Tens of thousands of German football fans are giving a hero's welcome to the World Cup-winning team in Berlin.
The main celebrations were at the Brandenburg Gate, where
players displayed the cup on a large stage while performing an impromptu
dance.Many had gathered since dawn to welcome the players who touched down from Brazil on Tuesday morning. Huge crowds lined their bus route into the capital.
It was the fourth German cup win and the first since reunification in 1990.
Berlin transformed The team's 1-0 victory over Argentina in Sunday's final sparked delirious scenes across Germany. which are culminating in Tuesday's celebrations in central Berlin.
The team arrived in an open-top bus emblazoned with the years they have won the competition - 1954, 1974, 1990 and 2014.
The BBC's Lucy Hockings in Berlin says there was a carnival atmosphere in the city, with thousands taking the day off to witness the spectacle even though Tuesday is not officially a holiday.
Many waited since dawn to see coach Joachim Loew's team arrive in central Berlin with the much coveted trophy
"For our sakes the fans suffered with us. They were nervous with us. In the end they cheered with us. Without you we would not be here," he said.
Mario Goetze, the man who scored the winning goal on Sunday, said the experience of winning the cup was "dreamlike".
The German team showed no signs of jet-lag as they greeted adoring fans
Players disembarked form their plane with the World Cup trophy prominently on display
The winning team's Boeing 747 landed at
Tegel airport after flying a lap of honour over the "fan mile" in front
of the landmark Brandenburg Gate
"This is a historic event," 34-year-old supporter Bernd Hesse told AFP news agency.
He said that fans of the team had waited 24 years for a German World Cup victory.
Demand for replica World Cup shirts -
especially those with four stars on to mark the country's fourth title -
has reached an all-time high
The cup win has been celebrated by a wide
cross-section of German society, especially younger people who have
been out on the streets in force to celebrate
The BBC's Steve Evans in Berlin says that the was transformed for the arrival, with the old sponsors' logos for the tournament torn down and new ones for the homecoming put up.
Commercial opportunities were maximised, our correspondent says.
The German victory in Brazil was the first time the competition had been won in South America by a European nation.
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