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{{Short description|Athletic competitions in ancient Greece}}
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The '''Ancient Olympic Games''', originally referred to as simply the '''Olympic Games''' ({{lang-el|Ολυμπιακοί Αγώνες}}; ''Olympiakoi Agones'') were a series of ]s held between various ]s of ]. They began in 776 ] in ], ], and celebrated until 393 ].<ref name="Encarta-Ancient">{{cite web |url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761576089/Ancient_Olympic_Games.html |title=Ancient Olympic Games|accessdate=2006-12-27 |date=1997-20-06 |work=Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2006 |publisher=Microsoft Corporation }}</ref>
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2017}}
The prizes were olive wreaths, palm branches and woollen ribbons.
], a place devoted to the training of wrestlers and other athletes]]
==Legendary origin ==
{{Olympic Games sidebar}}
The '''ancient Olympic Games''' ({{langx|grc|τὰ Ὀλύμπια}}, ''ta Olympia''<ref name="perseus.tuft.edu">{{LSJ|*)olu/mpia|Ὀλύμπια|ref|mLSJ}}.</ref>), or the '''ancient Olympics''', were a series of ] among representatives of ] and one of the ] of ]. They were held at the ] of ], in honor of ], and the Greeks gave them a ]. The originating Olympic Games are traditionally dated to 776 BC.<ref name="olym_Olym">{{cite web |title = History |work = Olympic Games |access-date = 11 August 2016 |url = https://www.olympic.org/ancient-olympic-games/history |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160809210127/https://www.olympic.org/ancient-olympic-games/history |archive-date = 9 August 2016 |df = dmy-all }}</ref> The games were held every four years, or ], which became a unit of time in historical chronologies. These Olympiads were referred to based on the winner of their '']'' sprint, e.g., "the third year of the eighteenth Olympiad when Ladas of Argos won the ''stadion''".<ref> Tony Parrottet, ''The Naked Olympics'' (2004) at 145. Pausinias uses such references frequently in ''Description of Greece.'' E.g., "I found that the combat took pace when Pisistratus was archon at Athens in the 4th year . . . of the Olympiad in which Eurybotus, the Athenian, won the footrace." Pausinias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.24.7.</ref> They continued to be celebrated when Greece came under ] in the 2nd century BC. Their last recorded celebration was in AD 393, under the emperor ], but archaeological evidence indicates that some games were still held after this date.<ref name="Perrottet2004" /><ref name="Hamlet, Ingomar 2004 pp. 53-75">Hamlet, Ingomar. "Theodosius I. And The Olympic Games". Nikephoros 17 (2004): pp. 53–75. See also M.I. Finley & H.W. Pleket, ''The Olympic Games: The First Thousand Years'' (1976) p. 13.</ref> The games likely came to an end under ], possibly in connection with a fire that burned down the ] during his reign.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Remijsen |first1=Sofie |title=The End of Greek Athletics in Late Antiquity |date=2015 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=49}}</ref>


During the celebration of the games, the ] (''ekecheiría'') was announced so that athletes and religious pilgrims could travel from their cities to the games in safety. The prizes for the victors were ] or crowns. The games became a political tool used by city-states to assert dominance over their rival city states. Politicians would announce political alliances at the games, and in times of war, priests would offer sacrifices to the gods for victory. The games were also used to help spread ] throughout the Mediterranean. The Olympics also featured religious celebrations. The ] was counted as one of the ]. Sculptors and poets would congregate each Olympiad to display their works of art to would-be patrons.
The origins of the Ancient Olympic Games are unknown, but several legends and myths have survived. One of these involved ], king of ] and eponymous hero of the ], to whom offerings were made during the games. The ] ] asserted, " Olympian games are nothing else than the funeral sacrifices of Pelops."<ref name="myth quote">{{cite web |url=http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/020802.htm |title=Chapter 2. The Absurdity and Impiety of the Heathen Mysteries and Fables About the Birth and Death of Their Gods. |work=Exhortation to the Heathen |author=St. Clement Of Alexandria |accessdate=2007-04-18 |publisher=New Advent}}</ref> That myth tells of how Pelops' overcame the King and won the hand of his daughter ] with the help of ], his old ], a myth linked to the later fall of the house of ] and the sufferings of ].


The ancient Olympics had fewer events than the modern games, and for many years only freeborn Greek men were allowed to participate,<ref>David Sansone, ''Ancient Greek civilization,'' Wiley-Blackwell, 2003, p.32</ref> although there were victorious women chariot owners. Moreover, throughout their history, the Olympics, both ancient and modern, have occasionally become arenas where political expressions, such as demonstrations, boycotts, and embargoes, have been employed by nations and individuals to exert influence over these sporting events.<ref>Mark Golden, ''Greece & Rome'', Second Series, Vol. 58, No. 1 (APRIL 2011) pp. 1–13</ref> As long as they met the entrance criteria, athletes from any Greek ] and kingdom were allowed to participate. The games were always held at Olympia rather than moving between different locations like the ].<ref name=perseus>{{cite web |title = The Ancient Olympics |publisher = Tufts University |work = The Perseus Project |url = https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics |access-date = 12 February 2010 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100210170341/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics |archive-date = 10 February 2010 |url-status = live }}</ref> Victors at the Olympics were honored, and their feats chronicled for future generations.
A myth tells of the hero Herakles, or ], who won a race at Olympia and then decreed that the race should be re-enacted every four years, while another claims that ] had instated the festival after his defeat of the ] ]. Yet another tells of King ] of ], who consulted the ] ] at ]{{ndash}} to try and save his people from war in the 9th century BC. The prophetess advised him to organize games in honour of the gods. The ]n adversary of Iphitos then decided to stop fighting during these games, which were called Olympic, after the sanctuary of Olympia where they were held. Had they been named after ], the mountain on which the Greek gods were said to live, they would have been called Olympian games rather than Olympic. The favorite story is that Heracles celebrated cleaning the Augean Stables by building Olympia with help from Athena.


== Origin myths ==
Whatever the origin, the games were held to be one of the two central rituals in ], the other being the ].<ref name="HickokSports">{{cite web |url=http://www.hickoksports.com/history/olancien.shtml |title=The Ancient Olympic Games |publisher=HickokSports |date=] |accessdate=2007-05-13}}</ref>
]
To the ancient Greeks, it was important to root the Olympic Games in ].<ref>Kyle, 1999, p.101</ref> During the time of the ancient games their origins were attributed to the gods, and competing legends persisted as to who actually was responsible for the genesis of the games.<ref>Kyle, 1999, pp.101–102</ref> The patterns that emerge from these legends are that the Greeks believed the games had their roots in religion, that athletic competition was tied to worship of the gods, and the revival of the ancient games was intended to bring peace, harmony and a return to the origins of Greek life.<ref>Kyle, 1999, p.102–104</ref>


These origin traditions have become nearly impossible to untangle, yet a chronology and patterns have arisen that help people understand the story behind the games.<ref>Kyle, 1999, p.102</ref> Greek historian ] provides a story about the ] Heracles (not to be confused with the ] who was the son of ] and joined the Roman pantheon) and four of his brothers, Paeonaeus, ], ] and ], who raced at ] to entertain the newborn Zeus. He crowned the victor with an ] (which thus became a peace symbol), which also explains the four-year interval, bringing the games around every fifth year (counting inclusively).<ref>Spivey, 2005, pp.225–226</ref><ref>], Description of Greece, 5.7.6–9</ref> The other Olympian gods (so named because they lived permanently on ]) would also engage in wrestling, jumping and running contests.<ref>Spivey, 2005, p.226</ref>
Another possibility for the actual origin of the Games is that they essentially 'evolved' from Funeral Games.

Another myth of the origin of the games is the story of ], a local ] hero. ], the king of ], had a daughter named ], and according to an oracle, the king would be killed by her husband. Therefore, he decreed that any young man who wanted to marry his daughter was required to drive away with her in his chariot, and Oenomaus would follow in another chariot, and spear the suitor if he caught up with them. Now, the king's chariot horses were a present from the god ] and therefore supernaturally fast. The king's daughter fell in love with a man called Pelops. Before the race however, Pelops persuaded Oenomaus' charioteer ] to replace the bronze axle pins of the king's chariot with wax ones. Naturally, during the race, the wax melted and the king fell from his chariot and was killed. After his victory, Pelops organized chariot races as a thanksgiving to the gods and as funeral games in honor of King Oenomaus, in order to be purified of his death. It was from this funeral race held at Olympia that the beginnings of the Olympic Games were inspired. Pelops became a great king, a local hero, and he gave his name to the ].

One (later) myth, attributed to ], states that the festival at Olympia involved ], the son of Zeus: According to Pindar, Heracles established an athletic festival to honor his father, Zeus, after he had completed his ].


== History == == History ==
The Games first started in Olympia, Greece, in a sanctuary site for the ] near the towns of Elis and ] (both in ] on the peninsula of ]).
The Sanctuary of Zeus in Olympia housed a 12 metre high ], the father of the Greek gods, sculpted by ]. This statue was one of the ancient ].


===Prehistory===
The Olympic Games were held in four year intervals, and later the Greek method of counting the years even referred to these Games, using the term '']'' for the period between two Games. The historian ] who lived in the 4th century BC is believed to have invented the use of Olympiads to count years, much as we today use ] and BC. Previously every Greek state used its own dating system, something that continued for local events, which led to confusion when trying to determine dates. "Diodorus states that there was a solar eclipse in the third year of the 113th Olympiad, which must be the eclipse of 316 BC. This gives us a date of (mid-summer) 786 BC for the first year of the first Olympiad".<ref>"The Athletics of the Ancient Olympics: A Summary and Research Tool" by Kotynski, p.3 (Quote used with permission). For the calculation of the date, see Kotynski footnote 6.</ref> Nevertheless, there is disagreement among scholars whether the games truly began at this time or not.<ref>See, for example, Alfred Mallwitz's article "Cult and Competition Locations at Olympia" p.101 in which he argues that the games may not have started until about 704 BC. Hugh Lee, on the other hand, in his article "The 'First' Olympic Games of 776 B.C." p.112, follows an ancient source that claims that there were twenty-seven Olympiads before the first one was recorded in 776. There are no records of the Olympic victors extant from earlier than the 5th century BC.</ref>
Areas around the Mediterranean had a long tradition of physical activities, eventhough they did not seem to hold regular competitions, with the events being probably the preserve of kings and upper classes.{{sfn|Young|2004|p=3}} The earliest evidence of athletic tradition in Greece come from ] artistic represenations, such as from the island of ] and ], and ] literary texts.{{sfn|Beale|2011|pp=9-12}} The ] centered on Crete engaged in gymnastics, with ], tumbling, running, wrestling and boxing shown on their frescoes. The ] adopted Minoan games and also raced chariots in religious or funerary ceremonies.{{sfn|Young|2004|pp=5–6}}<ref>{{cite book |author=Wendy J. Raschke |title=Archaeology Of The Olympics: The Olympics & Other Festivals In Antiquity |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DwU1IlTEhrYC&pg=PA22 |access-date=12 August 2012 |date=15 June 1988 |publisher=Univ of Wisconsin Press |isbn=978-0-299-11334-6 |pages=22– |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131012003844/http://books.google.com/books?id=DwU1IlTEhrYC&pg=PA22 |archive-date=12 October 2013 |df=dmy-all}}</ref> The exact relation between the early Minoan and Mycenaean sporting activities and the later Greek practicies remains elusive.{{sfn|Beale|2011|pp=9-11}} The heroes of ]'s epics, composed around 750 BC and held to represent a late Bronze Age society, participate in athletic competitions to honor the dead. In the '']'' there are chariot races, boxing, wrestling, a foot race, as well as fencing, archery, and spear throwing. The '']'' adds to these a long jump and discus throw.{{sfn|Young|2004|pp=6-7}}<ref>{{harvnb|Beale|2011|p=12}} writes that, while the Bronze Age visual images are typically hard to interpret due to their lack of context and poor condition, Homeric epics provide a detailed discription of athletic competitions and the events involved, although, per {{harvnb|Young|2004|p=8}}, the question is how much of this "is an authentic memory of Mycenaean times, and how much comes from life in eighth-century Greece." </ref>
]
The only competition held then was, according to the Greek traveller ], the '']'' race, a race over about 190 metres, measured after the feet of Hercules. The word ''stadium'' is derived from this foot race.


===First games===
The early Olympics were also held to be the place where the Greek tradition of ] was first introduced in 720 BC, either by the Spartans or by the Megarian ].
] was one of the most popular sports in the ancient Olympics Games and was introduced into the Olympics in 688 BCE.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Early |first=Gerald |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0sqCDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA25 |title=The Cambridge Companion to Boxing |date=2019-01-24 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-65103-5 |pages=25 |language=en}}</ref> Scene of youths boxing, {{Circa|336}} B.C]]
] reckoned the date of the first Olympics to be 776&nbsp;BC, a date largely accepted by most, though not all, subsequent ancient historians.<ref>Nelson, Max. (2006) "The First Olympic Games" in Gerald P. Schaus and Stephen R. Wenn, eds. ''Onward to the Olympics: Historical Perspectives on the Olympic Games'' (Waterloo), pp. 47–58. See also, for example, "Olympic Games, in ''The Classical Tradition'' (2010) p.654.</ref> To this day, this is the conventional given date for the inception of the ancient Olympics and, while this specific date of origin cannot be verified, it is generally accepted that the games date from some time in the eighth century BC.{{Sfn|Sansone|2004|p=32}} Archaeological finds confirm, approximately, the Olympics starting at or soon after this time.{{sfn|Young|2004|pp=16–17}}


Archaeology suggests that major games at Olympia arose probably around 700. Christesen's important work on the Olympic victor lists shows that victors' names and details were unreliable until the sixth century. Elis's independent state administered it, and while the Eleans managed the games well, there sometimes was bias and interference. Also, despite modern illusions, the famous Olympic truce only mandated safe passage for visitors; it did not stop all wars in Greece or even at Olympia.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Edelman |first=Edelman |title=The Oxford Handbook of Sports History |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2017 |isbn=9780199984749 |pages=85}}. See also Finley & Pleket, pp.98-99.</ref>
Several groups fought over control of the sanctuary, and hence the Games, for prestige and political advantage. Pausanias writes that in 668 BC, Pheidon of ] was commissioned by the town of Pisa to capture the sanctuary from the town of Elis, which he did and then personally controlled the Games for that year. The next year Elis regained control.


====Olympiad calendar====
The Athenian writer ] in 364 BC gives a contemporary record of an Elean attack during the ] final of the Games themselves, as the Pisans were again in control. The Eleans pushed the defenders almost to the altar before retreating due to missiles being thrown at them from the porticos. During that night the defending Arcadians constructed defensive palisades, and the next morning on seeing the strength of the defence the Eleans retreated.
The historian ], who lived in the fourth century BC, is one potential candidate for establishing the use of Olympiads to count years, although credit for codifying this particular epoch usually falls to ], to ], or even to Timaeus, whom Eratosthenes may have imitated.<ref>Plutarch, ''Numa Pompilius 1.4''</ref><ref>Dionysius, ''1.74–1–3''. Little remains of Eratosthenes' ''Chronographiae'', but its academic influence is clearly demonstrated here in the ''Roman Antiquities'' by Dionysius of Halicarnassus.</ref><ref>Denis Feeney in ''Caesar's Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History''. (Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: the University of California Press, 2007), 84.</ref> The Olympic Games were held at four-year intervals, and later, the ancient historians' method of counting the years even referred to these games, using '']'' for the period between two games. Previously, the local dating systems of the Greek states were used (they continued to be used by everyone except historians), which led to confusion when trying to determine dates. For example, Diodorus states that there was a solar eclipse in the third year of the 113th Olympiad, which must be the eclipse of 316 BC. This gives a date of (mid-summer) 765 BC for the first year of the first Olympiad.<ref>"The Athletics of the Ancient Olympics: A Summary and Research Tool" by Kotynski, p.3 (Quote used with permission). For the calculation of the date, see Kotynski footnote 6.</ref> Nevertheless, there is disagreement among scholars as to when the games began.<ref>See, for example, Alfred Mallwitz's article "Cult and Competition Locations at Olympia" p.101 in which he argues that the games may not have started until about 704 BC. Hugh Lee, on the other hand, in his article "The 'First' Olympic Games of 776 B.C.E" p.112, follows an ancient source that claims that there were twenty-seven Olympiads before the first one was recorded in 776. There are no records of Olympic victors extant from earlier than the fifth century BC.</ref>


According to the later Greek traveler ], who wrote in 175 AD, the only competition held at first was the '']'', a race over about {{convert|190|m|abbr=off}}.<ref>See Perrott, p.138, and "Olympic Games" in ''The Oxford Classical Dictionary'' (2003), p.1066.</ref> The word ''stadium'' is derived from this event.
Related to the Elis/Pisa conflict, is the ], the first sanctioned competition for women, . It originally consisted of foot races only, as did the men's competition. Some texts, including Pausanias's '']'', c. AD 175, state that ] gathered a group known as the "Sixteen Women" and made them administrators of the Heraea Games, out of gratitude for her marriage to ]. Other texts indicate that the "]" were peace-makers from Pisa and Elis and, because of their political competence, became administrators of the Heraea Games.


===Early history===
The Olympic Games were part of the ], four separate games held at two- or four-year intervals but arranged so that there was at least one set of games every year. The Olympic Games were more important and more prestigious than the Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian Games.
] reserved for the judges at Olympia on the south embankment of the stadium. Today, this is where the ] is passed on to the first torchbearer of the upcoming Olympic Games.]]
Several groups fought over control of the sanctuary at Olympia, and hence the games, for prestige and political advantage. Pausanias later writes that in 668 BC, Pheidon of ] was commissioned by the town of ] to capture the sanctuary from the town of ], which he did and then personally controlled the games for that year. The next year, Elis regained control.


Greek sports also derived its origins from the concept that physical energy was being expended in a ritualistic manner, in which Paleolithic age hunting practices were turned into a more socially and glamorized function, thus becoming sport. The Greeks in particular were unique in the regard that their competitions were often held in grand facilities, with prizes and nudity that stressed the Greek idealisms of training one's body to be as fit as their mind. It is this ideology and athletic exceptionalism that resulted in theories claiming the Greeks were the inventors of sport.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Kyle |first1=Donald |editor1-last=Edelman |editor1-first=Robert |editor2-last=Wilson |editor2-first=Wayne |title=Oxford Handbook of Sports History. |date=2020 |publisher=Oxford Univ Press US |isbn=978-0-19-752095-6 |pages=83–86|chapter=Ancient Greek and Roman Sport}}</ref>
Finally, the Olympic Games were suppressed by either ] in AD 393 or his grandson ] in AD 435,<ref>Kotynski, p.3. For more information about the question of this date, see Kotynski.</ref> as part of the campaign to impose Christianity as a ]. The site of Olympia remained until an earthquake destroyed it in the 6th century AD.


In the first 200 years of the games' existence, they only had regional religious importance. Only Greeks in proximity to Olympia competed in these early games. This is evidenced by the dominance of Peloponnesian athletes in the victors' roles.<ref>Spivey, 2005, p.172</ref> Over time, the Olympic Games gained increasing recognition and became part of the ], four separate games held at two- or four-year intervals, but arranged so that there was at least one set of games every year. The other Panhellenic Games were the ], ], and ], though the Olympic Games, being the oldest among the rest, were considered the most prestigious.{{Sfn|Sansone|2004|p=31}} The Olympic games were held to be one of the two central rituals in ], the other being the much older religious festival, the ].<ref name="HickokSports">{{cite web |url = http://www.hickoksports.com/history/olancien.shtml |title = The Ancient Olympic Games |publisher = HickokSports |date = 4 February 2005 |access-date = 13 May 2007 |archive-url = http://webarchive.loc.gov/all/20020222234145/http://www.hickoksports.com/history/olancien.shtml |archive-date = 22 February 2002 |url-status = dead |df = dmy-all }}</ref>
== Olympic truce==

During the Olympic Games a truce or ''ekecheiria'' was observed. Three runners known as ''spondophoroi'' were sent from ] to the various participant cities at each set of games to announce the beginning of the truce. During this period armies were forbidden from entering Olympia, wars were suspended and legal disputes and the use of the death penalty were forbidden. The truce was primarily designed to allow athletes and visitors to travel safely to the games, and was for the most part observed, although ] wrote of a situation where the ] were forbidden from attending the games and fined 200,000 ] for assaulting the city of ] during the period of the ''ekechiria'', claiming that the truce had not yet taken hold. <ref>Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War. London, J. M. Dent; New York, E. P. Dutton (1910)</ref>
Participation in the Olympic Games was reserved for freeborn Greek men, although there were also Greek women who were victorious as chariot owners. Authorities differ as to whether females were allowed to attend the competitions. Some say all females were excluded from the sacred precinct where the games took place,<ref>Finley & Pleket pp. 17, 26, 45–46,</ref> while others cite Pausanias who indicated that ''parthenoi'' (maidens) could view the competitions, but not ''gynaikes'' (married women), who had to remain on the south side of the river ].<ref> Perrottet, pp.155–156; Pausinias, ''Description of Greece'' 5.6.7 & 6.20.9. For a lengthy examination of the issue, see Matthew Dillon, "Did Parthenoi Attend the Olympic Games? Girls and Women Competing, Spectating, and Carrying Out Cult Roles at Greek Religious Festivals," ''Hermes'' vol.128, no. 4 (2000), pp.457–480.</ref> The evidence regarding the attendance of women in the Olympics is inconclusive. Nevertheless, there is no specific evidence suggesting that women were excluded from attending the other Panhellenic or Panathenaic contests.<ref>Dillon (2000), pp.457–458</ref>

===Imperial period===
]

====Roman conquest of Greece====
After the ] the Olympics continued but the event declined in popularity throughout the pre-Augustan era. During this period, Romans largely concentrated on domestic problems, and paid less attention to their provinces. The fact that all equestrian victors were from the immediate locality and that there is a "paucity of victor statues in the Altis" from this period suggests the games were somewhat neglected.<ref name="Young, p. 131">Young, p. 131</ref>

In 86 BC the Roman general ] robbed Olympia and other Greek treasuries to finance a war. He was the only Roman to commit violence against Olympia.<ref name="Young, p. 131"/> Sulla hosted the games in 80 BC (the 175th Olympiad) as a celebration of his victories over ]. Supposedly the only contest held was the stadion race because all the athletes had been called to Rome.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p2cTDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA26 |title=Greek Athletics in the Roman World: Victory and Virtue |last=Newby |first=Zahra |author-link=Zahra Newby |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005 |location=Oxford, United Kingdom |isbn=978-0-19-927930-2 |page=26}}</ref>

====Augustus====
Under the rule of emperor ] the Olympics underwent a revival. Before he came to full power, Augustus' right-hand man ] restored the damaged temple of Zeus and in 12 BC Augustus asked King ] to subsidize the games.

After Augustus was declared a god by the Senate after his death, a statue of his likeness was commissioned at Olympia.<ref>Drees, p. 119</ref> Subsequent divine emperors also had statues erected within the sacred Altis. The stadium was renovated at his command and Greek athletics in general were subsidized.<ref name="Young, p. 132">Young, p. 132</ref>

====Nero====
One of the most infamous events of Olympic history occurred under the rule of ]. He desired victory in all chariot races of the Panhellenic Games in a single year, so he ordered the four main hosts to hold their games in AD 67, and therefore the scheduled Olympics of 65, in the 211th Olympiad, were postponed. At Olympia he was thrown from his chariot, but still claimed victory. Nero also considered himself a talented musician, so he added contests in music and singing to those festivals that lacked them, including the Olympics. Nero won all of those contests, no doubt because judges were afraid to award victory to anyone else. After his suicide, the Olympic judges had to repay the bribes he had bestowed and declared the "Neronian Olympiad" to be void.<ref name="Young, p. 132"/>

====Renaissance====
In the first half of the second century, the Philhellenic emperors, ] and ] oversaw a new and successful phase in the history of the games. The Olympics attracted a great number of spectators and competitors and the victors' fame spread across the Roman Empire. The renaissance endured for most of the second century. Once again, "philosophers, orators, artists, religious proselytizers, singers, and all kinds of performers went to the festival of Zeus."<ref>Young, p. 133</ref>

===Decline===
The 3rd century saw a decline in the popularity of the games. The victory list of ] ends at the 249th Olympiad (217), though ]'s ] lists a ] winner from as late as 369 (the 287th Olympiad).<ref>{{Cite book|author=]|title=]|page=3.40}}</ref> Excavated inscriptions also show the games continued past 217. Until recently the last securely datable winner was Publius Asclepiades of Corinth who won the pentathlon in 241 (the 255th Olympiad). In 1994, a bronze plaque was found inscribed with victors of the combative events hailing from the mainland and Asia Minor; proof that an international Olympic Games continued until at least 385 (the 291st Olympiad).<ref>Young, p. 135</ref>

The games continued past 385, by which time flooding and earthquakes had damaged the buildings and invasions by barbarians had reached Olympia.<ref name="Young2008">{{cite book |author = David C. Young |title = A Brief History of the Olympic Games |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=gMuuQZubxDIC&pg=PA135 |access-date = 1 April 2013 |date = 15 April 2008 |publisher = John Wiley & Sons |isbn = 978-0-470-77775-6 |pages = 135– |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20140103071351/http://books.google.com/books?id=gMuuQZubxDIC&pg=PA135 |archive-date = 3 January 2014 |df = dmy-all }}</ref> The last recorded games were held under ] in 393 (at the start of the 293rd Olympiad), but archeological evidence indicates that some games were still held.<ref name="Perrottet2004">{{cite book |author = Tony Perrottet |title = The Naked Olympics: The True Story of the Ancient Games |url = https://archive.org/details/nakedolympicstru00perr |url-access = registration |access-date = 1 April 2013 |date = 8 June 2004 |publisher = Random House Digital, Inc. |isbn = 978-1-58836-382-4 |pages = – |df = dmy-all }}</ref><ref name="Hamlet, Ingomar 2004 pp. 53-75"/>

== Location ==
], 4:&nbsp;], 5:&nbsp;], 10:&nbsp;], 15:&nbsp;], 20:&nbsp;], 21:&nbsp;], 26:&nbsp;], 29:&nbsp;], 31:&nbsp;]</p>]]
]
] lies in the valley of the ] (Romanized as Alpheus) in the western part of the ], today around 18&nbsp;km (11 mi) away from the ] but perhaps, in antiquity, half that distance.<ref name="sciencedaily1">{{cite web|title=Olympia Hypothesis: Tsunamis Buried the Cult Site On the Peloponnese|publisher=Science Daily|date=July 11, 2011|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/07/110710204240.htm|access-date=12 July 2011}}</ref> The Altis, as the sanctuary as was originally known, was an irregular quadrangular area more than 180 meters (590.5 feet) on each side and walled except to the North where it was bounded by the Mount Kronos.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/17740/Altis|title = Altis {{pipe}} ancient site, Greece}}</ref> It consisted of a somewhat disordered arrangement of buildings, the most important of which are the ], the ], the ] and the area of the great altar of Zeus, where the largest sacrifices were made. The name Altis was derived from a corruption of the ] word also meaning "the grove" because the area was wooded, olive and plane trees in particular.<ref>Wilson; {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210211000638/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics/site_1.html |date=11 February 2021 }}</ref>

Uninhabited throughout the year, when the games were held the site became over congested. There were no permanent living structures for spectators, who, rich or poor, made do with tents. Ancient visitors recall being plagued by summer heat and flies; such a problem that sacrifices were made to Zeus Averter of Flies. The site's water supply and sanitation were finally improved after nearly a thousand years, by the mid-second century AD.<ref>Young, p. 134 <p>"A very wealthy Greek, Herodes Atticus, and his very wealthy Roman wife, Regilla, funded an elaborate fountain which was both a practical solution and a work of art. Water, piped in from a tributary of the Alpheus, entered into a large semi-circular basin. Emerging from 83 gargoyle fountains, it was then channeled all around the site. Behind the basin rose a semi-circular colonnade more than 100 feet high, with a series of niches built into its upper level."</p></ref>

{{blockquote|But you may say, there are some things disagreeable and troublesome in life. And are there none at Olympia? Are you not scorched? Are you not pressed by a crowd? Are you not without comfortable means of bathing? Are you not wet when it rains? Have you not abundance of noise, clamour, and other disagreeable things? But I suppose that setting all these things off against the magnificence of the spectacle, you bear and endure.| author =], 1st century AD}}

== Culture ==
]'', a Greek statue from the 5th century BC, representing a discus thrower. The image shows a Roman marble version of the now-lost bronze original.]]

The ancient Olympics were as much a religious festival as an athletic event. The games were held in honor of the Greek god ], and on the middle day of the games, ] would be sacrificed to him.<ref name=perseus /> Over time, Olympia, the site of the games, became a central spot for the worship of the head of the Greek ] and a temple, built by the Greek architect ], was erected on the mountaintop. The temple was one of the largest ] temples in Greece.<ref name=perseus /> The sculptor ] created a statue of Zeus made of gold and ivory. It stood {{convert|42|ft}} tall. It was placed on a throne in the temple. The statue became one of the ].<ref name=perseus /> As the historian ] put it,

{{blockquote|... the glory of the temple persisted&nbsp;... on account both of the festal assembly and of the Olympian Games, in which the prize was a crown and which were regarded as sacred, the greatest games in the world. The temple was adorned by its numerous offerings, which were dedicated there from all parts of Greece.<ref name=perseus />}}

Artistic expression was a major part of the games. Sculptors, poets, painters and other artisans would come to the games to display their works in what became an artistic competition. Poets would be commissioned to write poems in praise of the Olympic victors. Such victory songs or epinicians, were passed on from generation to generation and many of them have lasted far longer than any other honor made for the same purpose.<ref>Golden, Mark, {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160504112937/https://books.google.com/books?id=HLORxPo6asUC&pg=PA77 |date=4 May 2016 }}</ref> ] claimed that the destroyed Sicilian polis of ] would have been completely forgotten if not for its four-time Olympic champion, Tisandros.<ref>''''</ref> ], one of the founders of the modern ], wanted to fully imitate the ancient Olympics in every way. Included in his vision was an artistic competition modeled on the ancient Olympics and held every four years, during the celebration of the Olympic Games.<ref>Stanton, 2000, pp.3–4</ref> His desire came to fruition at the Olympics held in ] in ].<ref>Stanton, 2000, p. 17</ref>

== Politics ==
=== Establishment ===
] in ], one of the leading city-states of the ancient world]]

Power in ] became centered on the ] (''polis'') in the 8th century BC.<ref>Hansen, 2006, p. 9</ref> The city-state was a population center organized into a self-contained political entity.<ref>Hansen, 2006, pp.9–10</ref> Every city-state worshiped the same ], although each one often gave more emphasis on a limited group of deities and celebrated religious festivals based on various calendars.{{Sfn|Sansone|2004|p=31}} These city-states often lived in close proximity to each other, which created competition for limited resources. Though conflict between the city-states was ubiquitous, it was also in their self-interest to engage in trade, military alliances, and cultural interaction.<ref>Hansen, 2006, p.10</ref> The city-states had a dichotomous relationship with each other: on one hand, they relied on their neighbors for political and military alliances, while on the other they competed fiercely with those same neighbors for vital resources.<ref>Hansen, 2006, p.114</ref> In this political context the Olympic Games served as a venue for representatives of the city-states to peacefully compete against each other.<ref>Raschke, 1988, p. 23</ref>

From the 8th century BC onwards, the city-states expanded with the establishment of ] in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. While their cults and sanctuaries provided a sense of identity, those local identities as well as the increasing contacts with non-Greek populations presented the Greeks with the need to define themselves not only as members of a certain ''polis'' but also as '']''. That was made possible on the basis of a common language, a body of shared myths and legends, their religious observance and fondness in athletic festivals, which functioned as important factors for the Greek self-definition. As a result, a small number of religious festivals assumed a '']'' character and were reserved for members of all Greek city-states; the oldest of them being the Olympic Games. A body of officials, known as '']'', was responsible for determining the city-state of origin and the Greek identity of the competitors.{{Sfn|Sansone|2004|pp=31-32}}

The spread of Greek colonies in the 6th and 5th centuries BC is repeatedly linked to successful Olympic athletes. For example, Pausanias recounts that ] was founded c.&nbsp;630&nbsp;BC by settlers from ] with ]n support. The support Sparta gave was primarily the loan of three-time Olympic champion Chionis. The appeal of settling with an Olympic champion helped to populate the colonies and maintain cultural and political ties with the city-states near Olympia. Thus, ] culture and the games spread while the primacy of Olympia persisted.<ref>Spivey, 2005, pp.182–183</ref>

=== Olympic truce ===
During the Olympic Games, a truce, or ''ekecheiria'' was observed. Three runners, known as ''spondophoroi'', were sent from ] to the participant cities at each set of games to announce the beginning of the truce.<ref name="swaddling11">Swaddling, 1999, p.11</ref> During this period, armies were forbidden from entering Olympia. Legal disputes and the use of the death penalty were forbidden. The truce — primarily designed to allow athletes and visitors to travel safely to the games — was, for the most part, observed.<ref name="swaddling11" /> ] wrote of a situation when the ]ns were forbidden from attending the games, and the violators of the truce were fined 2,000 ] for assaulting the city of ] during the period of the ''ekecheiria''. The Spartans disputed the fine and claimed that the truce had not yet taken hold.<ref name="thucydides" /><ref>Strassler & Hanson, 1996, pp. 332–333</ref>

The games faced a serious challenge during the ], which primarily pitted Athens against Sparta, but in reality touched nearly every Hellenic city-state.<ref>{{cite web |title = Peloponnesian War |last = Lendering |first = Jona |publisher = Livius, Articles on Ancient History |url = https://www.livius.org/pb-pem/peloponnesian_war/peloponnesian_war.html |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20100213095957/https://www.livius.org/pb-pem/peloponnesian_war/peloponnesian_war.html |archive-date = 13 February 2010 |url-status = live }}</ref> The Olympics were used during this time to announce alliances and offer sacrifices to the gods for victory.<ref name="perseus" /><ref name="thucydides">{{cite book |title = The History of the Peloponnesian War |last = Thucydides |volume = 5 |publisher = The Internet Classics Archive |url = https://archive.org/details/athensatwar00warn |others = Translated by ] |year = 1971 |isbn = 978-0-525-26035-6 }}</ref>

While a martial truce was observed by all participating city-states, no such reprieve from conflict existed in the political arena. The Olympic Games evolved the most influential athletic and cultural stage in ancient Greece, and arguably in the ancient world.<ref>Kyle, 2007, p. 8</ref> As such the games became a vehicle for city-states to promote themselves. The result was political intrigue and controversy. For example, ], a Greek historian, explains the situation of the athlete Sotades,{{blockquote|quote=Sotades at the ninety-ninth Festival was victorious in the long race and proclaimed a Cretan, as in fact he was. But at the next Festival he made himself an Ephesian, being bribed to do so by the Ephesian people. For this act he was banished by the Cretans.<ref name=perseus />}}


== Events == == Events ==
]
]
Unlike the ], only free men who spoke ] were allowed to participate in the Ancient Games. They were to some extent "international", though, in the sense that they included athletes from the various Greek city-states. Additionally, participants eventually came from Greek colonies as well, extending the range of the games to far shores of the ] and of the ].


{| class="wikitable
In order to be in the games one had to qualify and the athlete had to have one's name written down in the ''lists.'' It seems that only young people were allowed to participate, as the Greek writer ] relates that one young man was rejected for seeming too mature, and only after his lover interceded with the king of Sparta, who presumably vouched for his youth, was he permitted to participate. Before being able to participate, every participant had to take an oath in front of the statue of ] saying that he had been in training for 10 months.
|+ Events at the Olympics{{sfn|Young|2004|pp=20-21}}
|-
! Olympiad
! Year
! Event first introduced
|-
| 1st
| 776 BC
| {{lang|grc-Latn|]}}
|-
| 14th
| 724 BC
| {{lang|grc-Latn|]}}
|-
| 15th
| 720 BC
| Long-distance race ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}})
|-
| 18th
| 708 BC
| ], wrestling
|-
| 23rd
| 688 BC
| Boxing ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}})
|-
| 25th
| 680 BC
| Four horse chariot race ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}})
|-
| 33rd
| 648 BC
| Horse race ({{lang|grc-Latn|keles}}), ]
|-
| 37th
| 632 BC
| Boys' {{lang|grc-Latn|stade}} and wrestling
|-
| 38th
| 628 BC
| Boys' pentathlon (discontinued same year)
|-
| 41st
| 616 BC
| Boys' boxing
|-
| 65th
| 520 BC
| Hoplite race ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}})
|-
| 70th
| 500 BC
| Mule-cart race ({{lang|grc-Latn|apene}})
|-
| 71st
| 496 BC
| Mare horse race ({{lang|grc-Latn|calpe}})
|-
| 84th
| 444 BC
| Mule-cart race ({{lang|grc-Latn|apene}}) and mare horse race ({{lang|grc-Latn|calpe}}), both discontinued
|-
| 93rd
| 408 BC
| Two-horse chariot race ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}})
|-
| 96th
| 396 BC
| Competition for ]
|-
| 99th
| 384 BC
| Tethrippon for horse over one year
|-
| 128th
| 268 BC
| Chariot for horse over one year
|-
| 131st
| 256 BC
| Race for horses older than one year
|-
| 145th
| 200 BC
| {{lang|grc-Latn|Pankration}} for boys
|}


Apparently starting with just a single foot race, the program gradually increased to twenty-three contests, although no more than twenty featured at any one Olympiad.<ref> See also "Olympic Games" in ''The Classical Tradition'' p.654 and Finley & Peket, p.43.</ref> Participation in most events was limited to male athletes, except for women who were allowed to take part by entering horses in the ] events. Youth events are recorded as starting in 632 BC. Our knowledge of how the events were performed primarily derives from the paintings of athletes found on many vases, particularly those of the Archaic and Classical periods.<ref>Young, p. 18</ref> Competitors had access to two gymnasiums for training purposes: the ''Xystos'' (meaning 'scraped'), an open colonnade or running track,{{Sfn|Beale|2011|pp=49, 160}} for the runners and pentathletes, and the ''Tetragono'' for wrestlers and boxers.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191126024923/http://www.fhw.gr/olympics/ancient/en/204b.html |date=26 November 2019 }} Foundation of the Hellenic World</ref>
The Olympic games originally contained one event: the '']'' (or "stade") race, a short sprint measuring between 180 and 240 metres, or the length of the stadium. The actual length of the race is unknown, since tracks found at archeological sites, as well as literary evidence, provide conflicting answers. Runners had to pass five stakes that divided the lanes: one stake at the start, another at the finish, and three stakes in-between. Since time was not pertinent to winning the ''stadion'', merely passing the finish stake first was enough to earn the victory.


] while training.]]
]


A loincloth known as the ] was initially worn by athletes at the ancient Olympic Games.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Poliakoff |first=Michael B. |url= |title=Combat Sports in the Ancient World: Competition, Violence, and Culture |date=1987-01-01 |publisher=Yale University Press |isbn=978-0-300-06312-7 |page=165 |language=en}}</ref> Archaeological evidence from late sixth-century BC reveals athletes sporting this garment during competitions.<ref name=":1" /> For most of its history, Olympic events were performed in the ],<ref>See Perrottet, pp.6–7 and "Olympic Games" in ''The Classical Tradition'' p.654.</ref> a habit which the Greeks felt distinguished them from non-Greeks.{{Sfn|Sansone|2004|p=32}} Pausanias says that the first naked runner was ], winner of the {{lang|grc-Latn|stadion}} race in 720&nbsp;BC, who simply lost his garment on purpose because running without it was easier.<ref>Pausanias {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210204103820/https://www.theoi.com/Text/Pausanias1C.html |date=4 February 2021 }} 1.44.1. Trans. W. H. S. Jones</ref> The 5th-century&nbsp;BC historian ] credits the ] with introducing the custom of "publicly stripping and anointing themselves with oil in their gymnastic exercises". He continues saying that "formerly, even in the Olympic contests, the athletes who contended wore belts across their middles; and it is but a few years since that the practice ceased."<ref>] (431 BC) '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200407122012/http://classics.mit.edu/Thucydides/pelopwar.1.first.html |date=7 April 2020 }}'' 1.1 (Trans. R. Crawley)</ref>
The '']'', or 2-stade race, was introduced in 724 BC, during the 14th Olympic games. The race was a single lap of the stadium, approximately 400 metres, and scholars debate whether or not the runners had individual "turning" posts for the return leg of the race, or whether all the runners approached a common post, turned, and then raced back to the starting line.


=== Running ===
A third foot race, the ''dolichos'', was introduced in 720 BC. Separate accounts of the race present conflicting evidence as to the actual length of the ''dolichos''. However, the average stated length of the race was approximately 18-24 laps, or about three miles (5 km). The event was run similarly to modern marathons- the runners would begin and end their event in the stadium proper, but the race course would wind its way through the Olympic grounds. The course would often flank important shrines and statues in the sanctuary, passing by the Nike statue by the temple of Zeus before returning to the stadium.
]


The only event recorded at the first thirteen games was the {{lang|grc-Latn|]}}, a straight-line sprint of just over 192 metres (630 feet).<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |page = 33 |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171115124102/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&PA=33 |archive-date = 15 November 2017 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 978-0300115291 }} See also Finley & Pleket, p. 43.</ref>
The last running event added to the Olympic program was the '']'', or "Hoplite race," introduced in 520 BC and traditionally run as the last race of the day. The runners would run either a single or double '']'' (approximately 400 or 800 yards) in full or partial armour, carrying a shield and additionally equipped either with greaves or a helmet.<ref name="Gilman1">{{cite book|title=Athletics and Mathematics in Archaic Corinth: The Origins of the Greek Stadion|last=Gilman|first=David|date=1993|isbn=0871692066|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=HiILAAAAIAAJ&pg=PT53&ots=2QoRdmgTv8&sig=d9aJIf9wJzxTcSXzoYK_te38Tg8#PPA2,M1}}</ref><ref name="Perrottet1">{{cite journal|last=Perrottet|first=Tony|title=Let the Games Begin|journal=Smithsonian Magazine|url=http://www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issues/2004/august/games.php?page=2}}</ref> As the armour weighed between 50 and {{convert|60|lb|abbr=on}}, the ''hoplitodromos'' emulated the speed and stamina needed for warfare. Due to the weight of the armour, it was easy for runners to drop their shields or trip over fallen competitors. In a vase painting depicting the event, some runners are shown leaping over fallen shields. The course they used for these runs were made out of clay with sand over the clay.
The {{lang|grc-Latn|]}} (lit. "double pipe"), or two-stade race, is recorded as being introduced at the 14th Olympiad in 724 BC. It is thought that competitors ran in lanes marked out with lime or gypsum for the length of a stade then turned around separate posts ({{lang|grc-Latn|kampteres}}), before returning to the start line.<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA44 |page = 44 |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171115124102/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA44 |archive-date = 15 November 2017 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 978-0300115291 }} There is uncertainty about this. See, for example, Finley & Pleket, pp.35-37.</ref> ] wrote that "Victory by speed of foot is honored above all."


A third foot race, the {{lang|grc-Latn|]}} ("long race"), was introduced in the next Olympiad. Accounts of the race's distance differ; it seems to have been from twenty to twenty-four laps of the track, around 7.5&nbsp;km to 9&nbsp;km (4.6 to 5.6 mi), although it may have been lengths rather than laps and thus half as far.<ref>Golden, p. 55. "The {{lang|grc-Latn|dolichos}}" varied in length from seven to twenty-four lengths of the stadium – from 1,400 to 4,800 Greek feet."</ref><ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171115124102/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA32 |date=15 November 2017 }} "The sources are not unanimous about the length of this race: some claim that it was twenty laps of the stadium track, others that it was twenty-four. It may have differed from site to site, but it was in the range of 7.5 to 9 kilometers."</ref>
Over the years, more events were added: ] (pygme/pygmachia), ] (pale), ] (regulated full-contact fighting, similar to today's ]), ], several other running events (the '']'', '']'', ''dolichos'', and ''hoplitodromos''), as well as a ], consisting of wrestling, ''stadion'', ], ] and ] (the latter three were not separate events).


The last running event added to the Olympic program was the {{lang|grc-Latn|]}}, or "] race", introduced in 520 BC and traditionally run as the last race of the games. Competitors ran either a single or double {{lang|grc-Latn|diaulos}} (approximately 400 or 800 metres, 0.25 or 0.5 miles) in full military armour.<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA33 |page = 33 |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |isbn = 978-0-300-11529-1 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160918002901/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |archive-date = 18 September 2016 |df = dmy-all }}</ref> The {{lang|grc-Latn|hoplitodromos}} was based on a war tactic of soldiers running in full armor to surprise the enemy.
Boxing became increasingly brutal over the centuries. Initially soft leather covered their fingers but eventually hard leather weighted with metal was sometimes used.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761576089/Ancient_Olympic_Games.html|title=Boxing gets Brutal |publisher=Encarta|date=2006-03-23}}.</ref>


=== Combat ===
In the chariot racing event, it was not the rider but the owner of the chariot and team who was considered to be the competitor, so one man could win more than one of the top spots. The addition of events meant the festival grew from 1 day to 5 days, 3 of which were used for competition. The other two days were dedicated to religious rituals. On the final day, there was a banquet for all of the participants, consisting of 100 oxen that had been sacrificed to ] on the first day.
] scene. Attic ] plate. {{Circa|520–510 BC}}]]
Wrestling ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}}) is recorded as being introduced at the 18th Olympiad. Three throws were necessary for a win. A throw was counted if the body, hip, back or shoulder (and possibly knee) touched the ground. If both competitors fell nothing was counted. Unlike its modern counterpart ], it is likely that tripping was allowed.<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402">{{cite web |url = https://archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |title = Greek athletic sports and festivals |first = Edward Norman |last = Gardiner |date = 15 November 2017 |publisher = London : Macmillan |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Internet Archive |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120311004156/http://www.archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |archive-date = 11 March 2012 |df = dmy-all }}</ref>


]}} {{circa|490–480}} BC, ] ]]
The winner of an Olympic event was awarded an olive branch, and was often received with much honour throughout Greece and especially in his home town, where he was often granted large sums of money (in Athens, 500 drachma, a small fortune).
] prize ], {{circa|500}} BC.]]
(See ].) Sculptors would create statues of Olympic victors<ref>]</ref> and poets would sing odes in their praise for money.
Boxing ({{lang|grc-Latn|]}}) was first listed in 688 BC,<ref name="Miller, p. 51">{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA51 |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160918002901/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |archive-date = 18 September 2016 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 978-0300115291 }}</ref> the boys' event sixty years later. The laws of boxing were ascribed to the first Olympic champion ].<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/> It appears that body-blows were either not permitted or not practised.<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/><ref>To judge from the story of Damoxenos and Kreugas who boxed at the ], after a long battle with no result combatants could agree to a free exchange of hits. ( {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090817023933/http://www.archive.org/stream/greekathleticspo00garduoft |date=17 August 2009 }})</ref> The Spartans, who claimed to have invented boxing, quickly abandoned it and did not take part in boxing competitions.<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402" /> At first the boxers wore {{lang|grc-Latn|himantes}} (sing. {{lang|grc-Latn|himas}}), long leather strips which were wrapped around their hands.<ref name="Miller, p. 51" />


The {{lang|grc-Latn|]}} was one of the most popular sports in the ancient Olympics Games.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dunning |first=Eric |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xMVorY12iCQC&pg=PA48 |title=Sport Matters: Sociological Studies of Sport, Violence, and Civilization |date=1999 |publisher=Psychology Press |isbn=978-0-415-06413-2 |pages=48–49 |language=en}}</ref> The {{lang|grc-Latn|]}} was introduced in the 33rd Olympiad (648 BC).<ref>{{cite web |url = https://archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |page = 435 |title = Greek athletic sports and festivals |first = Edward Norman |last = Gardiner |date = 15 November 2017 |location = London |publisher=Macmillan |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Internet Archive |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120311004156/http://www.archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |archive-date = 11 March 2012 |df = dmy-all }}</ref> Boys' {{lang|grc-Latn|pankration}} became an Olympic event in 200 BC, in the 145th Olympiad.<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA60 |page = 60 |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171115124102/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC&pg=PA60 |archive-date = 15 November 2017 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 978-0300115291 }}</ref>
Archaeologists believe that wars were halted between the city-states of Greece so that the athletes as well as the spectators of the Olympics could get there safely. However, some archaeologists argue that the wars were not halted, but that the athletes who were in the army were allowed to leave and participate in the Olympics.
As well as techniques from boxing and wrestling, athletes also used ]s,<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090817023933/http://www.archive.org/stream/greekathleticspo00garduoft |date=17 August 2009 }} "Galen, in his skit on the Olympic games, awards the prize to the donkey, as the best of all animals in kicking."</ref> locks, and chokes on the ground. Although the only prohibitions were against biting and gouging, the {{lang|grc-Latn|pankration}} was regarded as less dangerous than boxing.<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=s_HjZ3JpPYIC&pg=PA41 |title = The Olympic Games: The First Thousand Years |first1 = M. I. |last1 = Finley |first2 = H. W. |last2 = Pleket |date = 24 May 2012 |publisher = Courier Corporation |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20171115124102/https://books.google.com/books?id=s_HjZ3JpPYIC&pg=PA41 |archive-date = 15 November 2017 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 9780486149417 }}</ref>


It was one of the most popular events: Pindar wrote eight odes praising victors of the {{lang|grc-Latn|pankration}}.<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/> A famous event in the sport was the posthumous victory of ] of Phigalia who "expired at the very moment when his opponent acknowledged himself beaten".<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/>
Participation in the games was limited to male athletes; the only way women were allowed to take part was to enter horses in the ] events. In 396 BC and again in 392 BC, the horses of a ]n princess named ] won her the four-horse race.
It is thought that single women (not betrothed or married) were allowed to watch the races. Also priestesses in the temple of Zeus who lit the candles were permitted.


=== Discus ===
The athletes usually competed ], not only as the weather was appropriate but also as the festival was meant to celebrate, in part, the achievements of the human body. Olive oil was occasionally used by the competitors, not only to keep skin smooth but also to provide an appealing look for the participants. Competitors may have worn a ] to restrain the ].
]
<!-- more:
The ] ({{lang|grc-Latn|diskos}}) event was similar to the modern competition. Stone and iron {{lang|grc-Latn|diskoi}} have been found, although the most commonly used material appears to be bronze. To what extent the {{lang|grc-Latn|diskos}} was standardized is unclear, but the most common weight seems to be 2&nbsp;kg (4.4 lbs) size with a diameter of approximately 21&nbsp;cm (8 in), roughly equivalent to the modern discus.<ref>Miller, p. 60</ref>
* specific winner

* better details
=== Long jump===
* customs
] carrying ''halteres'' (jumping weights) {{Circa|late ]}}]]
* Roman influence -->
In the long jump ({{lang|grc-Latn|halma}}) competitors swung a pair of weights called {{lang|grc-Latn|]}}. There was no set design; jumpers tended to use either spherical weights made of stone carved to fit the hand or longer lead weights.<ref>Miller, p. 63</ref><ref></ref> It is debated whether the jump was performed from a standing start or after a run-up. In his analysis of the event based on vase paintings, Hugh Lee concluded that there was probably a short run-up.<ref>Lee, Hugh M. (2009) {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221226112037/https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=lNvfAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA157 |date=26 December 2022 }} in ''Onward to the Olympics: Historical Perspectives on the Olympic Games''</ref>

=== Pentathlon ===
{{Main|Ancient Olympic pentathlon}}

The pentathlon was a competition made up of five events: running, ], ], ], and ].<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/> The pentathlon is said to have first appeared at the 18th Olympiad in 708 BC.<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |title = Ancient Greek Athletics |first = Stephen G. |last = Miller |date = 8 January 2006 |publisher = Yale University Press |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Google Books |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160918002901/https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |archive-date = 18 September 2016 |df = dmy-all |isbn = 978-0300115291 }}</ref> The competition was held on a single day,<ref>Young, p. 32</ref> but it is not known how the victor was decided,<ref>Young, p. 19</ref><ref>{{cite web |url = https://archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |pages = 362–365 |title = Greek athletic sports and festivals |first = Edward Norman |last = Gardiner |date = 15 November 2017 |location = London |publisher= Macmillan |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Internet Archive |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120311004156/http://www.archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |archive-date = 11 March 2012 |df = dmy-all }}</ref> or in what order the events occurred,<ref name="Gardiner, p. 402"/> except that it finished with the wrestling.<ref>{{cite web |url = https://archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |page = 363 |title = Greek athletic sports and festivals |first = Edward Norman |last = Gardiner |date = 15 November 2017 |location = London |publisher= Macmillan |access-date = 15 November 2017 |via = Internet Archive |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120311004156/http://www.archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |archive-date = 11 March 2012 |df = dmy-all }}</ref>

=== Equestrian events ===
Horse racing and chariot racing were the most prestigious competitions in the games, due to only the wealthy being able to afford the maintenance and transportation of horses. These races consisted of different events: the four-horse chariot race, the two-horse chariot race, and the horse with rider race, the rider being hand picked by the owner. The four-horse chariot race was the first equestrian event to feature in the Olympics, being introduced in 680 BC. It consisted of two horses that were harnessed under a ] in the middle, and two outer horses that were attached with a rope.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008aEN.html |title=Ancient Olympics |access-date=2017-04-04 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170106040630/http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008aEN.html |archive-date=6 January 2017 |df=dmy-all }} "Four-horse chariot"</ref> The two-horse chariot was introduced in 408 BC.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008bEN.html |title=Ancient Olympics |access-date=2017-04-04 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170105123201/http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008bEN.html |archive-date=5 January 2017 |df=dmy-all }} "Two-horse chariot"</ref> The horse with rider competition, on the other hand, was introduced in 648 BC. In this race, Greeks did not use saddles or ] (the latter was unknown in Europe until about the 6th century AD), so they required good grip and balance.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008cEN.html |title=Ancient Olympics |access-date=2017-04-04 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151023000347/http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/eng/TC008cEN.html |archive-date=23 October 2015 |df=dmy-all }} "Horse with rider"</ref>

Pausanias reports that a race for carts drawn by a pair of ]s, and a ], were instituted respectively at the seventieth Festival and the seventy-first, but were both abolished by proclamation at the eighty-fourth. The trotting race was for ]s, and in the last part of the course the riders jumped off and ran beside the mares.<ref>Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201125163702/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0160:book=5:chapter=9&highlight=olympic |date=25 November 2020 }}</ref>

The chariot races also saw the first woman to win an Olympic event, as the winner was deemed to be the wealthy benefactor or trainer that funded the team rather than those controlling the chariot (who could only be male). This allowed for horse trainer and spartan princess ] to be the first female Olympic victor.<ref>Millender, Ellen G., "Spartan Women" p. 500–525. In ''A Companion to Sparta'', edited by Anton Powell, Vol. 1 of ''A Companion to Sparta.'' Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley Blackwell, 2018.</ref>

Due to the winner being the benefactor, it was also possible for a particularly wealthy person to improve their odds by bringing multiple teams to the races; according to Plutarch, the record belongs to ], who brought seven chariots to a single competition, winning the first, second, and either the third or fourth place at once.<ref>], ''''</ref>

In 67, the Roman Emperor ] competed in the chariot race at Olympia. He was thrown from his chariot and was thus unable to finish the race. Nevertheless, he was declared the winner on the basis that he would have won if he had finished the race.<ref name=":0">{{cite web |url = http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/08/olympics-olympic-games-no-longer-play-ancient-greece |title = Olympic Games We No Longer Play |date = 4 August 2016 |access-date = 4 August 2016 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160805194129/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/2016/08/olympics-olympic-games-no-longer-play-ancient-greece/ |archive-date = 5 August 2016 |df = dmy-all }}</ref>


== Famous athletes ==<!-- This section is linked from ] --> == Famous athletes ==<!-- This section is linked from ] -->
{{Main|List of ancient Olympic victors}}
]

* from Athens:
]
** ] (Junior fist-fight)
* from Sparta: * Running:
** ] (''stadion'', traditionally declared first Olympic champion)
** ] (Running: diaulos)
** ] (''diaulos'', first to compete naked)
** ] (Running: stadium, diaulos. Long and Triple Jump)
** ] (''stadion'', ''diaulos'' and ''hoplitodromos'')
** ] (first woman to be listed as an Olympic victor)
** ] (three-time ''stadion''/''diaulos'' winner and champion jumper)
* from ]:
** ] (''stadion'', ''diaulos'' and ''hoplitodromos'')
** ] (Boxing 79th Olympiad, 464 BC) and his sons Akusilaos and Damagetos (Boxing and ])
** ] (''stadion'')<ref>{{cite web |url = http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh5020.htm |page = 22 |title = The History of Herodotus, parallel English/Greek: Book 5: Terpsichore: 20 |website = www.sacred-texts.com |access-date = 15 November 2017 |url-status = live |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160515201448/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh5020.htm |archive-date = 15 May 2016 |df = dmy-all }}</ref>
** ] (Running: stadium, diaulos and hoplitodromos)
* Combat:
* from ]:
** ] (''pankratiast'', died while successfully defending his championship in the 54th&nbsp;Olympiad (564&nbsp;BC). Described as "the most famous of all pankratiasts".)
** ] (Running: stadium, diaulos and hoplitodromos)
** ] (wrestling) ** ] (''wrestling'', legendary six-time victor: once as youth, the rest in the men's event)
** ] (''boxing'' 79th&nbsp;Olympiad, 464&nbsp;BC) and his sons Akusilaos and Damagetos (boxing and '']'')
** Timasitheos of Croton (wrestling)
** Timasitheos of Croton (''wrestling'')<ref>{{cite book |url = https://books.google.com/books?id=3C8-9j8Zb3oC&q=Timasitheos+of+Croton&pg=PA102 |title = A Brief History of the Olympic Games |access-date = 16 April 2015 |isbn = 9780470777756 |last1 = Young |first1 = David C. |date = 2008-04-15 |publisher = John Wiley & Sons }}</ref>
* from other cities:
** ] (''boxer'', ''pankratiast'' and ''runner'')
** ] (Stadion)
** ] (''pankratiast'', notorious for his finger-breaking technique)
** ] of ] (Runner: diaulos)
** ] (''pankratiast'', crowned champion by default in 336 BC when no other pankratiast dared compete. Such a victory was called ''akoniti'' (lit. without getting dusted) and remains the only one ever recorded in the Olympics in this discipline.)
** ] (Pankration)
** ] (''boxing'', Prince and future King of ], last known ancient Olympic victor (boxing) during the 291st&nbsp;Olympic Games in the 4th&nbsp;century<ref>369 according to ''Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece'' by Nigel Wilson, 2006, Routledge (UK) or 385 according to ''Classical Weekly'' by Classical Association of the Atlantic States</ref>)
* non-Greek:
* Equestrian:
** ] (steerer of a four-horse chariot)<ref>Tiberius, AD 1 or earlier - cf. Ehrenberg & Jones, Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius p. 73 (n.78)</ref>
** ] of Sparta (owner of a four-horse chariot) (first woman to be listed as an Olympic victor)
** ] ("the most famous racehorse in antiquity", 470s&nbsp;BC)
** ] (steerer of a four-horse chariot)<ref>Tiberius, AD 1 (or earlier) – cf. Ehrenberg & Jones, Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius p. 73 (n.78)</ref>
** ] (steerer of a ten-horse chariot) ** ] (steerer of a ten-horse chariot)
* Other:
** ], Prince and future King of ], (last known Ancient Olympic victor (boxing) during the 291st Olympic Games in the fourth century. <ref>369 according to ''Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece''
** ] (ten-time ])
by Nigel Wilson, 2006, Routledge (UK) or 385 according to ''Classical Weekly'' by Classical Association of the Atlantic States</ref>

== Olympic festivals in other places ==
{{Main|Ancient Greek Olympic festivals}}

Athletic festivals under the name of "Olympic games", named in imitation of the original festival at Olympia, were established over time in various places all over the Greek world. Some of these are only known to us by inscriptions and coins; but others, as the Olympic festival at ], obtained great celebrity. After these Olympic festivals had been established in several places, the great Olympic festival itself was sometimes designated in inscriptions by the addition of ].<ref>], '']'', 1875 – {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606012307/http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-dgra/0839.html |date=6 June 2011 }}</ref>


== See also == == See also ==
{{portal|Olympics|Sport of athletics}}
* ] (Ancient Women's Competition)
* ]
* ]
* ] * ]
* ]
* ]
* '']'', the Roman games influenced by Greek traditions
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ], a similar tradition of legendary pre-Christian Ireland
* ]
* ]


== Notes == == References ==
{{reflist}} {{reflist}}


'''Bibliography'''
== References ==
{{refbegin|2}}
<div class="references-small">
* {{Cite book |last=Beale |first=Allan |title=Greek Athletics and the Olympics |year=2011 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9780521138208}}
*
* {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/greekathleticspo00garduoft |title=Greek athletic sports and festivals |last=Gardiner |first=E. N. |publisher=London : Macmillan |year=1910}}
*
* Gardiner, E. Norman, ''Athletics of the Ancient World'', 246 pages, 200+ illustrations, with new material, Oxford University Press, 1930
* Mallowitz, Alfred. "Cult and Competition Locations at Olympia". Raschke 79-109.
* {{cite book |url=https://is.muni.cz/el/1451/jaro2011/bk900/um/A_Brief_History_of_the_Olympic_Games__CuPpY_.pdf |title=A Brief History of the Olympic Games |last=Young |first=David C. |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |year=2004 |isbn=978-1-4051-1130-0 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161009184000/https://is.muni.cz/el/1451/jaro2011/bk900/um/A_Brief_History_of_the_Olympic_Games__CuPpY_.pdf |archive-date=9 October 2016 |url-status=dead}}
* Miller, Stephen. “The Date of Olympic Festivals”. <ins> Mitteilungen: Des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Athenische Abteilung.</ins> Vol. 90 (1975): 215-237.
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3Wdh6YGXOxMC |title=Ancient Greek Athletics |last=Miller |first=Stephen G. |author-link=Stephen G. Miller |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-300-11529-1}}
* Raschke, Wendy J., ed. <ins>The Archaeology of the Olympics: the Olympics and Other Festivals in Antiquity.</ins> Madison, Wisconsin: Wisconsin University Press, 1987.
* Golden, Mark, ''Sport and Society in Ancient Greece'', Cambridge University Press, 1998.
*
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UwFoJTJZ1wIC&q=greek+city+state |title=Polis, an Introduction to the Ancient Greek City-State |last=Hansen |first=Mogens Herman |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-19-920849-4 |location=Oxford, England |access-date=12 February 2010}}
*
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pjt3ZGU61wIC&q=olympic+truce+violated&pg=PA332 |title=The Landmark Thucydides |last2=Strassler |first2=Robert B. |publisher=Simon & Schuster |year=1996 |isbn=978-1-4165-9087-3 |location=New York |last1=Hanson |first1=Victor Davis |access-date=12 February 2010}}
</div>
* ( 2009-10-25); {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130102184921/http://www.oocities.org/ejkotynski/Olympics.pdf |date=2 January 2013 }}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tEbcu-sDkFEC&q=greek+city+state+pride+at+the+olympics&pg=PA8 |title=Sport and Spectacle in the Ancient World |last=Kyle |first=Donald G. |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-631-22970-4 |location=Oxford, England |access-date=12 February 2010}}
* Mallowitz, Alfred. ''Cult and Competition Locations at Olympia''. Raschke 79–109.
* ]. "The Date of Olympic Festivals". Mitteilungen: Des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts, Athenische Abteilung. Vol. 90 (1975): 215–237.
* {{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l582jgEACAAJ&q=patay+The+origins+of+the+olympic+games |title=The Origins of the Olympic Games |last=Patay-Horváth |first=András |publisher=Archaeolingua Foundation |year=2015 |isbn=978-963-9911-72-7 |location=Budapest}}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DwU1IlTEhrYC&q=greek+city+state+olympics&pg=PA23 |title=The Archaeology of the Olympics: the Olympics and Other Festivals in Antiquity |last=Raschke |first=Wendy J. |publisher=Wisconsin University Press |year=1988 |isbn=978-0-299-11334-6 |location=Madison, Wisconsin |access-date=12 February 2010}}
* Remijsen, Sofie. ''The End of Greek Athletics in Late Antiquity''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.
* {{Cite book |last=Sansone |first=David |title=Ancient Greek civilization |publisher=Wiley |year=2004 |isbn=9780631232360}}
* {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/ancientolympics00spiv |url-access=registration |quote=origins of the ancient olympics. |title=The Ancient Olympics |last=Spivey |first=Nigel |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-19-280433-4 |location=Oxford, England |access-date=12 February 2010}}
* {{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p3Mz55M5DRwC&q=art+of+the+ancient+olympics&pg=PP8 |title=The Forgotten Olympic Art Competitions:The story of the Olympic art competitions of the 20th century |last=Stanton |first=Richard |publisher=Trafford |year=2000 |isbn=978-1-55212-606-6 |location=Victoria, Canada |access-date=23 February 2010}}
* {{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/ancientolympicga00swad |url-access=registration |page= |quote=announcing olympic truce. |title=The ancient Olympic Games |last=Swaddling |first=Judith |publisher=University of Texas Press |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-292-77751-4 |location=Austin, Texas |access-date=12 February 2010}}
*
* **{{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110511065706/http://ancientolympics.arts.kuleuven.be/ |date=11 May 2011 }}
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
* Christesen, Paul. 2007. ''Olympic Victor Lists and Ancient Greek History.'' Cambridge, UK, and New York: Cambridge Univ. Press.
* Lee, Hugh M. 2001. ''The Program and Schedule of the Ancient Olympic Games.'' Nikephoros Beihefte 6. Hildesheim, Germany: Weidmann.
* Nielsen, Thomas Heine. 2007. ''Olympia and the Classical Hellenic City-State Culture.'' Historisk-filosofiske Meddeleser 96. Copenhagen: Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters.
* Sinn, Ulrich. 2000. ''Olympia: Cult, Sport, and Ancient Festival.'' Princeton, NJ: M. Wiener.
* Valavanis, Panos. 2004. ''Games and Sanctuaries in Ancient Greece: Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia, Nemea, Athens.'' Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum.
* Swaddling, Judith. 1984. ''The Ancient Olympic Games.'' Austin: University of Texas.


== External links == == External links ==
{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Ancient Olympic Games |viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
*
{{Commons category|Ancient Olympic Games}}
* (General and detailed information)
{{NSRW Poster|Olympic Games}}
* (A special exhibit)
* *
* : General and detailed information
*
* * : A special exhibit
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080501061301/http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/olympics/olympicintro.shtml |date=1 May 2008 }}
*
* *
* . Thomas F. Scanlon, professor of Classics, University of California
*
*
*
*
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210512150425/http://ancientolympicgames.org/games/ancient-events/ |date=12 May 2021 }}
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Games, Classical|volume=11|pages=443–445|first=Francis|last=Storr}}
* The Games Odyssey podcast:
* The Games Odyssey podcast:


{{Ancient Greece topics}} {{Ancient Greece topics}}
{{Ancient Olympic Games}}
{{Multi-sport events}}
{{Olympic Games}}

{{authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 13:24, 14 December 2024

Athletic competitions in ancient Greece

The Palaestra at Olympia, a place devoted to the training of wrestlers and other athletes
Olympic Games
Olympic Rings
Main topics
Games
Regional games
Defunct games

The ancient Olympic Games (Ancient Greek: τὰ Ὀλύμπια, ta Olympia), or the ancient Olympics, were a series of athletic competitions among representatives of city-states and one of the Panhellenic Games of ancient Greece. They were held at the Panhellenic religious sanctuary of Olympia, in honor of Zeus, and the Greeks gave them a mythological origin. The originating Olympic Games are traditionally dated to 776 BC. The games were held every four years, or Olympiad, which became a unit of time in historical chronologies. These Olympiads were referred to based on the winner of their stadion sprint, e.g., "the third year of the eighteenth Olympiad when Ladas of Argos won the stadion". They continued to be celebrated when Greece came under Roman rule in the 2nd century BC. Their last recorded celebration was in AD 393, under the emperor Theodosius I, but archaeological evidence indicates that some games were still held after this date. The games likely came to an end under Theodosius II, possibly in connection with a fire that burned down the temple of the Olympian Zeus during his reign.

During the celebration of the games, the Olympic truce (ekecheiría) was announced so that athletes and religious pilgrims could travel from their cities to the games in safety. The prizes for the victors were olive leaf wreaths or crowns. The games became a political tool used by city-states to assert dominance over their rival city states. Politicians would announce political alliances at the games, and in times of war, priests would offer sacrifices to the gods for victory. The games were also used to help spread Hellenistic culture throughout the Mediterranean. The Olympics also featured religious celebrations. The statue of Zeus at Olympia was counted as one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. Sculptors and poets would congregate each Olympiad to display their works of art to would-be patrons.

The ancient Olympics had fewer events than the modern games, and for many years only freeborn Greek men were allowed to participate, although there were victorious women chariot owners. Moreover, throughout their history, the Olympics, both ancient and modern, have occasionally become arenas where political expressions, such as demonstrations, boycotts, and embargoes, have been employed by nations and individuals to exert influence over these sporting events. As long as they met the entrance criteria, athletes from any Greek city-state and kingdom were allowed to participate. The games were always held at Olympia rather than moving between different locations like the modern Olympic Games. Victors at the Olympics were honored, and their feats chronicled for future generations.

Origin myths

The Olympian Zeus statue

To the ancient Greeks, it was important to root the Olympic Games in mythology. During the time of the ancient games their origins were attributed to the gods, and competing legends persisted as to who actually was responsible for the genesis of the games. The patterns that emerge from these legends are that the Greeks believed the games had their roots in religion, that athletic competition was tied to worship of the gods, and the revival of the ancient games was intended to bring peace, harmony and a return to the origins of Greek life.

These origin traditions have become nearly impossible to untangle, yet a chronology and patterns have arisen that help people understand the story behind the games. Greek historian Pausanias provides a story about the dactyl Heracles (not to be confused with the Hercules who was the son of Zeus and joined the Roman pantheon) and four of his brothers, Paeonaeus, Epimedes, Iasius and Idas, who raced at Olympia to entertain the newborn Zeus. He crowned the victor with an olive wreath (which thus became a peace symbol), which also explains the four-year interval, bringing the games around every fifth year (counting inclusively). The other Olympian gods (so named because they lived permanently on Mount Olympus) would also engage in wrestling, jumping and running contests.

Another myth of the origin of the games is the story of Pelops, a local Olympian hero. Oenomaus, the king of Pisa, had a daughter named Hippodamia, and according to an oracle, the king would be killed by her husband. Therefore, he decreed that any young man who wanted to marry his daughter was required to drive away with her in his chariot, and Oenomaus would follow in another chariot, and spear the suitor if he caught up with them. Now, the king's chariot horses were a present from the god Poseidon and therefore supernaturally fast. The king's daughter fell in love with a man called Pelops. Before the race however, Pelops persuaded Oenomaus' charioteer Myrtilus to replace the bronze axle pins of the king's chariot with wax ones. Naturally, during the race, the wax melted and the king fell from his chariot and was killed. After his victory, Pelops organized chariot races as a thanksgiving to the gods and as funeral games in honor of King Oenomaus, in order to be purified of his death. It was from this funeral race held at Olympia that the beginnings of the Olympic Games were inspired. Pelops became a great king, a local hero, and he gave his name to the Peloponnese.

One (later) myth, attributed to Pindar, states that the festival at Olympia involved Heracles, the son of Zeus: According to Pindar, Heracles established an athletic festival to honor his father, Zeus, after he had completed his labors.

History

Prehistory

Areas around the Mediterranean had a long tradition of physical activities, eventhough they did not seem to hold regular competitions, with the events being probably the preserve of kings and upper classes. The earliest evidence of athletic tradition in Greece come from late Bronze Age artistic represenations, such as from the island of Crete and Thera, and Archaic literary texts. The Minoan culture centered on Crete engaged in gymnastics, with bull-leaping, tumbling, running, wrestling and boxing shown on their frescoes. The Mycenaeans adopted Minoan games and also raced chariots in religious or funerary ceremonies. The exact relation between the early Minoan and Mycenaean sporting activities and the later Greek practicies remains elusive. The heroes of Homer's epics, composed around 750 BC and held to represent a late Bronze Age society, participate in athletic competitions to honor the dead. In the Iliad there are chariot races, boxing, wrestling, a foot race, as well as fencing, archery, and spear throwing. The Odyssey adds to these a long jump and discus throw.

First games

Boxing was one of the most popular sports in the ancient Olympics Games and was introduced into the Olympics in 688 BCE. Scene of youths boxing, c. 336 B.C

Aristotle reckoned the date of the first Olympics to be 776 BC, a date largely accepted by most, though not all, subsequent ancient historians. To this day, this is the conventional given date for the inception of the ancient Olympics and, while this specific date of origin cannot be verified, it is generally accepted that the games date from some time in the eighth century BC. Archaeological finds confirm, approximately, the Olympics starting at or soon after this time.

Archaeology suggests that major games at Olympia arose probably around 700. Christesen's important work on the Olympic victor lists shows that victors' names and details were unreliable until the sixth century. Elis's independent state administered it, and while the Eleans managed the games well, there sometimes was bias and interference. Also, despite modern illusions, the famous Olympic truce only mandated safe passage for visitors; it did not stop all wars in Greece or even at Olympia.

Olympiad calendar

The historian Ephorus, who lived in the fourth century BC, is one potential candidate for establishing the use of Olympiads to count years, although credit for codifying this particular epoch usually falls to Hippias of Elis, to Eratosthenes, or even to Timaeus, whom Eratosthenes may have imitated. The Olympic Games were held at four-year intervals, and later, the ancient historians' method of counting the years even referred to these games, using Olympiad for the period between two games. Previously, the local dating systems of the Greek states were used (they continued to be used by everyone except historians), which led to confusion when trying to determine dates. For example, Diodorus states that there was a solar eclipse in the third year of the 113th Olympiad, which must be the eclipse of 316 BC. This gives a date of (mid-summer) 765 BC for the first year of the first Olympiad. Nevertheless, there is disagreement among scholars as to when the games began.

According to the later Greek traveler Pausanias, who wrote in 175 AD, the only competition held at first was the stadion, a race over about 190 metres (620 feet). The word stadium is derived from this event.

Early history

The exedra reserved for the judges at Olympia on the south embankment of the stadium. Today, this is where the Olympic flame is passed on to the first torchbearer of the upcoming Olympic Games.

Several groups fought over control of the sanctuary at Olympia, and hence the games, for prestige and political advantage. Pausanias later writes that in 668 BC, Pheidon of Argos was commissioned by the town of Pisa to capture the sanctuary from the town of Elis, which he did and then personally controlled the games for that year. The next year, Elis regained control.

Greek sports also derived its origins from the concept that physical energy was being expended in a ritualistic manner, in which Paleolithic age hunting practices were turned into a more socially and glamorized function, thus becoming sport. The Greeks in particular were unique in the regard that their competitions were often held in grand facilities, with prizes and nudity that stressed the Greek idealisms of training one's body to be as fit as their mind. It is this ideology and athletic exceptionalism that resulted in theories claiming the Greeks were the inventors of sport.

In the first 200 years of the games' existence, they only had regional religious importance. Only Greeks in proximity to Olympia competed in these early games. This is evidenced by the dominance of Peloponnesian athletes in the victors' roles. Over time, the Olympic Games gained increasing recognition and became part of the Panhellenic Games, four separate games held at two- or four-year intervals, but arranged so that there was at least one set of games every year. The other Panhellenic Games were the Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian Games, though the Olympic Games, being the oldest among the rest, were considered the most prestigious. The Olympic games were held to be one of the two central rituals in ancient Greece, the other being the much older religious festival, the Eleusinian Mysteries.

Participation in the Olympic Games was reserved for freeborn Greek men, although there were also Greek women who were victorious as chariot owners. Authorities differ as to whether females were allowed to attend the competitions. Some say all females were excluded from the sacred precinct where the games took place, while others cite Pausanias who indicated that parthenoi (maidens) could view the competitions, but not gynaikes (married women), who had to remain on the south side of the river Alpheios. The evidence regarding the attendance of women in the Olympics is inconclusive. Nevertheless, there is no specific evidence suggesting that women were excluded from attending the other Panhellenic or Panathenaic contests.

Imperial period

This model shows the site of Olympia, home of the ancient Olympic Games, as it looked around 100 BC. British Museum

Roman conquest of Greece

After the Roman conquest of Greece the Olympics continued but the event declined in popularity throughout the pre-Augustan era. During this period, Romans largely concentrated on domestic problems, and paid less attention to their provinces. The fact that all equestrian victors were from the immediate locality and that there is a "paucity of victor statues in the Altis" from this period suggests the games were somewhat neglected.

In 86 BC the Roman general Sulla robbed Olympia and other Greek treasuries to finance a war. He was the only Roman to commit violence against Olympia. Sulla hosted the games in 80 BC (the 175th Olympiad) as a celebration of his victories over Mithridates. Supposedly the only contest held was the stadion race because all the athletes had been called to Rome.

Augustus

Under the rule of emperor Augustus the Olympics underwent a revival. Before he came to full power, Augustus' right-hand man Marcus Agrippa restored the damaged temple of Zeus and in 12 BC Augustus asked King Herod of Judea to subsidize the games.

After Augustus was declared a god by the Senate after his death, a statue of his likeness was commissioned at Olympia. Subsequent divine emperors also had statues erected within the sacred Altis. The stadium was renovated at his command and Greek athletics in general were subsidized.

Nero

One of the most infamous events of Olympic history occurred under the rule of Nero. He desired victory in all chariot races of the Panhellenic Games in a single year, so he ordered the four main hosts to hold their games in AD 67, and therefore the scheduled Olympics of 65, in the 211th Olympiad, were postponed. At Olympia he was thrown from his chariot, but still claimed victory. Nero also considered himself a talented musician, so he added contests in music and singing to those festivals that lacked them, including the Olympics. Nero won all of those contests, no doubt because judges were afraid to award victory to anyone else. After his suicide, the Olympic judges had to repay the bribes he had bestowed and declared the "Neronian Olympiad" to be void.

Renaissance

In the first half of the second century, the Philhellenic emperors, Hadrian and Antoninus Pius oversaw a new and successful phase in the history of the games. The Olympics attracted a great number of spectators and competitors and the victors' fame spread across the Roman Empire. The renaissance endured for most of the second century. Once again, "philosophers, orators, artists, religious proselytizers, singers, and all kinds of performers went to the festival of Zeus."

Decline

The 3rd century saw a decline in the popularity of the games. The victory list of Africanus ends at the 249th Olympiad (217), though Moses of Chorene's History of Armenia lists a boxing winner from as late as 369 (the 287th Olympiad). Excavated inscriptions also show the games continued past 217. Until recently the last securely datable winner was Publius Asclepiades of Corinth who won the pentathlon in 241 (the 255th Olympiad). In 1994, a bronze plaque was found inscribed with victors of the combative events hailing from the mainland and Asia Minor; proof that an international Olympic Games continued until at least 385 (the 291st Olympiad).

The games continued past 385, by which time flooding and earthquakes had damaged the buildings and invasions by barbarians had reached Olympia. The last recorded games were held under Theodosius I in 393 (at the start of the 293rd Olympiad), but archeological evidence indicates that some games were still held.

Location

Olympia over the ages.

Areas of note: 2: Prytaneion, 4: Temple of Hera, 5: Pelopion, 10: Stadium, 15: Temple of Zeus, 20: Gymnasium, 21: Palaestra, 26: Greek Baths, 29: Leonidaion, 31: Bouleuterion

An artist's impression of ancient Olympia

Olympia lies in the valley of the Alfeiós River (Romanized as Alpheus) in the western part of the Peloponnese, today around 18 km (11 mi) away from the Ionian Sea but perhaps, in antiquity, half that distance. The Altis, as the sanctuary as was originally known, was an irregular quadrangular area more than 180 meters (590.5 feet) on each side and walled except to the North where it was bounded by the Mount Kronos. It consisted of a somewhat disordered arrangement of buildings, the most important of which are the Temple of Hera, the Temple of Zeus, the Pelopion and the area of the great altar of Zeus, where the largest sacrifices were made. The name Altis was derived from a corruption of the Elean word also meaning "the grove" because the area was wooded, olive and plane trees in particular.

Uninhabited throughout the year, when the games were held the site became over congested. There were no permanent living structures for spectators, who, rich or poor, made do with tents. Ancient visitors recall being plagued by summer heat and flies; such a problem that sacrifices were made to Zeus Averter of Flies. The site's water supply and sanitation were finally improved after nearly a thousand years, by the mid-second century AD.

But you may say, there are some things disagreeable and troublesome in life. And are there none at Olympia? Are you not scorched? Are you not pressed by a crowd? Are you not without comfortable means of bathing? Are you not wet when it rains? Have you not abundance of noise, clamour, and other disagreeable things? But I suppose that setting all these things off against the magnificence of the spectacle, you bear and endure.

— Epictetus, 1st century AD

Culture

Marble statue of a nude man, crouched in the act of throwing a discus.
The Discobolus, a Greek statue from the 5th century BC, representing a discus thrower. The image shows a Roman marble version of the now-lost bronze original.

The ancient Olympics were as much a religious festival as an athletic event. The games were held in honor of the Greek god Zeus, and on the middle day of the games, 100 oxen would be sacrificed to him. Over time, Olympia, the site of the games, became a central spot for the worship of the head of the Greek pantheon and a temple, built by the Greek architect Libon, was erected on the mountaintop. The temple was one of the largest Doric temples in Greece. The sculptor Pheidias created a statue of Zeus made of gold and ivory. It stood 42 feet (13 m) tall. It was placed on a throne in the temple. The statue became one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. As the historian Strabo put it,

... the glory of the temple persisted ... on account both of the festal assembly and of the Olympian Games, in which the prize was a crown and which were regarded as sacred, the greatest games in the world. The temple was adorned by its numerous offerings, which were dedicated there from all parts of Greece.

Artistic expression was a major part of the games. Sculptors, poets, painters and other artisans would come to the games to display their works in what became an artistic competition. Poets would be commissioned to write poems in praise of the Olympic victors. Such victory songs or epinicians, were passed on from generation to generation and many of them have lasted far longer than any other honor made for the same purpose. Pausanias claimed that the destroyed Sicilian polis of Naxos would have been completely forgotten if not for its four-time Olympic champion, Tisandros. Pierre de Coubertin, one of the founders of the modern Olympic Games, wanted to fully imitate the ancient Olympics in every way. Included in his vision was an artistic competition modeled on the ancient Olympics and held every four years, during the celebration of the Olympic Games. His desire came to fruition at the Olympics held in Athens in 1896.

Politics

Establishment

The Parthenon in Athens, one of the leading city-states of the ancient world

Power in ancient Greece became centered on the city-state (polis) in the 8th century BC. The city-state was a population center organized into a self-contained political entity. Every city-state worshiped the same pantheon of gods, although each one often gave more emphasis on a limited group of deities and celebrated religious festivals based on various calendars. These city-states often lived in close proximity to each other, which created competition for limited resources. Though conflict between the city-states was ubiquitous, it was also in their self-interest to engage in trade, military alliances, and cultural interaction. The city-states had a dichotomous relationship with each other: on one hand, they relied on their neighbors for political and military alliances, while on the other they competed fiercely with those same neighbors for vital resources. In this political context the Olympic Games served as a venue for representatives of the city-states to peacefully compete against each other.

From the 8th century BC onwards, the city-states expanded with the establishment of colonies in the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. While their cults and sanctuaries provided a sense of identity, those local identities as well as the increasing contacts with non-Greek populations presented the Greeks with the need to define themselves not only as members of a certain polis but also as Hellenes. That was made possible on the basis of a common language, a body of shared myths and legends, their religious observance and fondness in athletic festivals, which functioned as important factors for the Greek self-definition. As a result, a small number of religious festivals assumed a panhellenic character and were reserved for members of all Greek city-states; the oldest of them being the Olympic Games. A body of officials, known as Hellanodikai, was responsible for determining the city-state of origin and the Greek identity of the competitors.

The spread of Greek colonies in the 6th and 5th centuries BC is repeatedly linked to successful Olympic athletes. For example, Pausanias recounts that Cyrene was founded c. 630 BC by settlers from Thera with Spartan support. The support Sparta gave was primarily the loan of three-time Olympic champion Chionis. The appeal of settling with an Olympic champion helped to populate the colonies and maintain cultural and political ties with the city-states near Olympia. Thus, Hellenic culture and the games spread while the primacy of Olympia persisted.

Olympic truce

During the Olympic Games, a truce, or ekecheiria was observed. Three runners, known as spondophoroi, were sent from Elis to the participant cities at each set of games to announce the beginning of the truce. During this period, armies were forbidden from entering Olympia. Legal disputes and the use of the death penalty were forbidden. The truce — primarily designed to allow athletes and visitors to travel safely to the games — was, for the most part, observed. Thucydides wrote of a situation when the Spartans were forbidden from attending the games, and the violators of the truce were fined 2,000 minae for assaulting the city of Lepreum during the period of the ekecheiria. The Spartans disputed the fine and claimed that the truce had not yet taken hold.

The games faced a serious challenge during the Peloponnesian War, which primarily pitted Athens against Sparta, but in reality touched nearly every Hellenic city-state. The Olympics were used during this time to announce alliances and offer sacrifices to the gods for victory.

While a martial truce was observed by all participating city-states, no such reprieve from conflict existed in the political arena. The Olympic Games evolved the most influential athletic and cultural stage in ancient Greece, and arguably in the ancient world. As such the games became a vehicle for city-states to promote themselves. The result was political intrigue and controversy. For example, Pausanias, a Greek historian, explains the situation of the athlete Sotades,

Sotades at the ninety-ninth Festival was victorious in the long race and proclaimed a Cretan, as in fact he was. But at the next Festival he made himself an Ephesian, being bribed to do so by the Ephesian people. For this act he was banished by the Cretans.

Events

Three runners featured on an Attic black-figured Panathenaic prize amphora. 332–333 BC, British Museum
Events at the Olympics
Olympiad Year Event first introduced
1st 776 BC Stade
14th 724 BC Diaulos
15th 720 BC Long-distance race (Dolichos)
18th 708 BC Pentathlon, wrestling
23rd 688 BC Boxing (pygmachia)
25th 680 BC Four horse chariot race (tethrippon)
33rd 648 BC Horse race (keles), pankration
37th 632 BC Boys' stade and wrestling
38th 628 BC Boys' pentathlon (discontinued same year)
41st 616 BC Boys' boxing
65th 520 BC Hoplite race (hoplitodromos)
70th 500 BC Mule-cart race (apene)
71st 496 BC Mare horse race (calpe)
84th 444 BC Mule-cart race (apene) and mare horse race (calpe), both discontinued
93rd 408 BC Two-horse chariot race (synoris)
96th 396 BC Competition for heralds and trumpeters
99th 384 BC Tethrippon for horse over one year
128th 268 BC Chariot for horse over one year
131st 256 BC Race for horses older than one year
145th 200 BC Pankration for boys

Apparently starting with just a single foot race, the program gradually increased to twenty-three contests, although no more than twenty featured at any one Olympiad. Participation in most events was limited to male athletes, except for women who were allowed to take part by entering horses in the equestrian events. Youth events are recorded as starting in 632 BC. Our knowledge of how the events were performed primarily derives from the paintings of athletes found on many vases, particularly those of the Archaic and Classical periods. Competitors had access to two gymnasiums for training purposes: the Xystos (meaning 'scraped'), an open colonnade or running track, for the runners and pentathletes, and the Tetragono for wrestlers and boxers.

Greek athletes wearing perizoma (loincloths) while training.

A loincloth known as the perizoma was initially worn by athletes at the ancient Olympic Games. Archaeological evidence from late sixth-century BC reveals athletes sporting this garment during competitions. For most of its history, Olympic events were performed in the nude, a habit which the Greeks felt distinguished them from non-Greeks. Pausanias says that the first naked runner was Orsippus, winner of the stadion race in 720 BC, who simply lost his garment on purpose because running without it was easier. The 5th-century BC historian Thucydides credits the Spartans with introducing the custom of "publicly stripping and anointing themselves with oil in their gymnastic exercises". He continues saying that "formerly, even in the Olympic contests, the athletes who contended wore belts across their middles; and it is but a few years since that the practice ceased."

Running

A section of the stone starting line at Olympia, which has a groove for each foot

The only event recorded at the first thirteen games was the stade, a straight-line sprint of just over 192 metres (630 feet). The diaulos (lit. "double pipe"), or two-stade race, is recorded as being introduced at the 14th Olympiad in 724 BC. It is thought that competitors ran in lanes marked out with lime or gypsum for the length of a stade then turned around separate posts (kampteres), before returning to the start line. Xenophanes wrote that "Victory by speed of foot is honored above all."

A third foot race, the dolichos ("long race"), was introduced in the next Olympiad. Accounts of the race's distance differ; it seems to have been from twenty to twenty-four laps of the track, around 7.5 km to 9 km (4.6 to 5.6 mi), although it may have been lengths rather than laps and thus half as far.

The last running event added to the Olympic program was the hoplitodromos, or "hoplite race", introduced in 520 BC and traditionally run as the last race of the games. Competitors ran either a single or double diaulos (approximately 400 or 800 metres, 0.25 or 0.5 miles) in full military armour. The hoplitodromos was based on a war tactic of soldiers running in full armor to surprise the enemy.

Combat

Palaestra scene. Attic red-figure plate. c. 520–510 BC

Wrestling (pale) is recorded as being introduced at the 18th Olympiad. Three throws were necessary for a win. A throw was counted if the body, hip, back or shoulder (and possibly knee) touched the ground. If both competitors fell nothing was counted. Unlike its modern counterpart Greco-Roman wrestling, it is likely that tripping was allowed.

Pankration scene: the pankriatiast on the right tries to gouge his opponent's eye; the umpire is about to strike him for this foul. Detail from an Attic red-figure kylix c. 490–480 BC, British Museum
Pankratiasts fighting under the eyes of a judge. Side B of a Panathenaic prize amphora, c. 500 BC.

Boxing (pygmachia) was first listed in 688 BC, the boys' event sixty years later. The laws of boxing were ascribed to the first Olympic champion Onomastus of Smyrna. It appears that body-blows were either not permitted or not practised. The Spartans, who claimed to have invented boxing, quickly abandoned it and did not take part in boxing competitions. At first the boxers wore himantes (sing. himas), long leather strips which were wrapped around their hands.

The pankration was one of the most popular sports in the ancient Olympics Games. The pankration was introduced in the 33rd Olympiad (648 BC). Boys' pankration became an Olympic event in 200 BC, in the 145th Olympiad. As well as techniques from boxing and wrestling, athletes also used kicks, locks, and chokes on the ground. Although the only prohibitions were against biting and gouging, the pankration was regarded as less dangerous than boxing.

It was one of the most popular events: Pindar wrote eight odes praising victors of the pankration. A famous event in the sport was the posthumous victory of Arrhichion of Phigalia who "expired at the very moment when his opponent acknowledged himself beaten".

Discus

A discus thrower. Attic red-figure kylix c. 500 BC

The discus (diskos) event was similar to the modern competition. Stone and iron diskoi have been found, although the most commonly used material appears to be bronze. To what extent the diskos was standardized is unclear, but the most common weight seems to be 2 kg (4.4 lbs) size with a diameter of approximately 21 cm (8 in), roughly equivalent to the modern discus.

Long jump

Attic red-figure kylix depicting an athlete carrying halteres (jumping weights) c. late Archaic Greece

In the long jump (halma) competitors swung a pair of weights called halteres. There was no set design; jumpers tended to use either spherical weights made of stone carved to fit the hand or longer lead weights. It is debated whether the jump was performed from a standing start or after a run-up. In his analysis of the event based on vase paintings, Hugh Lee concluded that there was probably a short run-up.

Pentathlon

Main article: Ancient Olympic pentathlon

The pentathlon was a competition made up of five events: running, long jump, discus throw, javelin throw, and wrestling. The pentathlon is said to have first appeared at the 18th Olympiad in 708 BC. The competition was held on a single day, but it is not known how the victor was decided, or in what order the events occurred, except that it finished with the wrestling.

Equestrian events

Horse racing and chariot racing were the most prestigious competitions in the games, due to only the wealthy being able to afford the maintenance and transportation of horses. These races consisted of different events: the four-horse chariot race, the two-horse chariot race, and the horse with rider race, the rider being hand picked by the owner. The four-horse chariot race was the first equestrian event to feature in the Olympics, being introduced in 680 BC. It consisted of two horses that were harnessed under a yoke in the middle, and two outer horses that were attached with a rope. The two-horse chariot was introduced in 408 BC. The horse with rider competition, on the other hand, was introduced in 648 BC. In this race, Greeks did not use saddles or stirrups (the latter was unknown in Europe until about the 6th century AD), so they required good grip and balance.

Pausanias reports that a race for carts drawn by a pair of mules, and a trotting race, were instituted respectively at the seventieth Festival and the seventy-first, but were both abolished by proclamation at the eighty-fourth. The trotting race was for mares, and in the last part of the course the riders jumped off and ran beside the mares.

The chariot races also saw the first woman to win an Olympic event, as the winner was deemed to be the wealthy benefactor or trainer that funded the team rather than those controlling the chariot (who could only be male). This allowed for horse trainer and spartan princess Cynisca to be the first female Olympic victor.

Due to the winner being the benefactor, it was also possible for a particularly wealthy person to improve their odds by bringing multiple teams to the races; according to Plutarch, the record belongs to Alcibiades, who brought seven chariots to a single competition, winning the first, second, and either the third or fourth place at once.

In 67, the Roman Emperor Nero competed in the chariot race at Olympia. He was thrown from his chariot and was thus unable to finish the race. Nevertheless, he was declared the winner on the basis that he would have won if he had finished the race.

Famous athletes

Main article: List of ancient Olympic victors
Ancient list of Olympic victors of the 75th to the 78th, and from the 81st to the 83rd Olympiads (480–468 BC, 456–448 BC)
  • Running:
  • Combat:
    • Arrhichion (pankratiast, died while successfully defending his championship in the 54th Olympiad (564 BC). Described as "the most famous of all pankratiasts".)
    • Milo of Croton (wrestling, legendary six-time victor: once as youth, the rest in the men's event)
    • Diagoras of Rhodes (boxing 79th Olympiad, 464 BC) and his sons Akusilaos and Damagetos (boxing and pankration)
    • Timasitheos of Croton (wrestling)
    • Theagenes of Thasos (boxer, pankratiast and runner)
    • Sostratus of Sicyon (pankratiast, notorious for his finger-breaking technique)
    • Dioxippus (pankratiast, crowned champion by default in 336 BC when no other pankratiast dared compete. Such a victory was called akoniti (lit. without getting dusted) and remains the only one ever recorded in the Olympics in this discipline.)
    • Varastades (boxing, Prince and future King of Armenia, last known ancient Olympic victor (boxing) during the 291st Olympic Games in the 4th century)
  • Equestrian:
    • Cynisca of Sparta (owner of a four-horse chariot) (first woman to be listed as an Olympic victor)
    • Pherenikos ("the most famous racehorse in antiquity", 470s BC)
    • Tiberius (steerer of a four-horse chariot)
    • Nero (steerer of a ten-horse chariot)
  • Other:

Olympic festivals in other places

Main article: Ancient Greek Olympic festivals

Athletic festivals under the name of "Olympic games", named in imitation of the original festival at Olympia, were established over time in various places all over the Greek world. Some of these are only known to us by inscriptions and coins; but others, as the Olympic festival at Antioch, obtained great celebrity. After these Olympic festivals had been established in several places, the great Olympic festival itself was sometimes designated in inscriptions by the addition of Pisa.

See also

References

  1. Ὀλύμπια. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; An Intermediate Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  2. "History". Olympic Games. Archived from the original on 9 August 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. Tony Parrottet, The Naked Olympics (2004) at 145. Pausinias uses such references frequently in Description of Greece. E.g., "I found that the combat took pace when Pisistratus was archon at Athens in the 4th year . . . of the Olympiad in which Eurybotus, the Athenian, won the footrace." Pausinias, Description of Greece 2.24.7.
  4. ^ Tony Perrottet (8 June 2004). The Naked Olympics: The True Story of the Ancient Games. Random House Digital, Inc. pp. 190–. ISBN 978-1-58836-382-4. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  5. ^ Hamlet, Ingomar. "Theodosius I. And The Olympic Games". Nikephoros 17 (2004): pp. 53–75. See also M.I. Finley & H.W. Pleket, The Olympic Games: The First Thousand Years (1976) p. 13.
  6. Remijsen, Sofie (2015). The End of Greek Athletics in Late Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. p. 49.
  7. David Sansone, Ancient Greek civilization, Wiley-Blackwell, 2003, p.32
  8. Mark Golden, Greece & Rome, Second Series, Vol. 58, No. 1 (APRIL 2011) pp. 1–13
  9. ^ "The Ancient Olympics". The Perseus Project. Tufts University. Archived from the original on 10 February 2010. Retrieved 12 February 2010.
  10. Kyle, 1999, p.101
  11. Kyle, 1999, pp.101–102
  12. Kyle, 1999, p.102–104
  13. Kyle, 1999, p.102
  14. Spivey, 2005, pp.225–226
  15. Pausanias, Description of Greece, 5.7.6–9
  16. Spivey, 2005, p.226
  17. Young 2004, p. 3.
  18. Beale 2011, pp. 9–12.
  19. Young 2004, pp. 5–6.
  20. Wendy J. Raschke (15 June 1988). Archaeology Of The Olympics: The Olympics & Other Festivals In Antiquity. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 22–. ISBN 978-0-299-11334-6. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  21. Beale 2011, pp. 9–11.
  22. Young 2004, pp. 6–7.
  23. Beale 2011, p. 12 writes that, while the Bronze Age visual images are typically hard to interpret due to their lack of context and poor condition, Homeric epics provide a detailed discription of athletic competitions and the events involved, although, per Young 2004, p. 8, the question is how much of this "is an authentic memory of Mycenaean times, and how much comes from life in eighth-century Greece."
  24. Early, Gerald (24 January 2019). The Cambridge Companion to Boxing. Cambridge University Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-108-65103-5.
  25. Nelson, Max. (2006) "The First Olympic Games" in Gerald P. Schaus and Stephen R. Wenn, eds. Onward to the Olympics: Historical Perspectives on the Olympic Games (Waterloo), pp. 47–58. See also, for example, "Olympic Games, in The Classical Tradition (2010) p.654.
  26. ^ Sansone 2004, p. 32.
  27. Young 2004, pp. 16–17.
  28. Edelman, Edelman (2017). The Oxford Handbook of Sports History. Oxford University Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780199984749.. See also Finley & Pleket, pp.98-99.
  29. Plutarch, Numa Pompilius 1.4
  30. Dionysius, 1.74–1–3. Little remains of Eratosthenes' Chronographiae, but its academic influence is clearly demonstrated here in the Roman Antiquities by Dionysius of Halicarnassus.
  31. Denis Feeney in Caesar's Calendar: Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History. (Berkeley and Los Angeles, California: the University of California Press, 2007), 84.
  32. "The Athletics of the Ancient Olympics: A Summary and Research Tool" by Kotynski, p.3 (Quote used with permission). For the calculation of the date, see Kotynski footnote 6.
  33. See, for example, Alfred Mallwitz's article "Cult and Competition Locations at Olympia" p.101 in which he argues that the games may not have started until about 704 BC. Hugh Lee, on the other hand, in his article "The 'First' Olympic Games of 776 B.C.E" p.112, follows an ancient source that claims that there were twenty-seven Olympiads before the first one was recorded in 776. There are no records of Olympic victors extant from earlier than the fifth century BC.
  34. See Perrott, p.138, and "Olympic Games" in The Oxford Classical Dictionary (2003), p.1066.
  35. Kyle, Donald (2020). "Ancient Greek and Roman Sport". In Edelman, Robert; Wilson, Wayne (eds.). Oxford Handbook of Sports History. Oxford Univ Press US. pp. 83–86. ISBN 978-0-19-752095-6.
  36. Spivey, 2005, p.172
  37. ^ Sansone 2004, p. 31.
  38. "The Ancient Olympic Games". HickokSports. 4 February 2005. Archived from the original on 22 February 2002. Retrieved 13 May 2007.
  39. Finley & Pleket pp. 17, 26, 45–46,
  40. Perrottet, pp.155–156; Pausinias, Description of Greece 5.6.7 & 6.20.9. For a lengthy examination of the issue, see Matthew Dillon, "Did Parthenoi Attend the Olympic Games? Girls and Women Competing, Spectating, and Carrying Out Cult Roles at Greek Religious Festivals," Hermes vol.128, no. 4 (2000), pp.457–480.
  41. Dillon (2000), pp.457–458
  42. ^ Young, p. 131
  43. Newby, Zahra (2005). Greek Athletics in the Roman World: Victory and Virtue. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-19-927930-2.
  44. Drees, p. 119
  45. ^ Young, p. 132
  46. Young, p. 133
  47. Moses of Chorene. History of Armenia. p. 3.40.
  48. Young, p. 135
  49. David C. Young (15 April 2008). A Brief History of the Olympic Games. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 135–. ISBN 978-0-470-77775-6. Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  50. "Olympia Hypothesis: Tsunamis Buried the Cult Site On the Peloponnese". Science Daily. 11 July 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
  51. "Altis | ancient site, Greece".
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  53. Young, p. 134

    "A very wealthy Greek, Herodes Atticus, and his very wealthy Roman wife, Regilla, funded an elaborate fountain which was both a practical solution and a work of art. Water, piped in from a tributary of the Alpheus, entered into a large semi-circular basin. Emerging from 83 gargoyle fountains, it was then channeled all around the site. Behind the basin rose a semi-circular colonnade more than 100 feet high, with a series of niches built into its upper level."

  54. Golden, Mark, p. 77 Archived 4 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  55. Description of Greece 6.13.8
  56. Stanton, 2000, pp.3–4
  57. Stanton, 2000, p. 17
  58. Hansen, 2006, p. 9
  59. Hansen, 2006, pp.9–10
  60. Hansen, 2006, p.10
  61. Hansen, 2006, p.114
  62. Raschke, 1988, p. 23
  63. Sansone 2004, pp. 31–32.
  64. Spivey, 2005, pp.182–183
  65. ^ Swaddling, 1999, p.11
  66. ^ Thucydides (1971). The History of the Peloponnesian War. Vol. 5. Translated by Richard Crawley. The Internet Classics Archive. ISBN 978-0-525-26035-6.
  67. Strassler & Hanson, 1996, pp. 332–333
  68. Lendering, Jona. "Peloponnesian War". Livius, Articles on Ancient History. Archived from the original on 13 February 2010.
  69. Kyle, 2007, p. 8
  70. Young 2004, pp. 20–21.
  71. See also "Olympic Games" in The Classical Tradition p.654 and Finley & Peket, p.43.
  72. Young, p. 18
  73. Beale 2011, pp. 49, 160.
  74. "Preparing and organizing the games" Archived 26 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine Foundation of the Hellenic World
  75. ^ Poliakoff, Michael B. (1 January 1987). Combat Sports in the Ancient World: Competition, Violence, and Culture. Yale University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-300-06312-7.
  76. See Perrottet, pp.6–7 and "Olympic Games" in The Classical Tradition p.654.
  77. Pausanias Description of Greece Archived 4 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine 1.44.1. Trans. W. H. S. Jones
  78. Thucydides (431 BC) The History of the Peloponnesian War Archived 7 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine 1.1 (Trans. R. Crawley)
  79. Miller, Stephen G. (8 January 2006). Ancient Greek Athletics. Yale University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0300115291. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017 – via Google Books. See also Finley & Pleket, p. 43.
  80. Miller, Stephen G. (8 January 2006). Ancient Greek Athletics. Yale University Press. p. 44. ISBN 978-0300115291. Archived from the original on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2017 – via Google Books. There is uncertainty about this. See, for example, Finley & Pleket, pp.35-37.
  81. Golden, p. 55. "The dolichos" varied in length from seven to twenty-four lengths of the stadium – from 1,400 to 4,800 Greek feet."
  82. Miller, p. 32 Archived 15 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine "The sources are not unanimous about the length of this race: some claim that it was twenty laps of the stadium track, others that it was twenty-four. It may have differed from site to site, but it was in the range of 7.5 to 9 kilometers."
  83. Miller, Stephen G. (8 January 2006). Ancient Greek Athletics. Yale University Press. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-300-11529-1. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2017 – via Google Books.
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  86. To judge from the story of Damoxenos and Kreugas who boxed at the Nemean Games, after a long battle with no result combatants could agree to a free exchange of hits. (Gardiner, p. 432 Archived 17 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine)
  87. Dunning, Eric (1999). Sport Matters: Sociological Studies of Sport, Violence, and Civilization. Psychology Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 978-0-415-06413-2.
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  93. Miller, p. 63
  94. Gardiner, p. 295
  95. Lee, Hugh M. (2009) "The Halma: A Running or Standing Jump?" Archived 26 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine in Onward to the Olympics: Historical Perspectives on the Olympic Games
  96. Miller, Stephen G. (8 January 2006). Ancient Greek Athletics. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300115291. Archived from the original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved 15 November 2017 – via Google Books.
  97. Young, p. 32
  98. Young, p. 19
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  105. Millender, Ellen G., "Spartan Women" p. 500–525. In A Companion to Sparta, edited by Anton Powell, Vol. 1 of A Companion to Sparta. Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley Blackwell, 2018.
  106. Plutarch, The Life of Alcibiades
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  109. Young, David C. (15 April 2008). A Brief History of the Olympic Games. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780470777756. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  110. 369 according to Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece by Nigel Wilson, 2006, Routledge (UK) or 385 according to Classical Weekly by Classical Association of the Atlantic States
  111. Tiberius, AD 1 (or earlier) – cf. Ehrenberg & Jones, Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius p. 73 (n.78)
  112. William Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, 1875 – ancientlibrary.com Archived 6 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Christesen, Paul. 2007. Olympic Victor Lists and Ancient Greek History. Cambridge, UK, and New York: Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Lee, Hugh M. 2001. The Program and Schedule of the Ancient Olympic Games. Nikephoros Beihefte 6. Hildesheim, Germany: Weidmann.
  • Nielsen, Thomas Heine. 2007. Olympia and the Classical Hellenic City-State Culture. Historisk-filosofiske Meddeleser 96. Copenhagen: Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters.
  • Sinn, Ulrich. 2000. Olympia: Cult, Sport, and Ancient Festival. Princeton, NJ: M. Wiener.
  • Valavanis, Panos. 2004. Games and Sanctuaries in Ancient Greece: Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia, Nemea, Athens. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum.
  • Swaddling, Judith. 1984. The Ancient Olympic Games. Austin: University of Texas.

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