Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/1938–39_Gauliga> ?p ?o }
- 1938–39_Gauliga abstract "The 1938–39 Gauliga was the sixth season of the Gauliga, the first tier of the football league system in Germany from 1933 to 1945. It was the last completed season before the Second World War.The league operated in eighteen regional divisions, of which the Gauliga Sudetenland was played in a knock-out format of regional champions, with the league containing 175 clubs all up, five less than the previous season. The league champions entered the 1939 German football championship, won by FC Schalke 04 who defeated Admira Wien 9–0 in the final. It was Schalke's fourth national championship, with the club winning six championships all up during the Gauliga era.Four clubs remained unbeaten during the league season, those being FC Schalke 04, Hindenburg Allenstein, VfR Mannheim and SV Dessau 05. At the other end of the table one club finished the season without a win, SV Algermissen. Hamburger SV scored the most amount of goals of any Gauliga club with 87 while ESV Wacker Wiener Neustadt conceded the most with 87. SV Dessau 05 and Hamburger SV achieved the highest points total with 35 while SV Algermissen earned the least with two points to its name.The 1938–39 season saw the fifth edition of the Tschammerpokal, now the DFB-Pokal. The 1939 edition was won by 1. FC Nürnberg, defeating SV Waldhof Mannheim 2–0 on 28 April 1940.The 1938–39 season saw an expansion of the number of the Gauligas from 16 to 18. In March 1938 Nazi Germany annexed Austria in what is commonly referred to as the Anschluss, with the Gauliga Ostmark formed as a consequence. In September 1938, through the Munich Agreement, Nazi Germany acquired the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia which resulted in the formation of the Gauliga Sudetenland. This was followed by the German occupation of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 but the Gauliga Böhmen und Mähren was only organised in 1943 in the region.In the part of Czechoslovakia annexed by Germany in March 1939, the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, the Czechoslovak First League continued its 1938–39 season separately from the Gauligas and the German championship.".
- 1938–39_Gauliga thumbnail Gauligas_1933.png?width=300.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageExternalLink www.f-archiv.de.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageID "49113429".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageLength "9484".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageOutDegree "81".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageRevisionID "705314481".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1._FC_Köln.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1._FC_Nürnberg.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1._FC_Schweinfurt_05.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1937–38_Gauliga.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1938–39_Czechoslovak_First_League.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1938–39_Gauliga_Bayern.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1938–39_Gauliga_Ostmark.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1939_German_football_championship.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1939_Tschammerpokal.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink 1939–40_Gauliga.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Anschluss.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Austria.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Category:1938–39_in_European_association_football_leagues.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Category:1938–39_in_German_football_leagues.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gauliga_seasons.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Czechoslovak_First_League.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Czechoslovakia.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink DFB-Pokal.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink DFC_Prag.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Deutscher_Sportclub_für_Fußballstatistiken.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Dresdner_SC.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink ESV_Wacker_Wiener_Neustadt.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink FC_Admira_Wacker_Mödling.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink FC_Schalke_04.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Fortuna_Düsseldorf.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Baden.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Bayern.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Berlin-Brandenburg.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Böhmen_und_Mähren.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Hessen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Mitte.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Mittelrhein.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Niederrhein.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Niedersachsen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Nordmark.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Ostmark.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Ostpreußen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Pommern.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Sachsen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Schlesien.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Sudetenland.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Mainhessen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Westfalen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Gauliga_Württemberg.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink German_football_league_system.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink German_occupation_of_Czechoslovakia.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Hamburger_SV.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink List_of_German_football_champions.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Munich_Agreement.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Nazi_Germany.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Protectorate_of_Bohemia_and_Moravia.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SC_Kassel_03.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SV_Algermissen.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SV_Dessau_05.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SV_Hindenburg_Allenstein.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SV_Waldhof_Mannheim.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink SpVgg_Blau-Weiß_1890_Berlin.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Stuttgarter_Kickers.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Sudetenland.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink VfL_Osnabrück.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink VfR_Mannheim.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Viktoria_Stolp.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Vorwärts-Rasensport_Gleiwitz.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink Wormatia_Worms.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink File:Gauligas_1933.png.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLink File:Nazi_Germany.svg.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLinkText "1938".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLinkText "1938–39 Gauliga".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageWikiLinkText "1938–39".
- 1938–39_Gauliga competition Gauliga.
- 1938–39_Gauliga continentalcup 1939_German_football_championship.
- 1938–39_Gauliga continentalcup1Qualifiers FC_Schalke_04.
- 1938–39_Gauliga nextseason "1939".
- 1938–39_Gauliga prevseason "1937".
- 1938–39_Gauliga season "1938".
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:1938–39_in_European_football_(UEFA).
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:De_icon.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Gauliga.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_football_league_season.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- 1938–39_Gauliga wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- 1938–39_Gauliga winners "18".
- 1938–39_Gauliga subject Category:1938–39_in_European_association_football_leagues.
- 1938–39_Gauliga subject Category:1938–39_in_German_football_leagues.
- 1938–39_Gauliga subject Category:Gauliga_seasons.
- 1938–39_Gauliga hypernym Season.
- 1938–39_Gauliga type FootballLeagueSeason.
- 1938–39_Gauliga type SportsSeason.
- 1938–39_Gauliga type SportsTeamSeason.
- 1938–39_Gauliga type Thing.