Post Südstadt Karlsruhe


Post Südstadt Karlsruhe is a German sports club from the city of Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg that was formed in 2001 through the merger of Karlsruhe VfB Südstadt and Postsportverein Karlsruhe. The footballers of VfB, playing as Karlsruher FC Südstadt sometime early in the club's history, are notable as founding members of the German Football Association in Leipzig in 1900.

History

The league is believed to have been formed in the spring or summer of 1899 and to have led a short tumultuous existence. Friedrich Wilhelm Nohe, chairman of Karlsruher FV, also acted as chairman of the league and of the VSFV. Nohe found himself in conflict with the leadership of several of the KFB's clubs as well as with Walther Bensemann, chairman of a committee established to organize matches between German and foreign clubs.
These conflicts led to the collapse of the KFB after only a single season. Some FV players left for other clubs, while Südstadt and Germania pulled out of the league. Südstadt and Phönix went on to join the DFB. The club left the DFB in 1924 to become part of the ATSB, one of several national sports associations active in Germany at the time. Following the rise of the Nazis the ATSB and other sports organizations were broken up in 1933 as politically unpalatable to the regime. VfB and many similar such clubs saw their memberships dispersed or forced into mergers with other more ideologically acceptable sides. VfB was reestablished after World War II and the current-day club has several other sporting departments in addition to its football side and focuses on recreational sport and wellness. The footballers most recently played in the Landesliga Mittelbaden from where they were relegated at the end of the 2015–16 season.