The Kiel Week () or Kiel Regatta is an annual sailing event in Kiel, the capital of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is considered to be one of the largest sailing events globally, and also the largest summer festivals in Northern Europe, attracting millions of people every year from all over Germany and neighbouring countries.
Together with the Trofeo Princesa SofÃÂa, Semaine Olympique Française, and Allianz Regatta regattas, Kiel Week is part of the Sailing World Cup in the 2023 and 2024 seasons.
Events
Kiel Week is held annually in the last week in June, and opens officially on the preceding Saturday with the official Glasen, followed by the Holstenbummel. The "Soundcheck" is on the Friday before the official opening; it is a music festival across all the stages within the city. Kiel Week, ends with a large fireworks display at 11 p.m. on Sunday, fired from pontoons or the quays at the Howaldtswerke, visible all across the Bay of Kiel. There are also many minigames
Most ship races begin at the Olympic Harbor of Schilksee, also the centre of most sporting activities during Kiel Week. As Schilksee is located outside of the inner city and most sailing competitions take place yet further out, only some races â mainly of smaller boat types â can be viewed from shore, namely from along the Kiellinie at the west coast of the Bay of Kiel.
Kiel Week usually gathers around 5,000 sailors, 2,000 ships, and about three million visitors each year. The event is organized in a joint effort by the Yacht Club of Kiel, the Norddeutscher Regattaverein, the Hamburger Sailing Club, and the Verein Seglerhaus am Wannsee.
While Kiel Week started out as a ship racing championship, it has long since become a large festival with many popular bands playing on public stages. They often play for free, although the corporate sponsors (many from the Schleswig-Holstein media and telecommunications industry) usually display their involvement prominently. Most of the stages can be found at the Kiellinie (the western side of the Kieler Förde from the Düsternbrook yacht harbour past the Schleswig-Holstein parliament building to the big inner-city ferry harbour), and as of late, across the Hoernbridge to the Germania harbour and the Hörn. Another area of rich cultural activity in the city centre (Rathausplatz, Holstenbrücke) and the area connecting the city centre with the ferry harbour (Alter Markt, Dänische StraÃÂe, SchloÃÂpark). Between the public stages and especially on the International Market on the Rathausplatz, food specialties from different countries can be eaten. Small street performances and street comedy are performed in many places. A special children's program is available at the Spiellinie.
Kiel Week is also one of the largest tall ship conventions in Germany, attracting many German and international traditional ships, mainly sailing ships. Many of them spend the week doing day tours out of Kiel, thus berthing much more in view of the festival visitors than the racing boats at Kiel-Schilksee. More than 100 traditional ships and hundreds of yachts usually participate in the Tall Ships Parade (Windjammer‎parade) on the day before the closing day of the Kiel Week, i.e. usually on the second Saturday of Kiel Week. The Parade was first held in 1972, under the name of Operation Sail, and was organized in celebration of the Olympic Summer Games in Germany that year, whose sailing competitions took place in Kiel. It was the first large gathering of tall ships since the time of the windjammers, and its success led to the annual Parade and to the foundation of the first sail training organization in Germany (Clipper DJS). Today, the Parade is often headed by the Gorch Fock, a sister ship to the German-built USCGC Eagle (WIX-327).
Kiel Week Poster and Enamel Plaques
Since 1948, advertises an annual Kiel Week poster for the festival week. Their design is another example of the cultural positioning and visual-design tradition of the Kieler Woche. In this context represents a jury put together a selection of graphic designers and then invites them to a competition for the corporate design of the festival week. An invitation is already an honor, because the design contest enjoys a high reputation and many designs have been awarded national and international prizes.
Among other things, the following graphic artists designed for the Kiel Week: Ernst Irmler (1953), Anton Stankowski (1962), Hans Hillmann (1964), Michael Engelmann (1965), Bruno K. Wiese (1971 & 1982), Rolf Müller (, 1972), Otto Treumann (1975), Ruedi Baur (1986), Rosemarie Tissi (1990), Hans Günther Schmitz (1992), Christof Gassner (1993), Siegfried Odermatt (1994), Barbara & Gerd Baumann (1995), Wim Crouwel (1998 ), Fons M. Hickmann (2002), Klaus Hesse (2006), Markus Dressen (2007), Peter Zizka (2008), Henning Wagenbreth (2009), Andrew and Jeffrey Goldstein (2010), Melchior Imboden (2011) and Stefan Guzy and Björn re (2015).
The series of Kieler Woche playcards considered as a reflection of the recent graphic story. The motifs are applied to many objects and almost all of these â mostly developed by the competition winner himself â applications reach after a short time collector status.
Even before WWII annual enamel plaques were made as memento for the competitors.
History
- June 23, 1882 20 sailing yachts (one of them Danish) participate in a ship race from Düsternbrook. Because of the large success the event is held annually in the following years.
- 1889 The German Emperor Wilhelm II visits the ship races for the first time.
- 1892 More than 100 ships announce themselves for the ship races.
- 1894 The event is called Kiel Week for the first time in press reports. Emperor Wilhelm II is a regular visitor now.
- 1895 Opening of the Kiel Canal, then called Kaiser-Wilhelm-Kanal during Kiel Week.
- 1907 25th anniversary of Kiel Week. Since then more than 6,000 ships have been racing at the event.
- 1914 New canal locks are opened during Kiel Week. On June 28, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria is murdered in Sarajevo, leading to World War I and interrupting Kiel Week. Between 1915 and 1918 Kiel Week is not held.
- 1934 Kiel Week becomes an instrument of propaganda for the Nazis.
- 1936 For the first time, Kiel is the location for the sailing contests at the Summer Olympics.
- 1937 Kiel Week is organized by the newly formed Yacht-Club von Deutschland.
- 1940âÂÂ1946 During World War II, Kiel Week does not happen.
- 1945 The first sailing week after the Second World War is held by the British occupation army under the name "Kiel-Week".
- 1947 A festival week in September is held under the name 'Kiel im Aufbau' ('Kiel in reconstruction').
- * End of June 1948 First Kiel Week after the war.
- September 1948 "Kiel im Aufbau" held for the second time.
- 1949 "Kiel im Aufbau" integrated into Kiel Week.
- 1950 Theodor Heuss is the first President of Germany to visit Kiel Week.
- 1962 Important Scandinavian theatre groups and orchestras set new accents for the cultural part of Kiel Week.
- 1972 For the second time the sailing contests at the Summer Olympics are held in Kiel, finishing with a Tall Ships Parade.
- 1974 The Spiellinie becomes a permanent institution at Kiel Week after the initial success of the Olympic SpielstraÃÂe for children in 1972. It is established along the Kiellinie.
- 1982 100 years of Kiel Week celebrations.
- 1994 100th Kiel Week celebrations (during the First and Second World Wars, Kiel Week was suspended); co-operation agreement with boot Düsseldorf.
- 1995 100 years of the Kiel Canal (formerly Kaiser-Wilhelm-Canal) celebrations.
Winners
Contender
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
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- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2021 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Men's Europe
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Women's Europe
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Open Europe
- 2005 âÂÂ
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Finn
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ILCA 4 (formerly known as Laser 4.7)
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
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- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
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- 2022 âÂÂ
Men's ILCA 6 (formerly known as Laser Radial)
Women's ILCA 6 (formerly known as Laser Radial)
- 2005 âÂÂ
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
- 2012 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
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- 2016 âÂÂ
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- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2021 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Open ILCA 6 (formerly known as Laser Radial)
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
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ILCA 7 (formerly known as Laser)
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- 1988 âÂÂ
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Moth
Musto Skiff
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
OK
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Waszp
420
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Men's 470
- 1987 âÂÂ
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Women's 470
- 1987 âÂÂ
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Mixed 470
505
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29er
- 2005 âÂÂ
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29er XX
49er
- 1997 âÂÂ
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49er FX
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
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- 2016 âÂÂ
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- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Flying Dutchman
- 1987 âÂÂ
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- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Pirat
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 1999 âÂÂ
- 2000 âÂÂ
- 2001 âÂÂ
- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
RS 800
12 Metre
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
2.4 Metre
- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
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5.5 Metre
- 2001 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
Albin Express
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
B/one
Dehler 29
Dragon
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
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- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
Elliott 6m
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
Farr 30
H-boat
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
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- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
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- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
- 2012 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
Hansa 303
J/24
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 1999 âÂÂ
- 2000 âÂÂ
- 2001 âÂÂ
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- 2004 âÂÂ
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- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
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J/70
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
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- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2021 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
J/80
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
Kielzugvogel
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
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- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
Melges 24
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
Nordic Folkboat
- 1957 âÂÂ
- 1958 âÂÂ
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- 1963 âÂÂ
- 1964 âÂÂ
- 1965 âÂÂ
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- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Platu 25
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
- 2012 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
SB 20
Soling
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
Sonar
Star
- 1931 âÂÂ
- 1933 âÂÂ
- 1934 âÂÂ
- 1935 âÂÂ
- 1936 âÂÂ
- 1937 âÂÂ
- 1938 âÂÂ
- 1939 âÂÂ
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
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- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
- 2012 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
Yngling
- 2001 âÂÂ
- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
A-cat
Formula 18
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
- 2012 âÂÂ
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
Hobie 16
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
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- 1998 âÂÂ
- 1999 âÂÂ
- 2000 âÂÂ
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- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
Nacra 17
- 2013 âÂÂ
- 2014 âÂÂ
- 2015 âÂÂ
- 2016 âÂÂ
- 2017 âÂÂ
- 2018 âÂÂ
- 2019 âÂÂ
- 2020 âÂÂ
- 2022 âÂÂ
Tornado
- 1987 âÂÂ
- 1988 âÂÂ
- 1989 âÂÂ
- 1990 âÂÂ
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- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
Men's Iqfoil
Women's Iqfoil
Men's Mistral
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 1999 âÂÂ
- 2000 âÂÂ
- 2001 âÂÂ
- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
Women's Mistral
- 1990 âÂÂ
- 1991 âÂÂ
- 1992 âÂÂ
- 1993 âÂÂ
- 1994 âÂÂ
- 1995 âÂÂ
- 1996 âÂÂ
- 1997 âÂÂ
- 1998 âÂÂ
- 1999 âÂÂ
- 2000 âÂÂ
- 2001 âÂÂ
- 2002 âÂÂ
- 2003 âÂÂ
- 2004 âÂÂ
- 2005 âÂÂ
Men's RS:X
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
Women's RS:X
- 2006 âÂÂ
- 2007 âÂÂ
- 2008 âÂÂ
- 2009 âÂÂ
- 2010 âÂÂ
- 2011 âÂÂ
Notes
See also
References
- . Description by a German officer of the visit by a squadron of British warships attending Kiel week in June 1914. Available at Canadian library archive
External links