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This category is made up of the logos of German football teams and includes current, historical, and variant logos. German football clubs are listed here . Contents
Bayern Munich made German football history even further by earning a record fourth consecutive Bundesliga title in 2016, [14] and eventually became the first German club to attain more than four championships in succession by winning their fifth and sixth titles in 2017 and 2018 respectively [15] [16] [17] for the club's 27th league title and ...
This is a list of football clubs in Germany by major honours won. It lists every German football club to have won any of the two major domestic trophies in Germany (or West Germany), three major European competitions or the global competitions FIFA has recognised. East German championships are not counted in these tables.
This category is made up of the logos of German football competitions and includes current, historical, and variant logos. German football competitions are listed in Category:Football competitions in Germany.
This is a list of clubs in the Bundesliga.It records all 57 clubs who played in the 61 seasons of the Bundesliga since its introduction in 1963.The placings section is split in two periods, before and after the German reunification, which took place during the league's 1990–91 season, in October 1990.
Club Division League/Level City State German champion Cup wins Inter-national trophies VfV 06 Hildesheim: Oberliga Niedersachsen: 5 Hildesheim: Lower Saxony: 0 0 0 VfL 07 Bremen: Bremen-Liga: 6 Bremen: Bremen: 0 0 0 FSV 08 Bissingen: Oberliga Baden-Württemberg: 5 Bietigheim-Bissingen: Baden-Württemberg: 0 0 0 TSV 1860 Munich: 3. Liga: 3 ...
Regionalliga (RL) – The fourth division of football in Germany, established in 1964 and designated as the fourth tier in 2008. Bayernliga (OLB) – A fifth division of football in Germany, established in 1991. DFB-Pokal (DFBP) – The premier knockout cup competition in German football, first contested in 1935.
The clubs from the Saar protectorate remained within the German football league system for the most part and continued to take part in the national championship. East German clubs did not. SC Planitz, the team from Zwickau, in Saxony qualified for the 1948 championships at Nuremberg, but was refused a travel permit by the Soviet authorities ...