olympia
27 May 2002

The Palaestra was
where the athletes trained for the contests in wrestling, boxing and
jumping, 3rd Century BC.
There was scarcely any city which failed to stage games in honour of the gods, but the attention of all Greece was
drawn to the
four great Pan-Hellenic festivals: the Olympic Games at Olympia and the Pythian Games at Delphi, both held every four years; and the Nemean Games
in Argolis and the Isthmian Games at Corinth, each held every two years.
These festivals drew athletes from all parts of Greece who competed as
individuals, not as teams, on a passionately amateur basis. Wars were put
aside for the Games. Greatest of all the Pan-Hellenic games were the
Olympics held at Olympia.
Olympia was the most sacred of ancient
Greece’s sanctuaries. It was the place in which Zeus, principal among the
gods, was worshipped, and where the Olympic Games were held in his honour.
The importance of the Games is apparent in the number of city states
that participated in them, honouring the ceasefire traditionally imposed
during each Olympic period, and in the fact that the Olympiad - the period
of four years from one Games to the next - was recognized as the only
reliable system of chronology throughout Greece.
The sanctuary and its surroundings were
first inhabited in 3000 BC. Archeologists have discovered six arched
buildings called the Pelopeum, together with a tomb around which a cult
centered, dating to this period. The Pelopeum was connected with Pelops, a Mycenaean king, who according to myth was victorious in a chariot race
over the king of Pisa. The sanctuary had originally been controlled by
Pisa, later on passing into the hands of the Elis who were responsible for
the organization of the Olympic Games in 776 BC.
Before the Dorian invasion, Olympia was a
center for cults connected with the earth. On the hill of Cronium, to the
north of the site, the cult of Cronos was developed. When the Dorians
invaded, the Elder Gods, or Titans were replaced with the Olympian gods
Zeus and Hera. After the 5th Century BC, the Games became renowned
throughout the Greek world, and the sanctuary of Zeus received priceless
religious offerings and magnificent temples were built at the site. In 74
BC it was plundered by Sulla and in 67 AD Nero carried off much of the
statuary to Rome, after first competing in the Games and winning six
events. In 393 AD Theodosius II ordered the destruction of the temples; a
task in which he was assisted with by a series of earthquakes. When the
pagan religions were suppressed, the institution of the Olympic Games
which had flourished for 12 centuries and made a brilliant contribution to
the history of sport, fell into disuse. The excavations on the site have
been carried out largely by the German Archaeological Institute since
1875.
The Olympic Games, a religious occasion
and fair as well, lasted five days and included boys events, horse races, athletic contests
and the race for warriors in armour. The athletic contests consisted of
the pentathlon, foot race, discus and javelin
throwing, wrestling, boxing, and pankration (a combination of boxing,
wrestling, kicking and strangling to the finish with nothing barred save
biting, breaking an opponent’s fingers and pushing one’s thumb into the
other’s eye). Except for rare instances,
the games were contested in the nude. To the Greeks nudity seemed the
natural way to exercise and it fostered pride in physical fitness and
indignity at being flabby. The pentathlon was designed to choose all-round
athletes who could do well in a series of five contests rather than
specialists in one sport. Running and jumping events and discus and
javelin throwing took place in the stadium; horseback and chariot racing
in the hippodrome or race course; and boxing and wrestling was held at the
open space in front of the altar of Zeus.

The Stadium at
Olympia where the original Olympic Games of antiquity were held, 5th-4th
Century BC.
Foot racing and chariot racing were the
essence of the Games. The opening spectacle of the Olympics was a four
horse chariot race. The charioteer was one of the few clothed athletes.
Because the victor’s crown went to the owner of the chariot and horses and
not to the driver, rich men desirous for honours sometimes entered as many as
seven chariots in the same race. As many as 40 chariots partook in a race
covering a distance of 9 miles or 12 double laps back and forth between
two posts in the ground of the hippodrome. The races were run off in a
dust storm of collisions and spills. Very few starters managed to finish
the race.
All athletes competing had to be true
born, free Greek men. Women were not allowed to watch the Games. Winners
at all Pan-Hellenic games received only garlands as awards: wild olive
leaves at Olympia, pine needles at the Isthmian Games in Corinth, laurel at the Pythian Games in
Delphi and parsley at the Nemean Games in Argolis; lesser festivals gave
more valuable prizes. Victors in the Olympic Games were crowned with a
wreath made from the branch of the "beautiful crowned wild olive tree"
that stood near the temple of Zeus and believed to have been planted by
Heracles. This crown bestowed the greatest honour on the competitor, his
family and his native city, and could not be compensated for by either
money or high office. There were also other benefits to winning the
Pan-Hellenic games. In their home cities statues were put up to victors.
At times the winner was welcomed through a special hole knocked in the
city’s walls. He was paraded in triumph through the streets, and poems in
his praise were recited in public places. An especially enthusiastic city
might give front row seats to all public shows, make him exempt from
taxation and give him free meals as well. And in Athens as elsewhere he was given
a good sum of cash.
Training was hard work. Competitors
had to train for 10 months to qualify to partake in the event. Its not
pure coincidence that the Greek word for public games became the English
word ‘agony’. But there were periods of relief from the endless practice.
The Greeks had recreational sport such as vigorous ball games similar to
modern rugby. But these were merely past times and never made it to the
Olympics, where there were no team contests, perhaps because the Greek
temperament was too individualistic and competitive to foster the spirit
of cooperation required.
Olympia was not a town but a grouping of
temples and arenas in the fields. Since there were no permanent houses,
people put up tents and slept in the open. The sanctuary of Zeus was
marked on the north side by the Cronium hill and to the south and west by
the two rivers, Cladeus and Alpheius respectively. Inside the sanctuary, a
wall dating to the geometric period (1000-750 BC) showed the boundaries of
the Altis or grove, the densely vegetated precinct of Zeus. The site
contained a number of buildings. The sacred hearth and the fire that was
never extinguished was kept in the Prytaneum (6th Century BC). The
Philippeum was a circular building or tholos in the Ionic order, built by
Philip II in 338 BC and his son Alexander the Great. It housed statues of
Alexander and his forefathers. The Heraeum or the temple of Hera where
Zeus was also worshipped until 460 BC was a Doric temple (6th Century BC).
It was used as an exhibition hall for statues as well, among which was the
famous Hermes and Dionysus by Praxiteles. The Nymphaeum, dedicated to the
nymphs, was constructed by Herodes Atticus and his wife in the 2nd Century
AD. Furthermore, there were Treasuries which were small buildings in the form of temples built to
house valuable dedications made to the sanctuary (6th and 5th Century BC).
In front of the Treasuries were the 12 bases of Zannes, or bronze statues
of Zeus; the money for which was contributed compulsorily by those who
were discovered to have cheated at the Olympics. Lastly, the Metroon was a Doric
temple to Rhea Cybele, mother of the gods (4th Century BC). In the time of
Augustus, it was used for the Emperor’s own cult.
The stadium was moved to its present
position outside the Altis in the 5th or 4th Century BC when the Games
lost their religious significance and had become a purely secular event.
Stadium literally meant a length of 600 Greek feet, measuring 192.27 meters
in metric terms. The starting
slab, divided to give each runner four feet of lateral room, accommodated
20 men. The racers who wore no shoes, lined up by positioning their feet
according to the grooves that were cut into the stone slab. The spectators
sat on the ground all around the stadium. The embankment could seat up to
45,000 spectators. There were stone thrones for the official
representatives of the city states, the organizers of the Games, the
umpires and the priestess of Demeter Chamyne, the only woman allowed to
watch the events. The stadium was linked to the Altis by the Crypt, a
vaulted passageway built in the 3rd Century BC.

Part of the pediment showing
the Battle of the Centaurs from the Temple of Zeus, 470-456 BC.
(Olympia Museum)
The Temple of Zeus, the most important
building in the Altis represented the ultimate achievement of the Doric
order. It had six rows of 13 columns each and was built between 470 and 456 BC. The
temple stood on a platform and was of huge dimensions: 60 meters in length,
23 meters in width, and approximately 20 meters in height. Its architect was Libon
from Elis. In the temple’s cella stood Phidias’ masterpiece, the
chryselephantine statue of Zeus, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
The god, 12.5 meters high, was seated. He was decorated with jewellery
consisting of precious stones and held victory in one hand and in the
other the sceptre with the eagle, his symbol. The pedestal of the statue
was decorated with reliefs. The grey limestone floor (from Ephesus in
Turkey)
contained a depression filled with oil which was used for the maintenance
of the statue and which also because of the reflections in it, enhanced
the visual impression made by the effigy. On the pediments of the temple
were sculptures depicting the chariot race between Pelops and king of Pisa
(east side) and the Battle of the Centaurs (west side), while the friezes
illustrated the 12 Labours of Heracles. The temple of Zeus was shattered
by an earthquake in the 6th Century AD.
The workshop of Phidias, in which the
gigantic statue of Zeus was built, stood to the west of the temple.
Materials and tools for the carving of stone and making of gold artifacts
have been found here, along with a small earthenware wine cup with the
inscription "I belong to Phidias". In the 5th Century AD, an early
Christian Basilica was erected on the same site, and its ruins can be seen
today.
Stoas formed the boundaries of the Altis.
Three groups of Roman hostels and baths have been excavated at the site.
The Theocoleum was the official residence of the priests of Olympia. The
Leonidium, built in 330 BC with funds donated by Leonidas of Naxos, was
the largest structure in the sanctuary and the hostel for official
visitors to Olympia. In the time of Hadrian, the central courtyard was
redesigned as a garden with winding channels of water, a central island
and bridges. The layout was a replica of Hadrian’s villa at Tivoli.
The various areas of the sanctuary were
dedicated to specific activities. Horse
racing and chariot racing took place in the Hippodrome which was to the
south of the stadium. It no longer survives today. The Bouleuterion
(council chamber), built in the 6th Century BC, contained the altar of
Zeus Horceus at which the athletes took the oath to honour the rules of
the Games. The Palaestra, a square building dating to the 3rd Century BC
consisted of an open courtyard with rooms around it. The athletes
practiced for the heavy events here, namely, wrestling, boxing and jumping. The
Gymnasium, a 2nd Century BC building consisting of an open area surrounded
by stoas, was on the other hand used for training in the light events such
as running and the
pentathlon.

Hermes and Dionysus
by Praxiteles, 340-330 BC. (Olympia Museum)
Close to the archaeological site is
Olympia Museum. Room V is the most important room, containing the
sculptures from the temple of Zeus, works of the highest artistic value in
the severe style of the early 5th Century BC. On display are the 12
metopes from the short sides of the temple, which with unique symmetry and
power depict the Labours of Heracles. The pediments, almost completely
made of marble, have been reconstructed according to the surviving
sections. On the east pediment is the myth of the chariot race between Pelops and Oenomaus,
king of Pisa, with Zeus as the central figure. On the
west is the Battle of Centaurs taking place around the figure of Apollo.
In the Hermes Room is the marble statue of Hermes and Dionysus (340-330 BC) found in
the temple of Hera, a work of incomparable artistry which is attributed to
the famous sculptor Praxiteles. The figure of Nike by Paeonios is a
masterpiece of the 5th Century BC. Dedicated to Zeus, it commemorated one
of the victories in 421 BC during the Peloponnesian war.
As I strolled through the pillars in
the palaestra, ran in the ancient stadium, gasped in awe at the exhibits
in the museum, the Greek
idea of arete, pursuit of excellence at all levels of life, and the glory
of sport as an expression of the divine power manifested in human life,
shined through in full inspiring clarity. The gods were the source of
power, and the Greeks honoured every kind of power and yearned to display
it in their own lives. This applied equally to war, arts, athletic games
and thought. If a Greek did well in any of these, he was believed to be making proper use
of his heavenly provided gifts and to that extent was getting closer to
the gods. This is what Aristotle meant when he said, "We must be immortal
as far as we can".
Note: My camera got
damaged whilst travelling through Greece and Italy. I have thus instead used Photos © Editions D. Haitalis
for my Greece web pages.
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