The Greeks invented athletic contests and held them in honour of
their gods. The Isthmos game were staged every two years at the Isthmos
of Corinth. The Pythian games took place every four years near Delphi.
The most famous games held at Olympia, South- West of Greece, which took
place every four years. The ancient Olympics seem to have begun in the
early 700 BC, in honour of Zeus. No women were allowed to watch the
games and only Greek nationals could participate. One of the ancient
wonders was a statue of Zeus at Olympia, made of gold and ivory by a
Greek sculptor Pheidias. This was placed inside a Temple, although it
was a towering 42 feet high.
The games at Olympia were greatly expanded from a one-day
festival of athletics and wrestling to, in 472 BC, five days with many
events. The order of the events is not precisely known, but the first
day of the festival was devoted to sacrifices. On the Middle Day of the
festival 100 oxen were sacrificed in honor of a God. Athletes also often
prayed and made small sacrifices themselves..
On the second day, the foot-race, the main event of the
games, took place in the stadium, an oblong area enclosed by sloping
banks of earth.
At Olympia there were 4 different types of races; The first was stadion,
the oldest event of the Games, where runners sprinted for 1 stade, the
length of the stadium(192m). The other races were a 2-stade race (384
m.), and a long-distance run which ranged from 7 to 24 stades (1,344 m.
to 4,608 m.).The fourth type of race involved runners wearing full amor,
which was 2-4 stade race (384 m. to 768 m.), used to build up speed and
stamina for military purposes.
On other days, wrestling, boxing, and the pancratium, a
combination of the two, were held. In wrestling, the aim was to throw
the opponent to the ground three times, on either his hip, back or
shoulder. In ancient Greek wrestling biting and genital holds were
illegal.
Boxing became more and more brutal; at first the pugilists
wound straps of soft leather over their fingers as a means of deadening
the blows, but in later times hard leather, sometimes weighted with
metal, was used. In the pancratium, the most rigorous of the sports, the
contest continued until one or the other of the participants
acknowledged defeat.
Horse-racing, in which each entrant owned his horse, was
confined to the wealthy but was nevertheless a popular attraction. The
course was 6 laps of the track, with separate races for whereupon the
rider would have no stirrups. It was only wealthy people that could pay
for such training, equipment, and feed of both the rider and the horses.
So whichever horse won it was not the rider who was awarded the Olive
wreath but the owner. There were also Chariot races, that consisted of
both 2-horse and 4-horse chariot races, with separate races for chariots
drawn by foals. There was also a race was between carts drawn by a team
of 2 mules, which was 12 laps of the stadium track.
After the horse-racing came the pentathlon, a series of five
events: sprinting, long-jumping, javelin-hurling, discus-throwing, and
wrestling.
The ancient Greeks considered the rhythm and precision of an athlete throwing the discus as important as his strength.
The discus was a circle shaped stone, iron, bronze, or lead.
There were different sizes according to age groups. The javelin was a
long wooden stick shape with spear head, similar height to that of a
person. In the middle was bound a thong for a hurler's fingers to grip
and guide to the correct angle it was thrown.
To Jump long distances athletes used lead or stone weights to
increase the length of the jump. These weights were known as 'halteres'
were held in front of the athlete during his ascent, and then swung
behind his back and dropped during his descent to help propel him.
credits: http://www.ancientgreece.com/s/Olympics/
done by liyana
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