Dynamo Stadium (Poltava)
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Dynamo Stadium (Poltava)
Dynamo Stadium or Dinamo Stadium is a stadium that often associated with the Dynamo (sports society). It may also refer to: Albania *Selman Stërmasi Stadium, Tirana, formerly "Dinamo Stadium" Belarus *Dinamo Stadium (Brest), Belarus *Dinamo Stadium (Minsk), Belarus Georgia *Boris Paichadze Dinamo Arena, also known as the Dinamo Stadium, Tbilisi, Georgia Germany * Stadion Dresden (in the 1970s), Dresden, Germany Moldova *Dinamo Stadium (Bender), Moldova *Dinamo Stadium (Chişinău), Moldova Romania *Dinamo Stadium (Bucharest), Romania Russia *Dynamo Stadium (Barnaul) *Dynamo Stadium (Bryansk) *Dynamo Stadium (Makhachkala) *Dynamo Stadium (Moscow) *Dynamo Stadium (Stavropol) *Dynamo Stadium (Ufa) *Dynamo Stadium (Vladivostok) Ukraine *Dynamo Stadium (Dnipropetrovsk), today place of the Towers Apartments Hotel *Dynamo Stadium (Kharkiv), Ukraine *Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium, Kyiv, Ukraine *Dynamo Stadium (Odessa), Ukraine *Dynamo Stadium, former name of Tsentralnyi Stadion (Zhyto ...
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Dynamo (sports Society)
Dynamo, also Dinamo, (; , Belarusian: Дынама, ka, დინამო) was a sports and fitness society created in 1923 in the Soviet Union. The society was an association of multi-sport clubs whose members were drawn from the NKVD and, after World War II, the MVD and the KGB. With the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe after World War II, similar Dynamo societies were established throughout the Eastern Bloc, such as SV Dynamo (East Germany). Since 2016, Vladimir Strzhalkovskiy is the Chairman of the Dynamo Society. Overview Name The name given to the society was supposed to mean "Power in Motion", taken from the Greek: δύναμις; ''dynamis'' -power, and Latin: ''motio'', -motion. Not coincidentally, this term was first coined earlier by a Belgian inventor Zenobe Gramme for the electrical generator. Dynamo, together with Armed Forces sports societies, made up the universal system of physical education and sports of the USSR. Forty-five sports disciplines were sanct ...
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