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  1. The 2010 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XXI Olympic Winter Games (French: XXI es Jeux olympiques d'hiver) and also known as Vancouver 2010 (Squamish: K'emk'emeláy̓ 2010), were an international winter multi-sport event held from February 12 to 28, 2010 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, with some events held in the ...

  2. 12. Feb. 2010 · Relive the moments that went down in history at the 2010 winter Olympics in Vancouver. Access official videos, results, galleries, sport and athletes.

  3. Die Olympischen Winterspiele 2010 (auch XXI. Olympische Winterspiele genannt) wurden vom 12. bis 28. Februar 2010 in Vancouver, der größten Stadt der kanadischen Provinz British Columbia, ausgetragen. Verschiedene Wettkämpfe fanden auch im Wintersportort Whistler sowie in den Vororten Richmond und West Vancouver statt.

  4. 12. Feb. 2010 · Erleben Sie die Momente nach, die bei den Olympischen Winterspielen 2010 in Vancouver in die Geschichte eingingen. Schauen Sie sich offizielle Videos, Ergebnisse, Bildergalerien, Sportarten und Athleten an.

    • Overview
    • Vancouver City Information
    • Notable Events from the Vancouver Winter Games

    The XXI Olympic Winter Games opened in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, on February 12 and closed on February 28, 2010. To celebrate the Games, Britannica is pleased to offer a broad selection of information on Vancouver and the Olympics, including a video highlighting the city’s history and geography; an interactive map of the Olympic venues; a brief history of the Winter Olympic Games and past Canadian Games, with tables featuring International Olympic Committee (IOC) presidents, sites of the Olympic Games through the years, and medal winners of 2006; a colourful photo gallery; and daily highlights of the 2010 Winter Olympic Games.

    Vancouver’s Olympic quest began in 1998, when the Canadian Olympic Committee (COC) selected the city over Calgary and Quebec for Canada’s bid to host the 2010 Winter Games. The bid was technically a joint venture between Vancouver and the Coast Mountains resort town of Whistler, which lies about 70 miles (110 km) north of Vancouver and was the proposed site of most of the Games’ skiing and sliding events. The Vancouver bid to host the Games was shortlisted along with those from Bern, Switzerland, P’yŏngyang, North Korea, and Salzburg, Austria, in August 2002. Bern withdrew its bid one month later after a referendum indicated that most Bern voters did not want to pay for the Games. On July 2, 2003, the final vote of the IOC was held in Prague. In the first round of balloting, P’yŏngyang captured 51 votes, while Vancouver trailed in second place with 40 and Salzburg received 16. Salzburg was eliminated for the second round of voting, which Vancouver won 56 to 53, bringing the Olympic Games to Canada for a third time (Montreal had hosted in 1976 and Calgary in 1988).

    Vancouver lies between Burrard Inlet (an arm of the Strait of Georgia) to the north and the Fraser River delta to the south, opposite Vancouver Island. The city is just north of the U.S. state of Washington. It has a fine natural harbour on a superb site facing the sea and mountains.

    Vancouver was originally a small sawmilling settlement, called Granville in the 1870s. It was incorporated as a city in April 1886 (just before it became the western terminus of the first trans-Canada railway, the Canadian Pacific) and was renamed to honour the English navigator George Vancouver, of the Royal Navy, who had explored and surveyed the coast in 1792. In 1929 two large suburbs to the south, Point Grey and South Vancouver, amalgamated with Vancouver, and its metropolitan area became the third most populous in Canada. By the 1930s Vancouver was Canada’s major Pacific coast port. After World War II it developed into Canada’s main business hub for trade with Asia and the Pacific Rim.

    •February 12:

    •Georgian luger Nodar Kumaritashvili died after crashing during a practice run hours before the Vancouver Olympic Games were set to open.

    •Technical difficulties caused delays at the opening ceremonies—the first Olympic opening ceremonies held indoors—which featured Canadian Olympic greats such as skier Nancy Greene, ice hockey player Wayne Gretzky, and basketball player Steve Nash.

    •February 13:

    •Simon Ammann of Switzerland was awarded the first gold medal of the Vancouver Olympics after winning the normal hill ski jumping event.

    •Slovakia’s Anastazia Kuzmina won the first Winter Olympic gold medal in her country’s history by scoring a surprise victory in the women’s 7.5-km biathlon sprint.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • 578,041 (8th largest city in Canada)
    • 44 square miles (114 square km)
    • 1886
  5. 6. Aug. 2011 · 14. 7. 5. Games Details. Duration. February 12 to 28. Olympic Cauldron Lighting. Catriona Le May Doan, Steve Nash, Nancy Greene, Wayne Gretzky. Events. 86. Official Opening. Her Excellency the Right Honourable Michäelle Jean, Governor General of Canada. Competing Athletes. 2566 (1522 men, 1044 women)

  6. 28. Feb. 2010 · Overview. The 2010 Winter Olympic Games were held from 12 to 28 February 2010 in Vancouver, Canada with the participation of approximately 2,600 athletes from 82 nations. In association with. International Olympic Committee. Replays. See all. Exclusive 32:33. Vancouver 2010 Historical Flashback: Cross Country Men's 15km Mass Start. Exclusive 47:42.

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