Diskussion:Internationales Paralympisches Komitee
2006, Januar
Meiner Meinung nach ist Sir Philip Craven der Präsident des IPC
Paralympic symbols, Agito
Das Paralympische Symbol besteht aus drei Agitos, rot, blau und grün, die drei Farben, die sehr häufig in Nationalflaggen auf der ganzen Welt vertreten sind.
/=.=.=. Current, von Paralympic symbols (en)=.=.=
The Paralympic symbol consists of three agitos, coloured red, blue and green, the three colours that are most widely represented in national flags around the world.
- 3 Agitos (ich bewege? / handele?)
The symbol of the [Paralympic Games] is composed of three "agitos", coloured red, blue, and green, encircling a single point, on a white field. The agito ("I move" in Latein{moveo?}) is a symbol of movement in the shape of an asymmetrical crescent. The Paralympic symbol was created by the Scholz & Friends agency and approved in April 2003. < ref name=psm/ > Paralympic Symbol & Motto, International Paralympic Committee (IPC) < ref name=flags >< / ref> International Paralympic Committee - The IPC logo, motto and flag, CRWFlags.com
- Zuerst offiziell in Gebrauch: 2006, Turin.
This Paralympic symbol was first used in publications and other products in 2003. (...) The symbol was first used in a Paralympic emblem at the [2006 Winter Paralympics|2006 Paralympic Winter Games in Torino].
Previous, ein Vorläufer
Zuletzt genutzt in Athen, 2004
In March 1992, the Paralympic symbol was changed to a version with three tae-gueks. This was not used until after the [1994 Winter Paralympics] in Lillehammer, [Norway], since the Lillehammer Paralympic Organizing Committee had by then already started a marketing program (...). The last Paralympics to use the three-tae-geuk version was the [2004 Summer Paralympics] in Athens, [Greece].
von en.wiki: --Schwab7000 (Diskussion) 15:34, 16. Sep. 2013 (CEST)
- 3 tae-geuks ist von Taegeuk, die koreanische Bezeichnung für das Taiji-Prinzip. siehe auch Flagge Südkoreas. --Schwab7000 (Diskussion) 16:15, 16. Sep. 2013 (CEST)