



Gymnastics-physical exercise carried out by males only, completely naked-were an integral part of the education of every young man and one of the distinguishing factors that the Greeks believed set them apart from barbarians. Victors in the games were crowned with a branch of the "beautiful - crowned wild olive tree" that stood near the temple of Zeus. This crown bestowed the greatest honor on the competitor, his family and his native city, and could not be compensated for by either money or high office. Every four years Greeks from all over the Greek world gathered in this sanctuary to participate in the Olympiada. A sacred truce (Ekecheria) was kept during the period of the games and attempts were made to settle wars and conflicts between the (poleis -cities) based on reasoning inspired by Zeus.
Every city invested substantial resources in the construction of a gymnasium, a complex similar to a present day campus and including a palaestra for physical education. This structure normally consisted of a square court, with porticoes offering shade, service facilities, changing rooms and fountains. Around it were three lined avenues, baths and rooms for teaching. The teaching was left to the personal initiative of philosophers and experts in various disciplines, pupils of the practical arts, including fine arts, got hands on experience in workshops, watch our video http://youtu.be/JPNEbO1Ey2A?hd=1
Sport necessarily
meant competitive sport, considered both part of a young mans education
perhaps a remnant of ancient initiation rites designed to instil
courage, virtue and military skills and a cultic offering been the
custom. It had been the custom among the aristocratic elites of
the Mycenaean and Homeric world to hold sporting contests in honor
of the dead. A link was thus established, very early in Greek history,
between religious festivals and competitive sporting events held
in the great sanctuaries both outside cities and in the principal
poleis.
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The Olympic Games were Pan-Hellenic Games. The most important athletic disciplines were running, with races over different distances one even in armor (hoplitodromeia) discus and javelin throwing, long jump, boxing, wrestling and pancration a contest involving boxing and wrestling.
Before training, under the eye of his coach, or taking part in a contest, the athlete performed a preparatory ritual consisting of covering his body with perfumed oil from a leather aryballos. When his strenuous physical exertions were over, and before taking a relaxing bath, he then scraped his skin clean of dust, oil and sweat with a strigil, a curved instrument designed for this purpose. Restricted to the wealthy were disciplines involving horses, including chariot racing.Musical, vocal and poetry contests were commonly associated with the athletic events, further evidence of the idea of unity that characterized the education of young Greeks.
Literature provides
references to some of the great sporting events of the ancient Greek
world: the celebrated Olympiads, according to legend initiated by
Heracles in 776 B.C. in Olympia (see page one), the Pythia Games,
held in Delphi in honor of Apollo, The Nemea Games, celebrated at
Nemea in honor of Zeus and recalling one of Heracles Labors, the
Isthmian Games, held in the sanctuary of Poseidon on the Isthmus
of Corinth, and the Panthenaic Games, part of the great festivities
organized in Athens to honor Athena. Any departure from fair play
was severely punished and the only prize besides the purely symbolic
laurel wreath was the glory which the winner basked in and which
reflected on his people and native city state, thus honored in the
eyes of all Greece.
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In Athens, athletes from nearly 200 countries will compete in 28 sports in 296 events. The sports are: aquatics (diving, swimming, synchronized swimming and water polo) · archery · badminton · baseball · basketball · boxing · canoe-kayak · cycling · equestrian · fencing · field hockey · gymnastics · handball · judo · modern pentathlon · rowing · sailing · shooting · softball · soccer · table tennis · taekwondo · tennis · track and field · triathlon · volleyball · weightlifting · wrestling
How does a sport get added to the Summer Games? For a sport to be included in the Summer Games, it must meet the following criteria:
It must
be widespread in at least 75 countries and 4 continents (mens
sports).
It must be widespread in at least 40 countries and 3 continents (womens sports)
The Athens 2004 Olympic Games emblem is an olive wreath - the "kotinos," with which the Olympic winner was crowned in classical times. It is a symbol linked with the Olympic ideals, peace and the city of Athens, whose sacred tree was the olive tree. Its circular shape projects universal meanings of the unity of the world, the circle of life and the link between time past and present.
History of the
Games
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