8 May 1993

First East Asian Games opened in Shanghai

On May 9, 1993, the first East Asian Games opened in Shanghai.

The first East Asian Games were attended by 9 delegations from China, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Mongolia, Hong Kong, Macao, Chinese Taipei, and Guam (by invitation), with over 2,500 athletes participating.

The emblem of the first East Asian Games is composed of the English letter "E" and the Arabic numeral "1". "E" is derived from the English name of the East Asian Games. At the same time, "E" and "1" form the Chinese character "申", indicating that the event was held in Shanghai.

As for the mascot, it was a golden rooster named Dongdong, wearing a sports suit, holding Shanghai's city flower "Bai Yulan" (white magnolia) and a gold medal around its neck.

The Games featured 12 events, namely athletics, swimming (including diving), football (men’s), basketball, badminton, gymnastics, weightlifting (men’s), judo, rowing, boxing, bowling, and wushu.

Among them, China topped the medal table with 105 gold, 74 silver, and 34 bronze, while Japan and South Korea ranked second and third respectively.

Paris Olympics|Table tennis icon Ma Long facing final dance?

Practice is the Sole Criterion for Testing Truth

11 May 1978

The article "Practice is the Sole Criterion for Testing Truth" was published

Contemporary China - On This Day in History - High-Tech Industry

10 May 1988

China's first high-tech industry development experimental zone officially established

Beijing Olympic torch Mount Everest peak

8 May 2008

Beijing Olympic torch ignited at Mount Everest

Contemporary China-Today in History-China Brightness Project

7 May 1997

China Brightness Project entered implementation phase

Michael Chang

12 June 1989

Michael Chang became the first Chinese and the youngest tennis Grand Slam winner

WeChat