By Dr Stephen Instone
The Olympics: Ancient versus Modern part 1
For the first 13 Olympics there was only one event, the stadion race ,
which was a running race up one length of the stadium. How long this
race was is a matter for conjecture, as the ancient stadium, 192 meters
long, visible at Olympia now, did not exist then.
In 724 BC a longer, there-and-back race, the diaulos, was introduced, followed four years later by the long-distance race, the dolichos,
a race of perhaps 12 laps. The emphasis on running in the early years
of the Olympics may reflect the perceived basic requirements for a fit
soldier.
Boxing, wrestling, and the pancration (the 'all-power' race,
combining all types of physical attack) soon followed, along with the
pentathlon, and horse-and-chariot racing. A race while wearing armour
was introduced in 520 BC, and even a mule race (in 500 BC, but it was
not generally popular). So the changing shape of the modern Olympic
programme is not without precedent, though the ancient Greeks would
perhaps have baulked at the sight of some of our modern 'sports'
Comments
Post a Comment