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Gauliga Oberschlesien

Gauliga Schlesien
Gauligas Niederschlesien
Gauliga Oberschlesien
The initial 16 districts of the Gauliga with Schlesien in dark brown in the south east
Country Nazi Germany
Provinces
Gau (from 1933)
Founded 1933
Folded 1945
Replaced by region became part of Poland
Level on pyramid Level 1
Domestic cup(s) Tschammerpokal
Last champions

Gauliga Niederschlesien:
STC Hirschberg

Gauliga Oberschlesien:
Germania Königshütte
(1943-44)

Gauliga Niederschlesien:
STC Hirschberg

The Gauliga Schlesien was the highest football league in the region of Silesia (German:Schlesien), which consisted of the Prussian provinces of Lower Silesia and Upper Silesia from 1933 to 1945. Shortly after the formation of the league, the Nazis reorganised the administrative regions in Germany, and the Gau Silesia, later subdivided into Gau Upper Silesia and Gau Lower Silesia, replaced the Prussian provinces.

After the Polish defeat in 1939, the parts of Upper Silesia awarded to Poland after the First World War were reoccupied by Nazi Germany and added to the Gau Oberschlesien.

From 1941, the Gauliga Schlesien was split into two separate leagues, the Gauliga Niederschlesien and the Gauliga Oberschlesien.

The league was introduced by the Nazi Sports Office in 1933, after the Nazi takeover of power in Germany. It replaced the Oberliga as the highest level of play of the regional football competitions.

In its first season, the league had ten clubs, playing each other once at home and once away. The league champion then qualified for the German championship. The bottom two teams were relegated. The league modus and strength did not change until 1939.

Because of the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the league was split into two regional groups, one of five and one of seven clubs and the season start was delayed until early December 1939. The two group champions then played a home-and-away final for the Gauliga championship. For its last season, 1940–41, it returned to a single-division format, now with eleven clubs, some of them from the newly occupied regions formerly part of Poland. This last season was however not completed and with most teams having only one or two games to go, a winner was declared and the competition cancelled.


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