Maccabi (sometimes spelled Macabi, Makabi or Makkabi) may refer to:
Club | Country | City | Sport | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Asociación Hebraica y Macabi | Uruguay | Montevideo | Basketball | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Uruguay |
Brady Maccabi | England | Greater London | Association Football | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in North London |
Maccabi GB | England | England | Cricket & Association Football | Sports Clubs and Social Gathering for Jewish youth in across Great Britain. |
Maccabi London | England | London | Cricket & Association Football | Athletic and social gathering club for Jewish youth in Northwest London. |
Club Israelita Macabi de Mendoza | Argentina | Mendoza | Basketball | Professional basketball club |
IK Makkabi Stockholm | Sweden | Stockholm | Association Football | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Stockholm. |
Juda Makabi | Serbia | Novi Sad | Association Football | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Novi Sad. Existed between 1920 and 1941. [1] |
KSC Maccabi Antwerp | Belgium | Antwerp | Association Football | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Antwerp. |
Maccabi BBC Antwerp | Belgium | Antwerp | VBL – Flemish Basketball League | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Antwerp, which welcomes everybody. |
Lithuanian Sports Club Makabi | Lithuania | Vilnius | Non-specific | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Lithuania. |
London Maccabi Lions | England | London | Association Football | Football club in the Hertfordshire Senior County League |
Maccabi Ahi Nazareth | Israel | Nazareth | Association Football | Professional football team |
Maccabi Ashdod | Israel | Ashdod | Basketball | Professional basketball club |
Maccabi Ironi Ashdod | Israel | Ashdod | Association Football | Defunct professional football club |
Maccabi Be'er Sheva | Israel | Be'er Sheva | Association Football | Professional football club |
Maccabi București | Romania | Bucharest | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Maccabi Cernauţi | Romania | Cernauţi | Association Football | Historic sport club (defunct) |
Maccabi Budapest | Hungary | Budapest | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Maccabi Brinkford Tbilisi | Georgia | Tbilisi | Basketball | Professional basketball club |
Maccabi Haifa | Israel | Haifa | Non-specific | Large sport club in Haifa |
Maccabi Herzliya | Israel | Herzliya | Association Football | Professional football club |
Maccabi Ironi Kiryat Ata F.C. | Israel | Kiryat Ata | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Maccabi Ironi Tirat HaCarmel | Israel | Tirat Carmel | Association Football | Semi-professional football club |
Maccabi Jaffa | Israel | Tel Aviv | Association Football | Semi-professional football club |
Maccabi Kiryat Gat | Israel | Kiryat Gat | Association Football | Semi-professional football club |
Maccabi Los Angeles | United States | Los Angeles | Association Football | Historic amateur football club |
Maccabi Lyon-Villeurbanne | France | Lyon | Association Football | Amateur football club in Northeast border of Lyon and Villeurbanne |
Maccabi Melbourne | Australia | Melbourne | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Maccabi Moscow | Russia | Moscow | Association Football | Amateur football club |
Maccabi Netanya | Israel | Netanya | Association Football | Professional football club |
Macabi Noar | Argentina | Córdoba | Non-specific | The unique Jewish institution in Córdoba |
Maccabi Paris | France | Paris | Association Football | Football club |
Maccabi Petah Tikva | Israel | Petah Tikva | Association Football | Professional football club |
Maccabi Rugby | Australia | Sydney | Rugby union | Rugby team that competes in NSWSRU |
Maccabi Riga | Latvia | Riga | Association Football | Football team (1920s–1940), part of the Maccabi (Makabi) sports club |
Maccabi Rishon LeZion | Israel | Rishon Lezion | Non-specific | Large sport organization in Rishon Lezion |
Maccabi Sha'arayim | Israel | Rehovot | Association Football | Semi-professional football club |
Maccabi Tel Aviv | Israel | Tel Aviv | Non-Specific | Large sport organization in Tel Aviv |
Maccabi Tzur Shalom F.C. | France | Israel | Association Football | Football club |
Maccabi Istanbul | Turkey | Istanbul | Non-Specific | Defunct sports club |
Maccabi Toronto | Canada | Toronto | Non-Specific | Sport organization in Toronto with specialty in association football |
Maccabi Thessaloniki | Greece | Thessaloniki | Non-specific | Sport organization |
Maccabi Athens | Greece | Athens | Non-specific | Ping pong |
Maccabi Yavne | Israel | Yavne | Association Football | Semi-professional football club |
Makkabi Brno | Czech Republic | Brno | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Makkabi Frankfurt | Germany | Frankfurt | Non-specific | Sport organization |
Makkabi Helsinki | Finland | Helsinki | Non-specific | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Helsinki |
Makkabi München | Germany | Munich | Non-specific | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Munich |
Sport Club Maccabi Bruxelles | Belgium | Brussels | Non-specific | Athletic and social gathering club for Jews in Brussels |
Sport Club Maccabi Wien | Austria | Vienna | Association Football | Amateur football club |
Organización Hebrea Macabi | Argentina | Buenos Aires | Association Football | Professional football club |
TuS Maccabi e.V. Düsseldorf | Germany | Düsseldorf | Association Football | Amateur football club |
TuS Makkabi Berlin | Germany | Berlin | Association Football | Amateur football club |
ZGiSK Makabi | Croatia | n/a | Association Football | Defunct football club |
Maccabi Haifa Football Club is an Israeli professional football club based in the city of Haifa, Israel, a section of Maccabi Haifa sports club. The club plays in the Israeli Premier League. Maccabi Haifa home games are played at Sammy Ofer Stadium. The stadium, which is shared with rivals Hapoel Haifa, is the second largest in Israeli football, with a capacity of 30,942.
Maccabi Tel Aviv Basketball Club, known for sponsorship reasons as Maccabi Playtika Tel Aviv, is a professional basketball club based in Tel Aviv, Israel. The team plays in the Israeli Basketball Premier League, and internationally in the EuroLeague. Maccabi Tel Aviv is known as one of the best teams in Europe, having won 6 Euroleague titles since joining, and having sent numerous players to the NBA draft.
Maccabi Tel Aviv Football Club is an Israeli professional football club from Tel Aviv and part of the Maccabi Tel Aviv Sport Club.
Maccabi Petah Tikva F.C. is an Israeli professional football club based in the city of Petah Tikva. It is part of the Maccabi World Union for international Jewish sports clubs.
Football, also known as Soccer, is the most popular sport in Israel. Football as an organised sport, first developed in the United Kingdom, who controlled Mandatory Palestine during the days of the British Mandate.
The Maccabiah Games is an international multi-sport event with summer and winter sports competitions featuring Jews and Israeli regardless of religion. Held every four years in Israel, the Maccabiah Games is considered the foremost sports competition for global Jewry.
Maccabi Netanya F.C. is an Israeli professional football club based in Netanya. Established in 1934, the club was a founding member of the Israeli League in 1949. After winning their first championship in 1971, the club's golden period lasted until the late 80s, including four more league titles and a double in 1978.
Maccabi Akhi Nazareth Football Club is an Israeli football club based in Nazareth. The club is currently in the and plays at the Ilut Stadium in Ilut on the outskirts of the city.
Maccabi World Union is an international Jewish sports organisation spanning five continents and more than 50 countries, with some 400,000 members. The Maccabi World Union organises the Maccabiah Games, a prominent international Jewish athletics event.
The 13th Maccabiah Games brought 4,500 athletes to Israel from 45 nations.
The 1992 season was the second season of competitive football (soccer) in Lithuania as an independent nation since regaining independence from the Soviet Union in 1990.
These are the Lithuanian football standings from 1931–1940.
The 1928 LFF Lyga was the 7th season of the LFF Lyga football competition in Lithuania. KSS Klaipėda won the championship.
The 1930 LFF Lyga was the 9th season of the LFF Lyga football competition in Lithuania. It was contested by 19 teams, and KSS Klaipėda won the championship.
The "Maccabi youth movement" is a Zionist youth movement established during the international convention of the Maccabi organization in Prague, Czech Republic in 1929. As the Maccabi movement is involved with promoting physical activity and sports among the Jewish people, the Maccabi youth movement was designated to focus on the informal education of the young generation, in light of the vision of Max Nordau and the idea of "Muscular Judaism"
The Lithuanian Sports Club Makabi is a sports club of the Jewish minority in Lithuania. It is one of the many Maccabi sports clubs worldwide. It was originally established on September 19, 1920 in Kaunas. It ceased to exist during the Holocaust in Lithuania and was reestablished only in 1989 during the perestroika in the Lithuanian SSR. The club participates in the Maccabiah Games. It had about 500 members in 1990 and 200 in 2000. As of 2014, the club supported nine sports.
Novak Bošković was a Serbian handball player.
The 2017 Maccabiah Games, also referred to as the 20th Maccabiah Games, were the 20th edition of the Maccabiah Games. They took place from 4 to 17 July 2017, in Israel. The Maccabiah Games are open to Jewish athletes from around the world, and to all Israeli citizens regardless of their religion. A total of 10,000 athletes competed, a Maccabiah Games record, making the 2017 Maccabiah Games the third-largest sporting competition in the world. The athletes were from 85 countries, also a record. Countries represented for the first time included the Bahamas, Barbados, Cambodia, the Cayman Islands, Haiti, Malta, Morocco, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, and Trinidad. The athletes competed in 45 sports.
Makabi Warszawa, in English Makabi Warsaw, founded in 1915 in Warsaw, Poland was a Polish sports club founded by the Jewish Gymnastic and Sports Association "Maccabi" in Warsaw. It was the largest multi-section Jewish sports club in the Second Polish Republic.
The “2023” Maccabiah Games took place in Israel from July 14–25, 2022, and are also referred to as the 22nd Maccabiah Games. The Maccabiah Games are open to Jewish athletes from around the world, and to all Israeli citizens regardless of their religion. Israeli former Olympic judo medalist Arik Zeevi served as Maccabiah Chairman. Approximately 10,000 athletes from 80 countries competed in 42 sports categories.