Olympia
Equestrian Events
Combat Sports
Running
The most ancient and prestigious event at Olympia was the running race along the length of the stadium, a distance of 600 Olympic feet (192.28 meters). The Olympiad (the four-year period up to the next Games) was named after the winner, and dates were recorded by reference to the list of victors. Besides this equivalent of our “two-hundred meter” event, there was a race along two lengths of the track, and a long-distance race of twenty or twenty-four lengths. There was no “marathon,” this was the invention of Baron de Coubertin who revived the Olympic Games in 1896. In all these races the runners made a standing start, from a row of stone slabs set in the track that had grooves cut in them to provide a grip for the toes.
Jumping
This vase has one of the best surviving depictions of the long-jump event at the ancient Olympic Games. There was only the long jump, not the high jump, in Greek athletics. You can see that the athlete in the picture is holding heavy lead or stone jumping weights called halteres. These were swung to increase the length of the jump. You can also see three pegs in the ground which mark the previous jumps.
Pentathlon
The Olympic victors
Archaeology at Olympia
Candela Citations
- The Olympic Games. Authored by: The British Museum. Provided by: The British Museum. Located at: https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/art-history/ancient-art-civilizations/greek-art/beginners-guide-greece/a/olympic-games. Project: The Olympic Games. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike