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A bronze medal from the 1980 Summer Olympics featuring a similar design on the obverse to that of the 1948 medals [12] This is the full table of the medal count of the 1948 Summer Olympics, based on the medal count of the IOC. These rankings sort by the number of gold medals earned by a nation.
The United States team being awarded their gold medals for the Men's coxed fours. The 1948 Summer Olympics (also known as the Games of the XIV Olympiad) was an international multi-sport event held from July 29 through August 14, 1948, in London, United Kingdom.
The table does not count revoked medals (e.g., due to doping). A total of 162 current and historical NOCs have earned at least one medal. Medal totals in this table are current through the 2024 Summer Olympics, and all changes in medal standings due to doping cases and medal redistributions up to 11 August 2024 are taken into account.
1948 London Olympic medals being minted at the works of John Pinches in Clapham. Lord Burghley, a gold medal winner at the 1928 Olympics, member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and president of the Amateur Athletics Association was named Chairman of the Organising and Executive Committees. [6]
1 Summer Olympics. 2 Winter Olympics. ... 1948 Great Britain ... The Geopolitics of Winter Olympic Medal Counts, The Atlantic, February 7, 2014;
1948 Summer Olympics; IOC code: SWE: NOC: Swedish Olympic Committee: Website: www.sok.se (in Swedish and English) in London; Competitors: 181 (162 men and 19 women) in 18 sports: Flag bearer: Per Carleson: Medals Ranked 2nd: Gold 16 Silver 11 Bronze 17 Total 44: Summer Olympics appearances
1948 Summer Olympics; IOC code: CAN: NOC: Canadian Olympic Committee: Website: www.olympic.ca (in English and French) in London, United Kingdom July 29–August 14, 1948; Competitors: 118 in 13 sports: Flag bearer: Robert McFarlane: Medals Ranked 25th: Gold 0 Silver 1 Bronze 2 Total 3: Summer Olympics appearances
During the 2008 Summer Olympics, with China and the U.S. topping the gold and total medal tallies respectively, [23] and then again at the 2010 Winter Olympics when Canada and the U.S. finished 1st and 3rd respectively in the "gold first" ranking, [24] and 3rd and 1st respectively in terms of total medals won. [25]