Eurovision History
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following is a list of the history of Eurovision shows, including the two Eurovision Song Contests and the Eurovision Dance Contest, showing the winners and runners-up.
Contents |
[edit] Eurovision Dance Contest
| Year | Winner | Dances | Dancers | Points | Margin | Second place | Date | Host city |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Rumba & Freestyle | Katja Koukkula & Jussi Väänänen | 132 | 11 | 1 September 2007 | London | ||
| 2008 | 6 September 2007 | Glasgow |
[edit] Junior Eurovision Song Contest
| Year | Winner | Song | Performer | Points | Margin | Second place | Date | Host city |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | "Ti Si Moja Prva Ljubav" | Dino Jelusić | 134 | 9 | 15 November 2003 | Copenhagen | ||
| 2004 | "Antes Muerta Que Sencilla" | María Isabel | 171 | 31 | 20 November 2004 | Lillehammer | ||
| 2005 | "My Vmeste" | Ksenia Sitnik | 149 | 3 | 26 November 2005 | Hasselt | ||
| 2006 | "Vesna" | The Tolmachevy Twins | 154 | 25 | 2 December 2006 | Bucharest | ||
| 2007 | "S druz'yami" | Alexey Zhigalkovich | 137 | 1 | 8 December 2007 | Rotterdam | ||
| 2008 | 22 November 2008 | Limassol | ||||||
| 2009 | Kyiv |
[edit] Eurovision Song Contest
[edit] Notes
- ^ The full results of the 1956 Contest were never released; only the winner is known.
- ^ a b c d Four countries tied for first place at the 1969 Contest. As no tie-break structure was in place, all four were declared joint winners.
- ^ Ireland and France tied for second place in the 1990 Contest.
- ^ Sweden won the 1991 Contest following a tie-break.
- ^ a b c d Since 2004 the Contest has included a televised semi-final. In 2004 this was held on the Wednesday before the final, and since 2005 it has been held on the Thursday of "Eurovision Week".
- ^ Since 2008 the Contest has included two semi-finals, held on the Tuesday and Thursday before the final.

