Origins The club was formed on 14 September 1878 as
Deutschen Fußball-Verein Hannover gegründet 1878. Under the leadership of
Ferdinand-Wilhelm Fricke, then only 15 years old, 24 young men formed the first football or rugby club in the country, a distinction was not made in Germany back then. The move was inspired by watching, and occasionally joining the players of the
English Hannover Football-Club. The first proper game of rugby however was not played until 1883, when "England" played "Germany" in Hannover on 17 October. In 1899, Fricke discovered an ideal spot for the club to play at,
Am Schnellen Graben, still the home of
DFV today. A year later, the
Verband Hannoverscher Fußball-Vereine (
Association of Hanover football clubs) was formed and
DFV won its first championship. In 1909, the club adopted
field hockey as another sport. In 1913, the
DFV reached its first German championship final but lost to
SC 1880 Frankfurt. Shortly after, the events of the First World War bring the activities of the club almost to a halt. Of the club members to lose their live in the war,
Hermann Löns, "The Poet of the Heath", is the best known. On 17 January 1927, the founding father of the club, F.W. Fricke, died. A year later, the club played in its second German final, and lost once more. In 1929, the club changed its name to
Deutscher Sportverein Hannover gegründet 1878 e.V., reflecting the fact that it didn't play football but rugby. During the Second World War, the clubs facilities suffered heavily from allied bombing raids and in 1945, the club house was in ruins. In the post-war years, the
DSV managed to rebuild its facilities and in 1949 it reopened its club house. On 7 June 1964, Germany's oldest rugby club finally earned its first German championship, beating
FC St. Pauli 11–0 in
Offenbach am Main.
78 won two more championships, in 1968 and 1970, before the
Rugby-Bundesliga was established in 1971. The club was part of the new league but did not achieve highly in its first ten years. Its fourth national championship came in 1982, when
RG Heidelberg was beaten 15–6. The club was to play in seven championship finals in a row from then on, winning the first four and then losing three. With a years interruption in 1989, the team returned for another championship in 1990. After another championship in 1991,
DSV reached the final for a last time in 1993. In the
German Cup, the club continued to be successful, winning it in 1996 and 1998 and making final appearances in the two years after. Up until the merger with SV 08 Ricklingen, the
DSV 78 continued to be a top side in German rugby. DSV 78 finished first in their group in the 2012–13 season and qualified for the north/east division of the championship round, where it also came first. The club was knocked out in the quarter-finals of the play-offs after a 7–13 loss to
RG Heidelberg. The club finished first in the north-east championship round again in 2013–14, received a bye for the first round of the play-offs and, after defeating
SC Neuenheim in the quarter-finals, lost to
TV Pforzheim in the semi-finals. In the 2014–15 season the club finished first in the north-east championship group but was knocked out by SC Neuenheim in the quarter-finals of the play-offs, losing 42–21.
DSV 78/08 Ricklingen In 2003, the club decided to join up with SV 08 Ricklingen to form an on-the-field union and play under the name DSV 78/08 Ricklingen. Both clubs however continue to exist as separate entities. In 2009,
SV 08 decided to leave this joint venture. ==Club honours==