الجمعة، 13 سبتمبر 2019

2019–20 2. Bundesliga

The 2019–20 2. Bundesliga will be the 46th season of the 2. Bundesliga. It began on 26 July 2019 and will conclude on 17 May 2020.[1]

Following an offline test phase in the previous season,[2] the video assistant referee system will be used for the first time in the 2. Bundesliga.[3][4] Also, the number of substitutes allowed on the bench was increased from seven to nine for the 2019–20 season.

2. Bundesliga

The 2. Bundesliga (Zweite Bundesliga, [ˈt͡svaɪ̯tə ˈbʊndəsliːɡa]) is the second division of professional football in Germany. The 2. Bundesliga is ranked below the Bundesliga and above the 3. Liga in the German football league system. All of the 2. Bundesliga clubs qualify for the DFB-Pokal, the annual German Cup competition. A total of 127 clubs have competed in the 2. Bundesliga since its foundation.

The decision to establish the league as the second level of football in West Germany was made in May 1973. The league started operating in August 1974, then with two divisions of 20 clubs. It was reduced to a single division in 1981. From the 1991–92 season onwards clubs from former East Germany started participating in the league, briefly expanding it to two divisions again. It returned to a single division format again at the end of that season and has had 18 clubs as its strength since 1994. Two clubs from the 2. Bundesliga are directly promoted to the Bundesliga, while a third promoted club has been determined through play-offs from 1974 to 1991 and again since 2008. Between 1991 and 2008 the third-placed club in the league was directly promoted. The bottom clubs in the league are relegated to the third division which has been, from 1974 to 1994 the Oberliga, from 1994 to 2008 the Regionalliga and since 2008 the 3. Liga. The number of relegated clubs has fluctuated over the years. Since 2008 two clubs are directly relegated while the third-last team has the opportunity to defend its league place in play-offs against the third placed team of the 3. Liga.

1. FC Nürnberg holds the record number of championships in the league with four. The club also holds the record for number of promotions from the 2. Bundesliga to the Bundesliga, seven.

For the 2016–17 season, an average of 21,717 spectators watched 2. Bundesliga matches, making the 2. Bundesliga the world's most-watched secondary football league.
History
Formation
Main article: Introduction of the 2. Bundesliga
The decision to establish the 2. Bundesliga as a fully professional league below the Bundesliga was made at the annual convention of the German Football Association, the DFB, in Frankfurt on 30 June 1973. The league replaced the five Regionalligas that were at this level from 1963 to 1974. Each Regionalliga had a set quota of clubs that could qualify for the new league with the Regionalliga Süd receiving thirteen spots, the Regionalliga West twelve, the Regionalliga Nord and Regionalliga Südwest seven and the Regionalliga Berlin one. The qualified teams were established through a ranking that took the last five seasons of the Regionalliga into account.[1]

The new 2. Bundesliga was split into a northern and a southern division with 20 clubs each. Each division had its champion directly promoted to the Bundesliga while the two runners-up would contest a two-leg play-off to determine the third promoted team. The bottom four clubs in each league were relegated, however, as the number of clubs relegated from the Bundesliga to each division could vary, so could the number of clubs in the league and therefore the number of teams relegated.[2][3]

2. Bundesliga North and South 1974 to 1981
The first-ever game of the league was played on Friday, 2 August 1974 between 1. FC Saarbrücken and Darmstadt 98 and ended in a 1–0 win for Saarbrücken, with Nikolaus Semlitsch scoring the first-ever goal of the new league.[4][5] The inaugural champions of the league were Hannover 96 in the north and Karlsruher SC in the south, both former Bundesliga clubs. The play-offs for the third Bundesliga spot were contested by FK Pirmasens and Bayer Uerdingen, with Uerdingen winning 6–0 at home after a four-all draw in the first leg.[6][7] The three promoted teams however proved uncompetitive in the Bundesliga with Hannover and Uerdingen being relegated straight away again while Karlsruhe lasted for only two seasons.[8]

The second season saw league championships for Tennis Borussia Berlin and 1. FC Saarbrücken, with Tennis Borussia lasting for only one season and 1. FCS for two. The contest for the third promotion spot pitted two far bigger names of German football against each other, with Borussia Dortmund edging out 1. FC Nürnberg with two wins, ending Dortmund's four-year second division spell.[8][9][10] The last round of the season in the south also saw an all-time goal scoring record per round when 55 goals were scored in ten games. The northern division incidentally set the second best mark when it scored 51 goals the day before.[11]

In 1976–77 the league champions were FC St. Pauli and VfB Stuttgart while the third promotion spot went to 1860 Munich, having had to play a third game after Arminia Bielefeld and TSV 1860 each won their home games 4–0, with the decider ending 2–0 in favour of the southern team.[12][13] Ottmar Hitzfeld set an all-time 2. Bundesliga record in May 1977 when he scored 6 goals in a league match for VfB Stuttgart against Jahn Regensburg.[14] Bielefeld won promotion as the champions of the northern division in the following season, as did southern champion SV Darmstadt 98, entering the Bundesliga for the first time in its history. Third place went to 1. FC Nürnberg who overcame Rot-Weiss Essen with a 1–0 home win and a two–all draw away.[15][16] For Nürnberg it ended a nine-year absence from the Bundesliga.[8] Horst Hrubesch set an all-time record that season for goals in one season, 41 scored for Rot-Weiss Essen.[17]

In 1978–79 direct promotion went to 1860 Munich and Bayer Leverkusen while the play-off was won, once more, by Bayer Uerdingen, which defeated SpVgg Bayreuth 2–1 at home after a draw away. In the north, two clubs were relegated from the league for financial reasons, Westfalia Herne, which had finished fifth and former Bundesliga side FC St. Pauli, which had come sixth.[18][19] The following seasons saw 1. FC Nürnberg and Arminia Bielefeld clinch another promotion from the 2. Bundesliga, as did Karlsuher SC which overcame Rot-Weiss Essen by winning 5–1 at home after losing 3–1 away.[20][21] Arminia Bielefeld set an all-time 2. Bundesliga record when it defeated Arminia Hannover 11–0 in May 1980, the biggest-ever win in the league.[22]

The 1980–81 season, the seventh of the league, was also its last in this format. From 1981 it played as a single division of 20 teams after a decision taken on 7 June 1980, when, at a special convention of the DFB, the introduction of the single division 2. Bundesliga was decided upon with a majority of 84 votes to 77.[23] The northern division was unusually strong that season, having received all three relegated teams of the 1979–80 Bundesliga season, SV Werder Bremen, Eintracht Braunschweig and Hertha BSC, and playing with 22 teams. Bremen won the league while Braunschweig came second. Hertha missed out despite scoring 123 goals. In the south, the league was won by SV Darmstadt 98 for a second time while runners-up Kickers Offenbach lost out to Braunschweig in the play-offs. The reduction of the league to a single division meant 22 teams were relegated while no team was promoted to the 2. Bundesliga that season.[24][25]

Single division era 1981 to 1991
The new single division league of 20 teams saw only a small change in modus. The top two in the league were promoted while the third placed team played the sixteenth placed Bundesliga side in a home-and-away play-off for one more spot in the Bundesliga. The bottom four in the league were relegated. The inaugural season saw FC Schalke 04 compete in the 2. Bundesliga for the first time, and win it. Second place went to Hertha BSC while third placed Kickers Offenbach missed out on promotion after losing both play-off games to Bayer Leverkusen. Fourth place went to 1860 Munich, one point behind Offenbach, but the club found itself relegated after the DFB refused it a licence for the following season. This decision kept 17th placed SG Wattenscheid 09, the best-placed team on a relegation rank, in the league.[26] The following season finally saw Kickers Offenbach win promotion from the 2. Bundesliga, behind champions SV Waldhof Mannheim who had never played in the Bundesliga before. Bayer Uerdingen, in third place, won promotion through the play-offs for a third time, this time overcoming the previous seasons 2. Bundesliga champions FC Schalke 04.[8][27]

Schalke bounced back immediately, coming second behind Karlsruher SC in 1983–84. Third place went to MSV Duisburg wo were deceisively beaten 0–5 by Bundesliga side Eintracht Frankfurt at home. At the other end, Rot-Weiss Essen, after having failed to win promotion to the Bundesliga through the play-offs twice from the 2. Bundesliga, was relegated to amateur football that season.[28] 1. FC Nürnberg took out the championship of the single division 2. Bundesliga for the first time in 1985, with Hannover 96 coming second. Third placed 1. FC Saarbrücken also won promotion courtesy to a 2–0 home win over Arminia Bielefeld after a draw away. Kickers Offenbach, freshly relegated from the Bundesliga came only 19th in the 2. Bundesliga, suffered another relegation, as did another former Bundesliga side, FC St. Pauli, having returned to the league for the first time after having had its licence revoked in 1979.[29]

In 1985–86, three clubs from Berlin competed in the league, but none the following season, with Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin achieving its one and only promotion to the Bundesliga while Hertha BSC and Tennis Borussia were relegated to amateur football. The league champions were FC 08 Homburg, also promoted to the Bundesliga for the first time. Arguably one of the most famous play-off contests in 2. Bundesliga history however were the games between third placed Fortuna Köln and Borussia Dortmund. Köln won 2–0 at home, followed by a 3–1 for Dortmund, making a third game necessary as the away goal rule did not apply to the Bundesliga versus 2. Bundesliga play-offs at the time. This third game was won 8–0 by Borussia Dortmund in front of 50,000 in neutral Düsseldorf. In the relegation zone MSV Duisburg followed the two Berlin clubs into amateur football as a third former Bundesliga side that season.[30][31]

Hannover 96 and Karlsruher SC won promotion once more in 1987 while third placed FC St. Pauli, freshly promoted from amateur football again, missed out by a goal in the play-offs against FC Homburg. At the bottom end Eintracht Braunschweig became another former Bundesliga side and champion to drop into the third division.[32] FC St. Pauli ended a ten-year wait for Bundesliga return in 1988 when it finished runners-up to Stuttgarter Kickers who were promoted to the Bundesliga for the first time. Third placed SV Darmstadt 98 missed out on penalties in the deciding third game against SV Waldhof Mannheim after each side had won their home game by a goal. Arminia Bielefeld came a distant last and was relegated while 17th placed SpVgg Bayreuth was rescued when Rot-Weiß Oberhausen was refused a licence.[33]

Fortuna Düsseldorf won the league championship in 1988–89, with two clubs from the Saarland coming second and third, FC Homburg and 1. FC Saarbrücken. Saarbrücken however was unable to overcome Eintracht Frankfurt in the later club's second successful play-off defence of its Bundesliga place. SpVgg Bayreuth finished 17th again but was again spared from relegation when Kickers Offenbach was refused a licence. Also relegated were Union Solingen after 14 consecutive seasons in the league.[34] At the end of the season Spanish-born Joaquín Montañés retired from 2. Bundesliga football after 479 games for Alemannia Aachen in the league from 1974 to 1989, a record for any player with a single club in the league.[35] In 1990 Hertha BSC completed its return from amateur football to the Bundesliga with a 2. Bundesliga title, followed up by SG Wattenscheid 09, who entered the Bundesliga for the first time. 1. FC Saarbrücken failed in the play-offs for a second consecutive time when it missed out to VfL Bochum, thereby ensuring a Bochum derby in the Bundesliga between VfL and Wattenscheid for the following season. In the relegation zone SpVgg Bayreuth failed to get reprieved for a third consecutive season and dropped into amateur football, as did Alemannia Aachen, a founding member of the 2. Bundesliga who had played all 16 seasons of the league until then.[36]

The tenth season of the single division 2. Bundesliga was to be the last in its current format for a time as the German reunification in 1991 lead to changes to the league after this season. With FC Schalke 04 and MSV Duisburg two long-term Bundesliga teams finished at the top of the league. In third place Stuttgarter Kickers had to play FC St. Pauli three times to earn promotion, the first two contests having ended 1–1 while Stuttgart won the third 3–1. FC Schweinfurt 05 in last place became one of the worst clubs in the league history when it only won two games all season. Rot-Weiss Essen had its licence revoked which allowed SV Darmstadt 98 to avoid relegation.[37]

German reunification 1991–92
In the 1991–92 season, the league was expanded to 24 teams in two regional divisions, north and south, to accommodate six new East German clubs which joined the league that season. The East German clubs were spread very unevenly, with one going to the north and five to the south, caused by the geographic location of those clubs. Only the league champions were promoted to the Bundesliga that year, which were Bayer Uerdingen in the north and 1. FC Saarbrücken in the south. The bottom three in each division were relegated, three of which were from former East Germany. The other two were former Bundesliga clubs, Blau-Weiß 90 Berlin and 1860 Munich, with the later having played its first season back in the 2. Bundesliga after their licence was revoked in 1982. At the end of this season the league returned to the single division format, but with still 24 clubs as its strength.[38][39]

Single division era 1992 to present
The 1992–93 season was a momentous one, with 24 teams competing in a single league and each club playing 46 games. Three clubs were promoted directly, as would be the case from then on until 2008, with the play-offs having been abolished. SC Freiburg won the league and promotion for the first time. Behind it, MSV Duisburg made a return to the Bundesliga while third placed VfB Leipzig became the first former East German club to earn promotion from the 2. Bundesliga. Seven clubs were relegated from the league to reduce its strength to 20 clubs again from the following season. Of those Eintracht Braunschweig, Fortuna Düsseldorf and SV Darmstadt 98 were former Bundesliga sides.[40] The following season saw changes again as it was the last with 20 clubs. Promoted were VfL Bochum, Bayer Uerdingen and 1860 Munich, which had just won promotion from the third division the year before and returned to the Bundesliga for the first time since 1981. At the bottom end, five clubs were relegated, four of those former Bundesliga sides and the fifth one, Carl Zeiss Jena, from former East Germany.[41]

The league level below the 2. Bundesliga was changed profoundly in 1994 with the Oberligas replaced by the new Regionalligas, which allowed for direct promotion to the 2. Bundesliga for the first time since 1980. The league itself was now reduced to 18 clubs with no play-offs, three promoted and four relegated teams, a system it would maintain until 2008, when the play-offs were re-introduced. Hansa Rostock won the 2. Bundesliga for the first time in 1995 and FC St. Pauli and Fortuna Düsseldorf followed it up to the Bundesliga. In the relegation zone FSV Frankfurt came a distant last with only three wins to its name while the two Saarland sides FC Homburg and 1. FC Saarbrücken accompanied it. The later, despite finishing seventh, had its licence revoked, thereby sparing FSV Zwickau from relegation.[42]

The 1995–96 season saw VfL Bochum win the league again with second placed Arminia Bielefeld winning promotion straight after having been promoted from the Regionalliga the year before. Third place went to MSV Duisburg while Hannover 96, 1. FC Nürnberg and SG Wattenscheid 09 were all former Bundesliga clubs now suffering relegation to the third division.[43] The 1. FC Kaiserslautern and Eintracht Frankfurt had suffered their first-ever relegation from the Bundesliga in 1996. The former won the league and bounced back immediately while Frankfurt remained at this level for another season. Kaiseslautern was accompanied up by VfL Wolfsburg, who won promotion for the first time, and Hertha BSC. Kaiserslautern would also become the first and only club to win the Bundesliga as a freshly promoted side the following year.[44] The 1. FC Kaiserslautern and SV Meppen also set a record for number of goals in a game, 13, when Kaiserslautern defeated Meppen 7–6.[45] Eintracht Frankfurt won the league in 1998 with SC Freiburg coming second while 1. FC Nürnberg, freshly returned from the Regionalliga, came third. At the bottom end VfB Leipzig was one of three clubs from the east to be relegated, alongside SV Meppen, which dropped out of the league after eleven consecutive seasons there.[46]

The 1998–99 season saw the 1. FC Köln in the league for the first time, having been relegated from the Bundesliga after 35 consecutive seasons there from the start of the league in 1963. Köln only managed to come tenth, while the league was won by Arminia Bielefeld. Behind Arminia Bielefeld, SpVgg Unterhaching and SSV Ulm 1846 entered the Bundesliga for the very first time. Last place in the league went to Fortuna Düsseldorf, which was accompanied to the Regionalliga by SG Wattenscheid 09, KFC Uerdingen 05, formerly Bayer Uerdingen, and FC Gütersloh.[47] The first season of the new millennium saw the end of an era, with Fortuna Köln being relegated after 26 consecutive seasons in the league since the start in 1974. Local rival 1. FC Köln won the league while VfL Bochum came second and FC Energie Cottbus, in third place, moved up to the Bundesliga for the first time. Fortuna Köln was accompanied to the Regionalliga by Karlsruher SC, Kickers Offenbach and Tennis Borussia Berlin, who had their licence revoked.[48]

In 2000–01, the league was won by 1. FC Nürnberg once again, with Borussia Mönchengladbach earning promotion back to the Bundesliga after a two-year absence. FC St. Pauli was the third promoted team. SSV Ulm 1846, freshly relegated from the Bundesliga, finished the season in 16th place and became insolvent.[49] Hannover 96, Arminia Bielefeld and VfL Bochum were the promoted teams in 2002,[50] while the following season saw 1. FC Köln and Eintracht Frankfurt competing and succeeding for promotion again, behind league champions SC Freiburg.[51]

In 2004, 1. FC Nürnberg and Arminia Bielefeld earned another one of their many promotions while third placed 1. FSV Mainz 05 was a newcomer to the Bundesliga.[52] Like in 2003, 2005 saw 1. FC Köln and Eintracht Frankfurt win promotion while between them, in second place, MSV Duisburg moved up, too. At the bottom end three of the four relegated clubs shared similar names, Rot-Weiß Oberhausen, Rot-Weiss Essen and Rot-Weiß Erfurt with the fourth team relegated being Eintracht Trier.
VfL Bochum won the league again in 2006 while FC Energie Cottbus returned to the Bundesliga for a second three-year stint. In second place Alemannia Aachen returned to the Bundesliga for the first time since 1970. Relegated that year were Dynamo Dresden, former East German power house, after a two-year stint in the league.[54] 2006 also saw the retirement of Willi Landgraf from 2. Bundesliga football. Landgraf had played a record 508 2. Bundesliga games from 1986 to 2006, playing in the league for Rot-Weiss Essen, FC 08 Homburg, FC Gütersloh and Alemannia Aachen.[35][55] Karlsruher SC ended an absence from the Bundesliga that had lasted since 1998 when it won the league in 2007 and was followed up by Hansa Rostock and MSV Duisburg.[56] Freshly relegated Borussia Mönchengladbach won the league the following year, with new Bundesliga club TSG 1899 Hoffenheim second and 1. FC Köln third.[57]

The 2008–09 season saw the return of play-offs. The third placed team in the 2. Bundesliga now played the 16th placed team in the Bundesliga for a spot in that league. At the other end of the table, the 16th placed 2. Bundesliga side would now also play the third placed team in the new 3. Liga, which had replaced the Regionalliga as the third division. SC Freiburg and 1. FSV Mainz 05 were directly promoted that season while 1. FC Nürnberg had to enter the play-offs in which it defeated FC Energie Cottbus 5–0 on aggregate. At the relegation end, VfL Osnabrück lost its 2. Bundesliga place to SC Paderborn from the 3. Liga.[58]

1. FC Kaiserslautern ended a four-year spell in the 2. Bundesliga in 2010 with a league championship, with FC St. Pauli coming second. The FC Augsburg finished third but was unable to overcome 1. FC Nürnberg in the play-offs and lost 3–0 on aggregate. Hansa Rostock, in 16th place, dropped out of the 2. Bundesliga when it lost both play-off games to Ingolstadt 04.[59] Hertha BSC and FC Augsburg were directly promoted to the Bundesliga in 2010, the later for the first time, while VfL Bochum in third place missed out on promotion against Borussia Mönchengladbach. VfL Osnabrück found itself unsuccessfully defending its league place again, losing to Dynamo Dresden in extra time in the second leg.[60]

After 15 consecutive seasons in the 2. Bundesliga a numerous attempts at promotion Greuther Fürth finally won the league in 2012. Eintracht Frankfurt came second and Fortuna Düsseldorf returned to the Bundesliga for the first time since 1997 when it defeated Hertha BSC in the play-offs. Karlsruher SC failed to remain in the 2. Bundesliga when it was relegated on away goal rule after two drawn games against Jahn Regensburg.[61]

Hertha BSC won the 2. Bundesliga for the second time in three seasons in 2012–13 and was accompanied up by Eintracht Braunschweig, who had not played in the Bundesliga since 1985. Third placed 1. FC Kaiserslautern lost both games to 1899 Hoffenheim and thereby failed to get promoted. Dynamo Dresden became the first 2. Bundesliga side in five attempts to hold onto their league place while 3. Liga side VfL Osnabrück missed out in the play-offs for a third time in three attempts.[62] The 2013–14 season ended with 1. FC Köln winning the league, followed up by SC Paderborn who won promotion to the Bundesliga for the first time. Relegated where Energie Cottbus and Dynamo Dresden, both former Bundesliga sides. Third placed SpVgg Greuther Fürth failed to gain promotion after two draws with Bundesliga club Hamburger SV. At the bottom end two eastern clubs were relegated, Dynamo Dresden and Energie Cottbus, while Arminia Bielefeld entered the relegation round.

The 2014–15 season saw Ingolstadt 04 win the league and earn Bundesliga promotion for the first time while SV Darmstadt 98 finished second and returned to the Bundesliga for the first time since 1982. Third placed Karlsruher SC faced Hamburg for another Bundesliga spot while TSV 1860 Munich had to play Holstein Kiel to retain their place in the 2. Bundesliga. Both the Bundesliga and 2. Bundesliga clubs retained their league membership. The two clubs directly relegated from the league where Erzgebirge Aue and VfR Aalen.[63] In the 2015–16 the league was won by SC Freiburg, with RB Leipzig finishing runners-up and earning its first-ever Bundesliga promotion, while 1. FC Nürnberg had to enter the promotion play-off where it lost on aggregate to Eintracht Frankfurt. At the bottom end of the table SC Paderborn suffered consecutive relegations, becoming the sixth club to drop from the Bundesliga to the third tier in consecutive seasons. FSV Frankfurt was the second team directly relegated while MSV Duisburg entered the relegation play-off where it was unsuccessful.[64] All the clubs promoted to the 2. Bundesliga had played there before but while Dynamo Dresden and Erzgebirge Aue had only experienced a short absence the third club, Würzburger Kickers, had not played at this level for almost 40 years
In December 2016, it was announced that for the first time, the 2. Bundesliga would be given its own logo, taking effect at the start of the 2017–18 season. Previously, the 2. Bundesliga had borrowed the Bundesliga logo for promotional and media purposes. The 2. Bundesliga gained its own logo to "strengthen the profile of the competition" and to better identify the league with fans, the media, and sponsors.[66]

After their relegation, the 2018–19 season was Hamburger SV's first season outside of the German top flight in their 55-year history.[67]

All-time table
The most consistent team in the league, as of 2018–19, is Alemannia Aachen, having won 1,481 points from 1,020 games. In second place sits SpVgg Greuther Fürth, best placed of the current 2. Bundesliga clubs. Fortuna Köln comes third in the all-time table, while last place, number 127, goes to Spandauer SV with just ten points to its name.[68] For the 2018–19 season, two new teams with no previous 2. Bundesliga experience entered the league: Hamburger SV and 1. FC Magdeburg.
Division set-up
Changes in division set-up
Number of clubs
Current (since 1994–95): 18 teams
From 1974–75 to 1980–81: two divisions (Nord and Süd)
From 1974–75 to 1978–79: 20 teams each
1979–80: 20 teams (Nord), 21 teams (Süd)
1980–81: 22 teams (Nord), 20 teams (Süd)
From 1981–82 to 1990–91: 20 teams
1991–92: two divisions (Nord and Süd) of 12 teams each, divisions split into promotion/relegation groups of 6 teams each after 22 rounds
1992–93: 24 teams
1993–94: 20 teams
Teams promoted to the Bundesliga: 3; 1981–1991 there was a promotion/relegation round, in 1991–92 there was 1 promotion per group.
Number of relegations into the Regionalliga (until 1994: Oberliga): 4; 1991–92: 2–3 per group (inclusive relegation); 1992–93: 7.
Promotion and relegation
Further information: Promotion to the Bundesliga
From the 1992–93 season to the 2008–09 season, the top three teams gained promotion into the Bundesliga; after this, and to the present, only the top two teams are promoted automatically, and the third placed team plays a two-leg playoff against the team that finishes 16th in the Bundesliga.
Until the 2007–08 season, the bottom four teams were relegated into the Regional leagues. Since the 2008–09, following the inception of the 3. Liga, only the bottom two teams are relegated into the 3. Liga automatically; the third from bottom team can avoid relegation by winning a two-leg playoff against the team that finishes in third place in the 3. Liga.
League rules
Since the 2006–07 season there is no longer a limit on non-EU players in the league. Instead clubs are required to have 8 players on the squad who have come up through the youth system of a German club, 4 of which have to come from the club's own youth system.[69] Seven substitutes are permitted to be selected, from which three can be used in the duration of the game.

2019–20 Bundesliga

The 2019–20 Bundesliga is the 57th season of the Bundesliga, Germany's premier football competition. It began on 16 August 2019 and will conclude on 16 May 2020.[1] Bayern Munich are the defending champions.

The number of substitutes allowed on the bench was increased from seven to nine for the 2019–20 season

Bundesliga

The Bundesliga (German: [ˈbʊndəsˌliːɡa] (About this soundlisten); lit.  'Federal League', sometimes referred to as die Fußball-Bundesliga [ˌfuːsbal-] or 1. Bundesliga [ˌeːɐ̯stə-]) is a professional association football league in Germany and the football league with the highest average stadium attendance worldwide. At the top of the German football league system, the Bundesliga is Germany's primary football competition. The Bundesliga comprises 18 teams and operates on a system of promotion and relegation with the 2. Bundesliga. Seasons run from August to May. Most games are played on Saturdays and Sundays, with a few games played on weekdays. All of the Bundesliga clubs qualify for the DFB-Pokal. The winner of the Bundesliga qualifies for the DFL-Supercup.

55 clubs have competed in the Bundesliga since its founding. Bayern Munich has won the Bundesliga the most, winning the title 28 times. However, the Bundesliga has seen other champions with Borussia Dortmund, Hamburger SV, Werder Bremen, Borussia Mönchengladbach and VfB Stuttgart most prominent among them. The Bundesliga is one of the top national leagues, ranked fourth in Europe according to UEFA's league coefficient ranking for the 2018–19 season, based on performances in European competitions over the past five seasons.[1] The Bundesliga is the number-one football league in the world in terms of average attendance; out of all sports, its average of 45,134 fans per game during the 2011–12 season was the second highest of any sports league in the world after the American National Football League.[2] The Bundesliga is broadcast on television in over 200 countries.[3]

The Bundesliga was founded in 1962 in Dortmund and the first season started in 1963. The structure and organisation of the Bundesliga along with Germany's other football leagues have undergone frequent changes. The Bundesliga was founded by the Deutscher Fußball-Bund (English: German Football Association), but is now operated by the Deutsche Fußball Liga (English: German Football League).
The Bundesliga is composed of two divisions: the 1. Bundesliga (although it is rarely referred to with the First prefix), and, below that, the 2. Bundesliga (2nd Bundesliga), which has been the second tier of German football since 1974. The Bundesligen (plural) are professional leagues. Since 2008, the 3. Liga (3rd League) in Germany has also been a professional league, but may not be called Bundesliga because the league is run by the German Football Association (DFB) and not, as are the two Bundesligen, by the German Football League (Deutsche Fußball-Liga or DFL).

Below the level of the 3. Liga, leagues are generally subdivided on a regional basis. For example, the Regionalligen are currently made up of Nord (North), Nordost (Northeast), Süd (South), Südwest (Southwest) and West divisions. Below this are thirteen parallel divisions, most of which are called Oberligen (upper leagues) which represent federal states or large urban and geographical areas. The levels below the Oberligen differ between the local areas. The league structure has changed frequently and typically reflects the degree of participation in the sport in various parts of the country. In the early 1990s, changes were driven by the reunification of Germany and the subsequent integration of the national league of East Germany.

Every team in the two Bundesligen must have a licence to play in the league, or else they are relegated into the regional leagues. To obtain a licence, teams must be financially healthy and meet certain standards of conduct as organisations.

As in other national leagues, there are significant benefits to being in the top division:

A greater share of television broadcast licence revenues goes to 1. Bundesliga sides.
1. Bundesliga teams draw significantly greater levels of fan support. Average attendance in the first league is 42,673 per game—more than twice the average of the 2. Bundesliga.
Greater exposure through television and higher attendance levels helps 1. Bundesliga teams attract the most lucrative sponsorships.
1. Bundesliga teams develop substantial financial muscle through the combination of television and gate revenues, sponsorships and marketing of their team brands. This allows them to attract and retain skilled players from domestic and international sources and to construct first-class stadium facilities.
The 1. Bundesliga is financially strong, and the 2. Bundesliga has begun to evolve in a similar direction, becoming more stable organizationally and financially, and reflecting an increasingly higher standard of professional play.
Internationally, the most well-known German clubs include Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Schalke 04, Hamburger SV, VfB Stuttgart, Borussia Mönchengladbach, Werder Bremen and Bayer Leverkusen. Hamburger SV was the only club to have played continuously in the Bundesliga since its foundation, until 12 May 2018, when the club was relegated for the first time.

In the 2008–09 season, the Bundesliga reinstated an earlier German system of promotion and relegation, which had been in use from 1981 until 1991:

The bottom two finishers in the Bundesliga are automatically relegated to the 2. Bundesliga, with the top two finishers in the 2. Bundesliga taking their places.
The third-from-bottom club in the Bundesliga will play a two-legged tie with the third-place team from the 2. Bundesliga, with the winner taking up the final place in the following season's Bundesliga.
From 1992 until 2008, a different system was used, in which the bottom three finishers of the Bundesliga had been automatically relegated, to be replaced by the top three finishers in the 2. Bundesliga. From 1963 until 1981 two, or later three, teams had been relegated from the Bundesliga automatically, while promotion had been decided either completely or partially in promotion play-offs.

The season starts in early August[4] and lasts until late May, with a winter break of six weeks (mid-December through to the end of January). In recent years, games have been played on Saturdays (five games beginning at 3:30 pm and one game beginning at 6:30 pm) and Sundays (one game beginning at 3:30 pm and one game at 5:30 pm). A new television deal in 2006 reintroduced a Friday game (beginning at 8:30 pm).

History
Origins
Further information: History of German football
Prior to the formation of the Bundesliga, German football was played at an amateur level in a large number of sub-regional leagues until, in 1949, part-time (semi-) professionalism was introduced and only five regional Oberligen (Premier Leagues) remained. Regional champions and runners-up played a series of playoff matches for the right to compete in a final game for the national championship. On 28 January 1900, a national association, the Deutscher Fußball Bund (DFB) had been founded in Leipzig with 86 member clubs. The first recognised national championship team was VfB Leipzig, who beat DFC Prague 7–2 in a game played at Altona on 31 May 1903.

Through the 1950s, there were continued calls for the formation of a central professional league, especially as professional leagues in other countries began to draw Germany's best players away from the semi-professional domestic leagues. At the international level the German game began to falter as German teams often fared poorly against professional teams from other countries. A key supporter of the central league concept was national team head coach Sepp Herberger who said, “If we want to remain competitive internationally, we have to raise our expectations at the national level.”

Meanwhile, in East Germany, a separate league was established with the formation of the DS-Oberliga (Deutscher Sportausschuss Oberliga) in 1950. The league was renamed the Football Oberliga DFV in 1958 and was generally referred to simply as the DDR-Liga or DDR-Oberliga. The league fielded 14 teams with two relegation spots.
.The defeat of the national team by Yugoslavia (0–1) in a 1962 World Cup quarter-final game in Chile was one impetus (of many) towards the formation of a national league. At the annual DFB convention under new DFB president Hermann Gösmann (elected that very day) the Bundesliga was created in Dortmund at the Westfalenhallen on 28 July 1962 to begin play starting with the 1963–64 season.[5]

At the time, there were five Oberligen (Premier Leagues) in place representing West Germany's North, South, West, Southwest, and Berlin. East Germany, behind the Iron Curtain, maintained its separate league structure. 46 clubs applied for admission to the new league. 16 teams were selected based on their success on the field, economic criteria and representation of the various Oberligen.

From Oberliga Nord: Eintracht Braunschweig, Werder Bremen, Hamburger SV
From Oberliga West: Borussia Dortmund, 1. FC Köln, Meidericher SV (now MSV Duisburg), Preußen Münster, Schalke 04
From Oberliga Südwest: 1. FC Kaiserslautern, 1. FC Saarbrücken
From Oberliga Süd: Eintracht Frankfurt, Karlsruher SC, 1. FC Nürnberg, 1860 Munich, VfB Stuttgart
From Oberliga Berlin: Hertha BSC
The first Bundesliga games were played on 24 August 1963. Early favourite 1. FC Köln was the first Bundesliga champion (with 45:15 points) over second place clubs Meidericher SV and Eintracht Frankfurt (both 39:21).

Reunification
Following German reunification, the East German leagues were merged into the West German system. Dynamo Dresden and F.C. Hansa Rostock were seeded into the top-tier Bundesliga division, with other clubs being sorted into lower tiers.
The German football champion is decided strictly by play in the Bundesliga. Each club plays every other club once at home and once away. Originally, a victory was worth two points, with one point for a draw and none for a loss. Since the 1995–96 season, a victory has been worth three points, while a draw remains worth a single point, and zero points are given for a loss. The club with the most points at the end of the season becomes German champion. Currently, the top four clubs in the table qualify automatically for the group phase of the UEFA Champions League. The two teams at the bottom of the table are relegated into the 2. Bundesliga, while the top two teams in the 2. Bundesliga are promoted. The 16th-placed team (third-last), and the third-placed team in the 2. Bundesliga play a two-leg play-off match. The winner of this match plays the next season in the Bundesliga, and the loser in the 2. Bundesliga.

If teams are level on points, tie-breakers are applied in the following order:

Goal difference for the entire season
Total goals scored for the entire season
Head-to-head results (total points)
Head-to-head goals scored
Head-to-head away goals scored
Total away goals scored for the entire season
If two clubs are still tied after all of these tie-breakers have been applied, a single match is held at a neutral site to determine the placement. However, this has never been necessary in the history of the Bundesliga.

In terms of team selection, matchday squads must have no more than five non-EU representatives. Seven substitutes are permitted to be selected, from which three can be used in the duration of the game.

Changes in league structure
Number of teams:
1963–64 to 1964–65: 16
1965–66 to 1990–91: 18
1991–92: 20, while the East German league was being included after German reunification
Since 1992–93: 18
Number of teams relegated (automatic relegation except as noted):
1963–64 to 1973–74: 2
1974–75 to 1980–81: 3
1981–82 to 1990–91: 2 automatic plus the 16th-place team in the First Bundesliga played a two-leg relegation match against the third-place team of the Second Bundesliga for the final spot in the First Bundesliga
1991–92: 4
1992–93 to 2007–08: 3
Since 2008–09: 2 automatic plus the 16th-place team in the First Bundesliga playing a two-leg relegation match against the third-place team of the Second Bundesliga for the final spot in the First Bundesliga
Qualification for European competitions
1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th place: Group phase of UEFA Champions League
5th place: Group stage of Europa League
6th place: Third qualifying round of Europa League
Until the 2016–17 season, an additional place in the Europa League could also be granted via the UEFA Fair Play mechanism. This rule was maintained from the UEFA Cup. The last Bundesliga team to gain entry to the UEFA Cup via the fair play rule was Mainz 05 in 2005–06.
DFB-Pokal (German Cup) winner: Qualifies for group phase of UEFA Europa League regardless of league position.
Until 2015–16, if the Cup winner qualified for the Champions League, the cup winner's place in the Europa League went to the defeated cup finalist if it had not already qualified for European competition, although the defeated cup finalist would enter the competition a stage earlier than if it had won the Cup. This rule was retained from the Europa League's predecessor, the UEFA Cup. From 2015–16, the runners-up no longer qualify for the Europa league and the Europa League berth reserved for the DFB-Pokal winners is transferred to the highest finisher below the Champions League qualification places.
Prior to 2015–16, the team that benefited from that rule did not necessarily have to be a Bundesliga member. For example, although 2. Bundesliga sides Alemannia Aachen lost to Werder Bremen in the 2004 DFB-Pokal Final, Alemannia secured an entry in the 2004–05 UEFA Cup, because Werder qualified for the Champions League as First Bundesliga champions.
The number of German clubs which may participate in UEFA competitions is determined by UEFA coefficients, which take into account the results of a particular nation's clubs in UEFA competitions over the preceding five years.

History of European qualification
European Cup/Champions League:
Up to and including 1996–97: German champion only.
1997–99: Top two teams; champions automatically into group phase, runners-up entered the qualifying round.
1999–2008: Top two teams automatically into first group phase (only one group phase starting in 2003–04). Depending on the DFB's UEFA coefficients standing, either one or two other clubs (most recently one) entered at the third qualifying round; winners at this level entered the group phase.
2008–11: Top two teams automatically into group phase. Third placed team had to play in the play-off round for the right to play in the group stage.
UEFA Cup/Europa League:
From 1971–72 to 1998–99, UEFA member nations could send between one and four teams to the UEFA Cup. Germany was always entitled to send at least three teams to the competition and often as many as four. From 1978–79, the number of participants was determined by the DFB's UEFA coefficient standing, prior to this the method for deciding the number of participants is unknown. The best performing teams in the league other than the champion would qualify, although if one of these teams was also winner of the DFB-Pokal then they would enter the Cup Winners' Cup instead and their UEFA Cup place would be taken by the next highest-placed team in the league (5th or 6th place). Briefly in the mid-1970s the DFB decided to allocate the last UEFA Cup place to the DFB-Pokal runner-up instead of a third or fourth team qualified by performance in the league, meaning that at this point the DFB-Pokal qualified two teams for European competition (winners for the Cup Winners' Cup, runners-up for the UEFA Cup). This policy was unique amongst UEFA member associations and was dropped after only a few seasons. Starting with the 1999–2000 season and the abolition of the Cup Winners' Cup (which was then folded into the UEFA Cup), the DFB-Pokal winner now automatically qualified for the UEFA Cup alongside, depending on the DFB's UEFA coefficients standing, between one and three extra participants (if the DFB-Pokal winner also qualified for the Champions League, they were replaced by the DFB-Pokal runner-up; if they were also qualified for the Champions League, the UEFA Cup place went to the next best placed team in the league not otherwise qualified for European competition). Since 1999, the DFB has always been entitled to enter a minimum of three clubs in the UEFA Cup/Europa League, and at times as many as four (the maximum for any European federation). Teams that entered via UEFA's Fair Play mechanism, or those that entered through the now-defunct Intertoto Cup, did not count against the national quota. From 2006 through the final Intertoto Cup in 2008, only one First Bundesliga side was eligible to enter the Intertoto Cup and possibly earn a UEFA Cup berth. For the 2005–06 season, the DFB earned an extra UEFA Cup place via the Fair Play draw; this place went to Mainz 05 as the highest-ranked club in the Fair Play table of the First Bundesliga not already qualified for Europe.
Cup Winners' Cup (abolished after 1999):

The winner of the DFB-Pokal entered the Cup Winners' Cup, unless that team was also league champion and therefore competing in the European Cup/Champions League, in which case their place in the Cup Winners' Cup was taken by the DFB-Pokal runner-up. Today, the DFB-Pokal winner (if not otherwise qualified for the Champions League) enters the UEFA Europa League.

홍자

홍자(본명: 박지민, 1985년 9월 29일 ~ )는 대한민국의 트로트 가수다.
학력
경민대학교 연극학과
음반
2012년 왜 말을 못해 / 울보야
2015년 홍자시대
2018년 Come Back HongJa
2019년 어떻게 살아
방송
2019년 TV조선 《내일은 미스트롯》
2019년 MBC 《섹션TV 연예통신》
2019년 MBC 에브리원 《대한외국인》
2019년 MBC 에브리원 《비디오스타》
2019년 KBS 조이 《무엇이든 물어보살》
2019년 tvN 《풀 뜯어먹는 소리-대농 원정대 》
2019년 JTBC2 《악플의 밤》
2019년 MBC 《미스터리 음악쇼 복면가왕》 여름엔~ 내가 제일 잘 나가! 워터파크 (참가자)
2019년 MBN 《최고의 한방》
2019년 엠넷 《더 콜2》

제사상

제사상은 제사 또는 제례를 지낼 때 제물을 벌여 놓는 상이다. 제사상의 형식은 제사의 종류, 가문의 정통과 가세, 지역 등에 따라 달라진다. 제사상에 올리는 제기와 제상(祭床)은 보통 쓰는 것과는 달리 잘 간수했다가 제사를 지낼 때만 쓰고, 제물의 진설(陳設) 또한 생전에 놓는 법과 반대로 한다.
제사의 유래
제사를 지내게 된 동기를 살펴보면 다음과 같다. 먼 옛날 인류가 원시적인 생활을 할 때 천재 지변이나 맹수의 공격 혹은 질병으로부터 보호를 받기 위한 수단으로서 하늘과 땅 심수(深水), 거목(巨木), 높은 산, 바다, 조상 등에게 절차를 갖추어서 빌었다. 즉 신체보전을 위한 구복행위가 제사가 발생하게 된 동기라고 할 수 있다. 이와 같이 인간이 자연변화나 어떤 공격체나 또는 질병으로부터 보호 받기 위한 수단으로서 행하여져 온 제사는, 동양에서는 중세와 근세에 이르자 차츰 유교적인 조상숭배의 제도로 변모하였다.[1]

한국의 제사는 고대부터 신명을 받들어 복을 빌고자 하는 의례로서 자연숭배의 제사 의식이 행해졌다. 삼국시대부터는 자연신에 대한 제사가 차츰 자신의 조상에 대한 제사의례로 발전하였으며, 일반 민중보다 왕가에서 먼저 행해졌다. 특히 고려 중기 이후 유교가 유입되면서 조상에 대한 제사 의식은 지배세력인 사대부를 중심으로 급속도로 공고화되었다. 《예서(禮書)》에 따르면 '제왕은 하늘을 제사지내고 제후는 산천을 제사지내며 사대부는 조상을 제사지낸다.'고 하였다.[2] 조선시대 초기에는 불교의례의 전통이 강하게 남아 《주자가례》와 같은 유교의례가 사회전반에 쉽게 보급되지 않았다. 16세기 중엽부터 성리학이 심화 되면서 양반 사대부 사회에서 《주자가례》가 정착하게 되고 《주자가례》에서 명시된 4대조까지 제사를 지내는 전통이 있었다. 오늘날에는 2대조까지 간소화되어 이어져 오면서 조상에 대한 존경과 추모의 표시로 지내기도 한다.[3]

제사상 구성
제사상 차림 규칙
제사상 진설은 각지방과 가문에 따라 다르나 근본적인 양식은 대한민국 상고시대부터 이어져 오는 토속적인 제수를 저변에 두고 《주자가례》의 내용을 수용하고, 《사례편람》에 의해 규범화 된 것이다.[4]

제수는 제사에 차리는 음식물이다. 제사는 고인을 추모하기 위한 정성의 표시라고 할 수 있다. 그러므로 제수는 돈을 많이 들여 성찬으로 차리기보다는 평상시 망인(亡人)이 즐겨 먹던 음식 또는 가정에서 먹는 반상차림으로 깨끗하게 차려 정성을 다하면 족하다. 이때문에 예서의 기준보다 집집마다 각양각색으로 죽은 사람이 살아 생전에 좋아하던 음식을 올리는 경우가 늘어나고 있다.[5] 하지만 기본적으로 제사상의 상차림 방식인 제수진설법은 다음과 같은 규칙에 따라 차려진다.[6]

고비합설(考妣合設) : 내외분일 경우 남자 조상과 여자 조상은 함께 차린다.
시접거중(匙楪居中) : 수저를 담은 그릇은 신위의 앞 중앙에 놓는다.
반서갱동(飯西羹東) : 밥(메)는 서쪽이고 국(갱)은 동쪽이다(산 사람과 반대)
적접거중(炙楪居中) : 구이(적)는 중앙에 놓는다.
어동육서(魚東肉西) : 생선은 동쪽에, 고기는 서쪽에 놓는다.
동두서미(東頭西尾) : 대가리를 동쪽에 향하고, 꼬리는 서쪽을 향한다.
배복방향(背腹方向) : 닭구이나 생선포는 등이 위로 향한다.
면서병동(麵西餠東) : 국수는 서쪽에, 떡은 동쪽에 놓는다.
숙서생동(熟西生東) : 익힌 나물은 서쪽이고, 생김치는 동쪽에 놓는다.
서포동해·혜(西脯東醢·醯) : 포는 서쪽이고. 생선젓과 식혜는 동쪽에 놓는다.
홍동백서(紅東白西) : 붉은 색의 과실은 동쪽에 놓고, 흰색의 과실은 서쪽에 놓는다.
동조서율(東棗西栗) : 대추는 동쪽이고 밤은 서쪽에 놓는다.
cf. 조율시이(棗栗枾梨) : 과실은 서쪽부터 대추, 밤, 감, 배 순서로 놓는다.

진설 음식
진설은 제사상의 음식을 준비한다는 말이다. 대한민국의 제사 음식은《주자가례》를 규범으로 한다. 조선 시대에 이를 수용하였기 때문인데, 《주자가례》는 중국의 생활방식을 담고 있기 때문에 대한민국에 맞게 재해석하거나 조금씩 변용하는 양상으로 음식을 준비했다. 주자가례의 진설도에 따르면 일반적으로 준비해야하는 음식들은 다음과 같다. 하지만 꼭 다음과 같이 해야하는 것은 아니고 집안 전통과 상황에 맞도록 하는 것이 중요하다고 한다.[7]

과일
《고례》에서는 포와 해가 기본 제찬이었으나 현대사회에 이르러 과일이 포와 더불어 가장 기본이 된다. 밥과 국이 없더라도 과일은 포와 올린다. 생과의 품목으로는 먹을 수 있는 것은 다 쓰인다. 주요 과일로 대추, 밤, 감, 배(조율이시)를 놓는다. 이 밖에 제철 음식(시과 등)들을 놓는다. 공자의 가어에서 복숭아를 제외시키고 있으나 대한민국의 유학자 이익은 시대에 따라 적절하게 변하게 차리는게 어긋나지 않다고 말하고 있다. 그러나 과는 생과 외에 조과, 사람이 직접 만든, 밀, 쌀가루 등을 이용해 기름에 튀겨 꿀 등을 묻여 만드는 박계나 약과도 의미한다. 계절에 따라 구애 받지 않으므로 일년 내내 올릴 수 있다. 꼬막도 해과라고 부르며 과일로서 올리기도 한다
소채는 김치, 나물 등을 말한다. 이는 침채, 숙채, 냉채로 조리방법에 따라 구분된다. 침채는 소금에 절인 것, 숙채는 데치거나 볶는 등 불에 조리한 것, 생채는 익히지 않고 조리한 것으로 초를 이용한 것이 많아 제사에는 주로 침채, 숙채를 사용한다. 이런 조리법은 채소의 특성에 따르는데 침채에는 김치 종류가 해당한다. 김치에는 파, 마늘, 고추 등의 냄새나는 양념을 넣지 않는다. 섬유질이 질기거나 독성이 있어 그대로 먹을 수 없는 재료들은 볶거나 데쳐 편하게 먹을 수 있도록 하는데 이에 해당하는 나물이 고사리, 숙주, 시금치 등이다. 도라지, 무 배추 등은 한가지 방법에 한하지 않고 다른 방식으로도 조리된다. 계절에 맞는 나물을 쓰기도한다. 무치기도 하고 간장과 함께 끓이기도 한다.[10][11]

어, 육
어는 보통 물에서 나는 것, 육은 땅에서 나는 가축 등을 뜻한다. 제사상에는 회, 전, 찜 등의 형태로 올라오는데 물고기의 경우 형태를 그대로 살려 굽거나, 찜으로 만들거나, 포를 떠 전으로 만든다. 고기의 경우, 양념을 무친 회, 불에 굽거나, 각종 재료들을 섞어 전 형태로 올라오고 닭고기의 경우에는 통째로 쪄 올린다. 방식에 따라 적, 포, 해로 나뉜다. 적은 불에 직접 굽는 조리법을 말하며 술을 드릴 때 올리는 특식이다. 고례에서는 동물의 내장을 사용했으나, 생선이나 쇠고기, 꿩 등이 사용되었고 다른 음식과 함께 한 그릇에 올렸다가 제사가 끝나면 다른 음식과 물린다. 포는 가장 기본이 되는 제찬으로 가장 낮은 등급의 제사에서도 올리도록 되어있었다. 포는 물고기, 육류를 건조시켜 만들어 저장이 용이하도록 했는데 숙성과정에서 변화가 와 상태가 개선되기도 했다. 포는 육포, 건어, 문어, 전복 등을 말한다. 밥을 주식으로 하는 우리문화권에서는 부식의 역할이 상당히 중요한데 밥이 필요없는 차례나, 상례에도 올라가는 기본 찬이다. 해는 가장 기본이 되는 제찬으로 가장 낮은 등급의 제사에서도 올리도록 되어있었다. 해는 젓갈을 말한다. 곡물을 섞을 경우 효소작용으로 저장 효과가 높아지는데 이를 식해라고 칭한다. 식혜의 혜와 발음이 비슷해 식혜를 올리는 집안도 있다. 포와 같이 중요한 부식의 역할을 하며 차례, 상례에도 올라가는 기본 찬품이다.[12][13]

갱, 탕
갱은 고기를 삶은 국물에 채소를 넣어 조미한 것을 뜻하며, 순수하게 고기만으로 만든 국을 태갱이라고도 한다. 현재는 갱을 태갱을 의미하는 용어로 많이 쓰며 생선, 채소 등이 사용된 것은 탕이라고 한다. 갱과 탕은 모두 형이라는 제기에 담는다. 갱은 보통 쇠고기를 삶은 국에 무로 맛을 더하며, 탕의 경우 갱에 두부, 생선, 다시마 등을 넣어 끌여 만든다.[14]

반, 미식, 면식

반은 주식이 되는 밥, 미식은 쌀로 만든 음식, 면식은 밀로 된 음식을 뜻한다. 이들은 곡류를 대표하며 고례에서는 오곡 등으로도 밥을 지어왔으너 지금은 밥은 쌀로만 올리고, 별도로 미식이나 면식을 올린다. 자세하게 말하면 미식은 쌀가루에 추가로 콩이나 팥 등이 섞인 각종 떡 종류를 뜻하며 면식은 밀가루 음식으로 주로 대한민국에서는 국수를 쓴다.《주자가례》에서는 만두를 사용하기도 하나 속이 고기, 채소, 양념 등을 사용하기 때문에 잘 쓰이지 않는다. 면식은 가정에 따라서 진설하기도 하고 하지 않기도 한다.[15][16][17]

제사에 올리는 술은은 보통 도수가 낮고 순한 종류를 사용한다. 고례에서는 제사에 예주를 쓴다고 하는데 이를 칭한다. 술은 누룩과 곡물을 섞어 발효시켜 만드는데 누룩대신 엿기름을 사용하면 단맛이 나는 식혜가 되는데 다른 이름으로 단술, 감주 등이 있다. 주로 청주를 진설한다. 소주를 쓰기도 한다. 조상이 술을 못 마셨다면 식혜로 대신해도 하기도 한다.[18]

초장
《주가가례》에서는 장을 언급하지 않으나 장은 예로부터 음식의 으뜸으로 여겨져 율곡이 제찬으로 보충해 넣어 청장이라는 이름으로 끼워넣었다. 초는 식초를 말하고 장은 간장 등을 말한다.[19]

지방
지방은 제사나 차례가 있을 때 종이에 써서 모시는 신위를 말한다. 사당이 없는 가정에서 주로 지방을 써서 제사를 지낸다. 관직명, 본관, 성씨 등을 기입한다.[20]

지역별 제사상
경상도
경북지역의 경우 경주지역은 제례음풍으로 어류가 크게 숭상되고 있었으며, 김치에 갈치가 들어가기도 했다. 대구지역은 적으로 상어고기를 구워서 올린다. 이는 대구 사투리인 ‘돔배기’로 많이 알려져 있는데, 영천지역이 돔배기 특산지로 유명하다. 안동지역은 대한민국에서 문어소비가 가장 많은 곳이라 한다. 문어에는 이름 자체에 글월 문(文)자가 들어 있을뿐더러 안에 먹물까지 담겨 있으니 선비의 상징물이라 여겨져서 제사나 큰 잔치에 문어가 빠지지 않기 때문이다.[21] 안동지역의 안동식혜 또한 제사상에 빠지지 않고 오르는 제물이다. 경남보다 닭고기나 쇠고기를 이용한 전류나 산적류가 많고, 제사떡으로는 본편(콩고물시루떡), 증편, 경단, 주악, 화전, 약식, 찹쌀가루로 만든 각색 웃기떡인 부편 등이 있다.[22] 제주로는 청주 이외에 탁주, 소주를 이용하였다.[23] 경남지역은 바다를 옆에 끼고 있어 어물을 제물로 많이 올린다. 조기 뿐만 아니라 민어, 가자미, 방어, 도미 등 여러 종류의 생선을 올리고 조개 등의 어패류를 올리는 지역도 있다. 특히 제사음식의 나물은 조개류를 다져 볶아 무치고, 갖가지 나물의 가운데 두부탕국을 얹어 낸다. 또한 제사를 끝낸 후 남은 음식으로 만든 진주헛제삿밥도 유명하며, 일반 가정에서 산야초로 만든 약주를 제주로 이용하였다.[24] 쌈은 안동과 영남지역에서만 볼 수 있는 제물인데, 영남지역에서는 김, 천엽, 계란지단, 다시마, 배추잎이, 안동지역에서는 천엽, 김, 계란지단이 쌈의 재료로 사용되었다.[25]


전라도
전라도의 지역성을 대표하는 음식으로 가장 유명한 것은 홍어요리이다. 따라서 전라도에서는 제사상 뿐만아니라 집안의 큰 잔치를 치를 때에는 반드시 홍어요리를 준비한다.[26] 또한 먹을거리가 풍성하고 음식문화가 발달한 지역이다보니 제물로 다양한 음식이 오른다. 병어나 낙지, 꼬막같은 어패류 또한 단골로 오르는 제물들이다. 전라북도는 설날에 콩나물잡채를 하기도 하고, 제사상의 적으로는 돼지고기적, 명태적, 새우적, 오징어적, 홍어적 등을 한다. 떡은 켜떡이라고 불리는 데 얇은 것이 특징이며, 찰떡은 두께 0.5cm 정도로 만들기도 한다. 전주의 송편은 크기가 아주 작아 엄지손가락 마디 하나 정도의 크기라고 한다.[27]


경기도
경기도는 어물로 반드시 조기를 사용하고 형편이 어려운 집에서는 북어를 올렸다. 육류는 고기산적, 북어포를 올리고 나물의 종류는 고사리, 도라지, 무나물 혹은 시금치나물을 올렸으며 두부적, 사과, 배, 대추, 밤, 유과, 다식, 백편 등을 진설한다. 북어를 올린 이유는 북어가 다산과 풍요의 상징으로 여겨졌기 때문이다. 어물은 다른 지역에 비해 상대적으로 적게 올리는 편이며, 탕은 갱(羹)이라고도 하는데 육탕, 어탕, 소탕의 3탕을 올렸으나 최근에는 육탕 한 가지만 올리기도 한다. 조선시대에는 왕릉 옆에 조포사(造泡寺)가 있어 제사상에 올릴 두부를 이곳에서 만들었다는 기록이 있다.[28]


강원도
강원도는 대부분이 산간지방이라 나물과 감자·고구마를 이용한 제물이 많다. 평창지역은 제사상에 반드시 메밀전을 올리며 감자전이나 무와 배추로 만든 적을 올리기도 한다. 버섯류도 부침이나 전의 단골 재료로 쓰이는데 특히 송이처럼 귀한 버섯은 소적으로 구워내 제물로 올린다. 어물로는 명태, 가자미 등을 찌고 그 위에 살짝 데친 문어를 잘 펴서 얹는다. 콩나물을 쓰지 않는 가문도 있으며 떡은 시루떡을 주로 하고 절편을 하기도 한다. 달걀을 삶아 껍질을 벗겨 제물로 올리기도 한다. 전은 대구전, 명태전, 고구마전을 올리고 녹두빈대떡을 하기도 한다.[29] 강릉지역은 다른 지역이 식혜의 밥을 떠서 대추 3조각을 얹은 ‘식혜밥’을 제물로 올리는 반면에 고춧가루, 파, 마늘 등을 넣지 않은 하얀 식해를 올린다. 그러나 최근의 제사상에는 식해 대신에 식혜밥이 오르고 있어 전통적인 제사상차림의 모습이 사라지고 있음을 보여준다.[30]


충청도
충청도 제사상에 올리는 음식은 메, 면, 탕, 산적, 어적, 향누름적, 포, 제주, 식혜, 과일, 나물 등을 쓴다. 향누름적은 도라지, 파, 고비, 고기를 길게 잘라 양념하여 볶아 꼬치에 끼고 알지단채로 장식한 것을 말한다. 충청도는 지리적으로 삼면이 육지이고, 한 면이 바다와 접하고 있어서 농산물과 해산물이 풍부하여 곡물음식이 발달하고 음식에 해산물을 많이 이용한다. 경북에 인접한 지역은 대구포, 상어포, 가오리포, 오징어, 피문어 등의 건어물을 올리고 전북에 인접한 지역은 말린 홍어, 병어, 가자미, 낙지, 서대묵 등을 올린다. 내륙 지역은 배추전, 무적 등 전과 부침류를 많이 올린다.[31]


제주도
제주도의 종교·의례음식으로 가장 많이 사용되는 음식재료는 돼지고기·달걀·쌀·두부·나물·옥돔·닭고기·팥·묵 등이다. 육지의 종교·의례음식과 크게 다르지 않은데 18세기 이후 종교·의례음식이 육지화 과정을 밟았기 때문이다. 그러나 돼지고기를 가장 중요한 육고기 제물로 사용한다든지, 해산물로 다른 육고기를 대체한다든지, 떡의 재료로 제주에서 나는 잡곡이 많이 사용된다는 점은 제주도만의 특색이라 할 수 있다.[32] 제수에서는 어적(상어적, 오징어적, 옥돔적)을 많이 쓴다. 육지에서 흔한 밤과 대추는 제주도에서 거의 생산되지 않아 쓰지 않는 것이 관행이다. 제주(祭酒)는 골감주와 좁쌀청주(오메기술)을 쓰고 시판 소주를 쓰는 집도 있다.[33] 현대의 제주 기제사음식으로는 인스턴트 식품 또는 가공 식재료를 사용한다. 각종 청량음료가 나오면서 골감주 대신 환타를 올리거나 제물빵 대신 쵸코파이나 또는 제편 대신 카스텔라나 롤케잌을 올리기도 한다.[34]

기타
차례와 제사
차례(茶禮)는 간소한 약식 제사로 《가례》를 비롯한 예서에는 언급되지 않는다. 그러나 우리 나라에서는 명절에 조상에게 올리는 제사를 차례라고 한다. 차례라는 이름의 유래는 사당 제도와 밀접한 관련이 있다. ‘가례’에는 정월 초하루, 동지, 매월 초하루, 보름에 참배하는 제사가 있는데, 그 중 매월 보름에는 술잔이 아닌 찻잔만을 올리게 되어 있다. 차를 올리는 례라고 하여 차례로 유래된 것으로 짐작된다. 또한 사당에서 명절에 올리는 제사는 특별한 계절식을 올리는 것이 관례였고, 대한민국에서 가장 큰 명절인 설과 추석에서는 일반 제사상에서의 음식들과 더불어 그 때 수확된 음식을 올린다. 차례의 상차림은 대부분 기제사와 같으나 몇가지 다르다. 차례상에서는 잔 드리기를 한번만 하기 때문에 적(炙)은 고기, 생선을 따로 담지 않고 한 접시에 미리 올린다. 예법에는 또한 국과 밥 대신 설에는 떡국, 추석에는 비워놓는 것을 원칙으로 한다. 추석에는 또한 토란과 쇠고기, 다시마를 넣은 국을 올리며, 그 밖의 젓갈을 올리는 자리에는 식혜 건더기를 접시에 담아 올리며, 떡 위치에는 송편을 올린다. [35]

현대의 제사상
시대가 변하면서 제식에도 변화가 있다. 과거에는 지역 별로 특산물을 올리거나, 시기에 따라 적절한 계절식, 그리고 조상이 좋아했던 음식을 제사상에 올리는 등 가정마다 천차만별이었다.[36] 그러나 최근에는 음식이 일반화되어가고 있으며, 대가족에서 핵가족으로 인원이 줄게 되면서 제사상의 절대적인 크기 또한 줄어들고 있다. 또한 제사상을 직접 차리지 않고 주문하는 것도 최근의 한 추세이다. 하지만 이렇게 주문되는 제사상도 시간에 따라 달라지고 있다. 한국제사상차림의 정복희 원장에 다르면 제사상 주문이 시작된 초기에는 주문자에 따라서 다양한 제사상이 나갔지만, 최근의 경우 대행업체에 알아서 맡기는 경우가 많은데 이는 제사상차림의 번거로움을 줄이기 위해서라고 본다. 또한 제사상 자체도 전통적인 음식보다, 제사를 지낸 후 먹기 쉬운 음식을 주문하는 추세라고 한다. [37]

개신교와 제사상
성경에 따르면 기독교인은 부모님의 생존 시에 효도하는 것이 원칙이며(출20:12, 엡 6:1), 돌아가신 후 고인을 기리는 의식은 십계명을 범하여 우상숭배이기 때문에 해서는 안된다(출20:3-6). 그러나 대한민국의 전통적인 제사에 대한 대안으로 추도예배가 있다. 추도예배의 뜻은 죽은 이를 기린단 듯이지만, 실제로는 고인의 죽음을 통해 신에게 예배를 드린다는 측면이다. 같은 이유로 제식 또한 먹을 수 없는데 제식은 우상의 제물로 귀신이 먹은 음식이라는 측면이 강하기 때문이다.

암수살인

암수살인》은 2018년에 개봉한 대한민국의 영화이다.
줄거리
부산에서 발생한 암수범죄[주 1]를 바탕으로 감옥에서 추가 살인을 자백한 살인범과 사건을 쫒는 형사의 이야기를 다룬 범죄 실화극.

캐스팅
김윤석 : 김형민 역
주지훈 : 강태오 역
진선규 : 조 형사 역
정종준 : 형사과장 역
허진 : 지희 할매 역
김중기 : 변호사 역
김영웅 : 정봉 역
정기섭 : 한 형사 역
이봉련 : 강숙자 역
전국환 : 형민 아버지 역
김종수 : 마수대장 역
배해선 : 박미영 역
권소현 : 오지희 역
원현준 : 김욱철 역
박진영 : 판사 역
이재현 : 최동주 역
박우식 : 황칠규 역
김은희 : 황칠규 여동생 역
박봉주 : 황칠규 아버지 역
김우석 : 형사과 형사 1 역
이현주 : 여사장 역
박창화 : 수선주인 역
김미경 : 칼국수집 아줌마 역
최영환 : 대교시설 관리인 역
한철우 : 택시기사 역
김미화 : 미용실 원장 역
박성현 : 동구형사 1 역
신민규 : 동구형사 2 역
박기량 : 동구형사 3 역
권회수 : 동구형사 4 역
황재열 : 포크레인기사 역
어주선 : 슈퍼영감 역
임진택 : 주차관리원 역
최광제 : 덩치 1 역
오운환 : 덩치 2 역
임헌호 : 대머리형사 역
윤성원 : 형사 2 역
공훈 : 사내 역
양중경 : 동창회 친구 역
김학준 : 과수대원 역
이윤재 : 검시관 역
박현 : 인부 역
박진수 : 유족 역
남혜진 : 유가족 아줌마 역
김진혁 : 택시기사 역
이상빈 : 어린 숙자 역
정택현 : 어린 강태오 역
김지성 : 어린 최동주 역
유상흘 : 형민 형 역
이민영 : 형민 형수 역
홍명기 : 의경 역
김란흔 : 수사관 역
최창준 : 형사과 형사 2 역
홍웅선 : 형사과 형사 3 역
김봉조 : 순경 역
심소영 : 중년여자 역
변창열 : 중년남자 역
서정빈 : 허수진 역
강두섭 : 교도관 1 역
임병우 : 교도관 2 역
박재한 : 기소검사 역
나종기 : 교감 역
윤동재 : 취객남 1 역
이호광 : 취객남 2 역
이슬이 : 구토여 역
김정연 : 어린 오지희 역
정미숙 : 세차아줌마 역
노영하 : 시장싸움여자 역
구경영 : 시장싸움여자 역
이다혜 : 산부인과 역
제홍규 : 교도관 역
최인환 : 동창회싸움남 역
김구태 : 동창회싸움남 역
양영애 : 황칠규 엄마 역
문정희 : 검사 역 (우정출연)
주진모 : 송경수 역 (특별출연)
고창석 : 잠수대장 역 (특별출연)
곽규택 : 고등법원 판사 역 (특별출연)
이유준 : 박 사장 역 (특별출연)
수상
2018년 제38회 한국영화평론가협회상 각본상 - 곽경택, 김태균
2018년 제38회 한국영화평론가협회상 영평 11선
2018년 제3회 런던동아시아영화제 남우주연상 - 김윤석
2018년 제39회 청룡영화상 각본상 - 곽경택, 김태균
2018년 제39회 청룡영화상 청정원 인기스타상 - 주지훈
2018년 제5회 한국영화제작가협회상 남우주연상 - 주지훈
2018년 제7회 대한민국 베스트 스타상 베스트 주연상 - 김윤석
2019년 제55회 백상예술대상 영화부문 시나리오상 - 곽경택, 김태균
2019년 제24회 춘사영화제 남우주연상 - 주지훈
2019년 제24회 춘사영화제 신인감독상 - 김태균
2019년 제39회 황금촬영상 최우수 남우주연상 - 주지훈
같이 보기
2018년 대한민국의 영화 목록
외부 링크
암수살인 - 네이버 영화
암수살인 - 다음 영화
암수살인 - 무비스트
17507 - 한국영화 데이터베이스
(영어) 암수살인 - 인터넷 영화 데이터베이스

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