Ursula DONATH

Deutschland
Deutschland
LeichtathletikLeichtathletik
Olympische Medaillen
1B
Teilnahmen1
Erste TeilnahmeRom 1960
Geburtsjahr1931

Biografie

In 1953, Ulla Donath was the first East German to set an IAAF-accepted world record, with a time of 55.7 for the 400. Donath won the bronze medal at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, and also won several medals at the International University Sport Weeks (3-1-2) in the 400, 800, and 4 x 100. Domestically she won 16 titles between 1951 and 1961 dominating the 800. She bettered her first 400 metre world record twice, in 1954 to 55.0 and one year later to 54.4 seconds. From 1961-66 she was a sports administrator and member of the DVfL. Her profession was as a university school teacher at Martin-Luther-University at Halle-Wittenberg.

She was of Geman ancestry but born in the Latvian town of Saldus (Frauenburg). The family was re-settled in 1941 initially to Poznań (Poland), and then to Luckenwalde in the GDR. In 1953 she married Dr. Rolf Donath, also a middle distance runner, who published in 1960 the textbook Mittelstrecken- und Hindernislauf. Technik, Training, Taktik (Middle Distance and Steeplechase Run. Technique, Training, Tactics). He was the leading sports medicine doctor of the former GDR and belonged in the late 1960s and early 1970s to the select group of 15 persons of the German Association of Athletics in the GDR (DVfL) who determined which high-performing athletes should receive ‘supporting means’, and was also empowered along with Drs. Hoeppner, Wendler and Pahlke, to distribute those means. In 1975 he was a member of the "medical commission" of DVfL and thus was instrumental in the development of the East German state doping system.

Personal Best: 800 – 2:05.73 (1960).

Olympische Ergebnisse

Athlete Olympic Results Content

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