Of all the games
held throughout
Although the first
Olympic champion listed in the records was one Coroebus of Elis, a cook, who
won the sprint race in 776 BC, it is generally accepted that the Games were
probably at least 500 years old at that time. According to one legend they were
founded by Heracles, Son of Alcmene, the Greek legendary hero. But other
traditions speak of the games being introduced in 1453 B.C. by the Idæi Dactyli
in honour of Zeus, or by Pelops, 1307 B.C., then revived by Iphitus, 884 B.C.
The Games, like
all Greek games, were an intrinsic part of a religious festival. They were held
in honour of Zeus on the banks of the
Wrestling and the
pentathlon were introduced in 708 BC. The latter was an all-around competition
consisting of five events--the long jump, javelin throw,
discus throw, foot
race, and wrestling. Boxing was introduced in 688 BC, and in 680 a chariot
race. In 648 the pancratium, a kind of all-strength, or no-holds-barred,
wrestling, was included. Kicking and hitting were allowed; only biting and
gouging (thrusting a finger or thumb into an opponent's eye) were forbidden.
Between 632 and
616 BC events for boys were introduced. And from time to time further events
were added, including contests for fully armed soldiers, for heralds, and for
trumpeters. The program must have been as varied as that of the modern
Olympics, although the athletics (track and field) events were limited; there
was no high jumping in any form and no individual field event, except in the
pentathlon. Until the 77th Olympiad (472 BC) all the contests took place on one
day; later they were spread, with perhaps some fluctuation, over four days,
with a fifth devoted to the closing-ceremony presentation of prizes and a
banquet for the champions. Sources generally agree that women were not allowed
as competitors or, except for the priestess of Demeter, as spectators. In most
events the athletes participated in the nude.
The Olympic Games
were originally restricted to freeborn Greeks. The competitors, including those
Who came from the Greek colonies, were amateur in the sense that the only prize
was a wreath or garland. The athletes underwent a most rigorous period of
supervised training, however, and eventually the contestants were true
professionals. Not only were there substantial prizes for winning but the
Olympic champion also received adulation and unlimited benefits from his city.
Athletes became full-time specialists--a trend that in the modern Games has
caused a long and bitter controversy over amateurism.
The Games
continued unabated for a great length of time, and were only abolished finally
by Theodosius in 394 A.D.
Revival of the
Olympics
The architect of
the modern Olympics was Pierre de Fredi, Baron de Coubertin, (born in
“Let us export our
oarsmen, our runners, our fencers into other lands. That is the true Free Trade
of the future; and the day it is introduced into
The speech did not
produce any appreciable activity, but Coubertin was not fainthearted. At a
conference on international sport in
himself wrote that
except for his co-workers Dimitrios Vikelas of
Nevertheless, and
to quote Coubertin again, "a unanimous vote in favour of revival was
rendered at the end of the Congress chiefly to please me."
It was at first
agreed that the Games should be held in
The modern
Olympics have been held ever since, with the exception of 1916, 1940, and 1944,
due to the two world wars.
What has been the
purpose of this historical sketch? Interesting as it is, what reason has been
behind the inclusion of it in this series of essays? Two factors stand out,
first the date – 1896, and second, the fact that the revival brought onto the
world stage one important event that was part of the scene in A.D. 29 – 33, the
years when Jesus ministered. In the following chapters, we shall see that other
revivals have likewise restored a world chess-board to its earlier format, and
there seems to be some special reason for this in connection with God’s
end-time judgements.
[Information for
this chapter has been selected from Britannica 2001, the Macmillan
Encyclopaedia, and Haydn’s Dictionary of Dates.]