Revision 6068313 of "Maskot Olimpiade" on idwiki

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Sejak penampilan maskot pertama pada Sejarah Olimpiade yang diselenggarakan di Olimpiade Munich tahun 1972, maskot olimpiade telah menjadi elemen utama dari simbol olimpiade.sebagai sebuah simbol yang penuh energi, sebuah maskot dapat menjadi penyemangat dan spirit dalam olimpiade, dan menjadi konsep yang berbeda dalam tiap olimpiade, mempromosikan sejarah dan budaya dari tiap negara tempat penyelenggara olimpiade.
[[jmpl]]

 List of mascots
Games 	City 	Mascot 	Character 	Designer 	Significance 	Picture
1968 Winter Olympics 	Grenoble 	Schuss 	Stylized skier 	Mme Lafargue 	(unofficial) 	
1968 Summer Olympics 	Mexico City 	El Jaguar Rojo de Chichen-Itza 	Red jaguar 		Based on a throne in the shape of a red jaguar in the "El Castillo" pyramid at Chichen Itzá. 	
Paloma de la Paz 	Dove 	Eduardo Terrazas and Lance Wyman 	A stylized white dove, it represented the slogan of the games, "Los juegos de la Paz", ("Games of the Peace").
1972 Summer Olympics 	Munich 	Waldi 	Dachshund dog 	Otl Aicher 	A popular breed in Bavaria, it represented the attributes required for athletes - resistance, tenacity and agility. 	
1976 Winter Olympics 	Innsbruck 	Schneemann 	Snowman 		It represents the Games of Simplicity. 	Olympische Winterspiele 1976 Innsbruck.jpg
1976 Summer Olympics 	Montréal 	Amik 	Beaver 	Yvon Laroche,
Pierre-Yves Pelletier,
Guy St-Arnaud and
George Huel 	One of the national symbols of Canada. 	
1980 Winter Olympics 	Lake Placid 	Roni 	Raccoon 	Donald Moss 	Its face design resembles the hat and goggles used by competitors. Named for the Adirondack mountain range. 	
1980 Summer Olympics 	Moscow 	Misha 	Bear cub 	Victor Chizhikov 	The bear was the national symbol of the Soviet Union. 	RIAN archive 488322 Flag-bearers of states-participants of the XXII Summer Olympic Games.jpg
1984 Winter Olympics 	Sarajevo 	Vučko 	Little wolf 	Joze Trobec 	Symbolizing the desire of humans to befriend animals. 1=According to the IOC, it helped change the common perception in the region of wolves as frightening and blood-thirsty.[citation needed] 	
1984 Summer Olympics 	Los Angeles 	Sam 	Bald eagle 	Robert Moore
(from
The Walt Disney Company) 	The symbol of the United States. 	SamOlyEagle1.png
1988 Winter Olympics 	Calgary 	Hidy and Howdy 	Two polar bears 	Sheila Scott 	Both represent Western Canadian hospitality. 	Olympics-hidy-howdy.jpg
1988 Summer Olympics 	Seoul 	Hodori and Hosuni 	Two tiger cubs 	Hyun Kim 	Common in Korean legends. 	Seoulgamesmascot2005.JPG
1992 Winter Olympics 	Albertville 	Magique 	Man-star/snow imp 	Philippe Mairesse 		
1992 Summer Olympics 	Barcelona 	Cobi 	A Catalan sheepdog 	Javier Mariscal 	Drawn in cubist style 	

1972cobi460.jpg
1994 Winter Olympics 	Lillehammer 	Håkon and Kristin 	Two Norwegian children 		Both are dressed in Viking clothes. 	Kristin Haakon OLmaskot 1994.JPG
1996 Summer Olympics 	Atlanta 	Izzy 	An abstract figure 	John Ryan 	The first computer-generated mascot. 	Mascot Izzy.jpg
1998 Winter Olympics 	Nagano 	The Snowlets:
Sukki, Nokki, Lekki and Tsukki 	Four owls 		Representing the four major islands of Japan. The first syllable of each name combines phonetically to create the word "Snowlets". 	
2000 Summer Olympics 	Sydney 	Olly
(from "Olympic") 	Kookaburra 	Matthew Hatton 	Representing the Olympic spirit of generosity. 	
Syd
(from "Sydney") 	Platypus 	Representing the environment and energy of the people of Australia.
Millie
(from "Millennium") 	Hedgehog 	Representing the Millennium. All three mascots are common wild animals found in Australia.
Fatso the Fat-Arsed Wombat
("The Battlers' Prince") 	Wombat 	Paul Newell with Roy & HG 	Protest against the commercialization of Olympic Mascots, ultimately became more popular than the official mascots. "(unofficial)" 	Fatso at Olympic Park.jpg
2002 Winter Olympics 	Salt Lake City 	Powder
(a.k.a. Swifter) 	Snowshoe Hare 	Steve Small,
Landor Associates
and Publicis[1] 	All three mascots are indigenous animals of the U.S. state of Utah, and are named after natural resources important to the state's economy. These animals are major characters in the legends of local American Indians, and these legends are reflected in the story of each mascot. To remind them of this heritage, all mascots wear a charm around their neck with a petroglyph image.[2] 	2002 Olympic Mascots on pin (transparent).png
Copper
(a.k.a. Higher) 	Coyote
Coal
(a.k.a. Stronger) 	American black bear
2004 Summer Olympics 	Athens 	Athena and Phevos 	Brother and sister 	Spyros Gogos 	Two modern children resembling ancient Greek dolls. 	Athens athena model.jpg
2006 Winter Olympics 	Turin 	Neve and Gliz 	A humanized snowball and ice cube 	Pedro Albuquerque 		Neve and Gliz 2.jpg
2008 Summer Olympics 	Beijing 	The Fuwa:
Beibei, Jingjing, Huanhuan, Yingying, Nini 	Fish, giant panda, Olympic Flame, Tibetan antelope, swallow 	Han Meilin 	The five names form the Chinese phrase "Beijing huan ying ni" (北京欢迎你), which means "Beijing welcomes you". Each representing an Olympic ring and Feng Shui element. 	Mascots of the 2008 Summer Olympics (Shatin, Hong Kong).jpg
2010 Winter Olympics 	Vancouver 	Miga 	Mythical sea bear 	Meomi Design
(a group of
Vicki Wong and
Michael Murphy) 	Part orca and part kermode bear 	Mascots Quatchi Miga and Sumi.jpg
Quatchi 	A sasquatch 	From Canadian mythology
Sumi 	An animal guardian spirit 	From Galactic News
Mukmuk 	A Vancouver Island Marmot 	an official mascot, but their designated "sidekick". 	
2010 Summer Youth Olympics 	Singapore 	Lyo and Merly 	Red male lion(Lyo), Blue female merlion(Merly) 	Cubix International 	The two characters are an allusion to the "Lion City" label of Singapore, and the Merlion, a national symbol of Singapore, respectively. 	Lyo and Merly in Hong Kong.jpg
2012 Summer Olympics 	London 	Wenlock and Mandeville[3] 	Drops of steel with cameras for eyes. 	Iris[4] 	Named after the village of Much Wenlock in Shropshire - which hosted a precursor to the modern Olympic Games in the 19th century. Mandeville is named after Stoke Mandeville, Buckinghamshire, UK, where the first Paralympic Games were held, in 1948. Both represent the UK's start of the Industrial Revolution. 	Olympic mascots (cropped).jpg
2012 Winter Youth Olympics 	Innsbruck 	Yoggl 	Alpine Chamois 	Florencia Demaría and Luis Andrés Abbiati of Argentina 	Yoggl represents the character of the host city of these games[5] 	
2014 Winter Olympics 	Sochi 	Bely Mishka (Polar Bear), Snow Leopard, Zaika (the dore hare) 	Silvia Petrova, Vadim Pak, Anatoli Serdechni 			
2014 Summer Youth Olympics 	Nanjing 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 		
2016 Summer Olympics 	Rio de Janeiro 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 		
2016 Winter Youth Olympics 	Lillehammer 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 		
2018 Winter Olympics 	Pyeongchang 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 		
2018 Summer Youth Olympics 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 		
2020 Summer Olympics 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 	TBA 				
--[[Istimewa:Kontribusi pengguna/118.97.212.189|118.97.212.189]] 11 Oktober 2012 07.58 (UTC)
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[[Kategori:Olimpiade]]