| Hour of the Olympics Chapter 6 "Mystery Man" |
The Greek Vase

The Greeks used the large deposits of clay to make pottery. By the year 1000 BC Athens had become one of the leading cities in making pottery. The pots were both functional and beautiful. The Greeks made two basic kinds of pottery. One was the red-figured and the other was black-figured. We simply used red and black clay to form these red and black figured Greek style vases.
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Vases Using Various Colors of Clay |
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Learn about the first Olympic games.
The Ancient Olympics http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/Olympics/
Real Story of the Ancient Olympic Games http://www.upenn.edu/museum/Olympics/olympicintro.html
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The Olympic
Games

Photo courtesy and ©1996 The Ancient Greek World
The Olympic Games called the Panhellenic Games were first held in Olympia around 775 BC. No one knows why the games started. Here are a few myths explaining why the first games were held:
The Olympic games were open to all city-states. Anyone who was a free man could participate. Men as far away as Spain and Turkey also came to the games. The games had few rules. Women were forbidden to attend the games.
The games were held every four years at four different shrines:
The city-states would stop fighting each other to go to the games. The Olympic games lasted for one week. The first day of the event ceremonies and sacrifices took place. On the closing day a victory banquet for the winning athletes and a procession was held.
In the fifth century B. C. there were eight events for adults and three for children. All events were competed as individuals and not as a member of a city-state. If anyone was caught cheating he was heavily fined. The fines went to building statues to the god Zeus. A total of sixteen statues were built.
The champions were rewarded with simple crowns made of leaves.
Events
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Running
(3 foot races: stadion, diaulos, and dolichos) - one length - adults and
children two lengths - adults The shortest race in the ancient Olympics was about 200 yards. The Greeks called this distance the stade. The runners began in a standing position. They raced in straight lines to the opposite end of the stadium. The finish line was marked by upright posts in the ground. |
Hoplite
This event was a foot race with the contestants wearing full armor that
weighed about 50 pounds. Later the racers wore only a helmet and carried a
shield.
Pugme (Boxing) -
adults and children
Boxing had no rounds. The contestants boxed until they were either knocked out
or admitted defeat. There were no weight classes. The boxers wore pieces of
leather tied around their hands and wrists leaving their fingers free. These
were called himantes.
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Pale (Wrestling)
- adults and children Another original event of the ancient games was wrestling. Two contestants began in a standing position and wrestled until one gave up. Biting was not allowed, but it was acceptable to break your opponent's fingers. |
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Pankration
- adults Pankration was a combination of boxing and wrestling. In this sport throwing your opponent to the ground gave a wrestler one point. The match was over when one wrestler scored three points. Greeks did not have weight classes. The only rules were that the contestants could not bite or puncture the eyes, nose, or mouth with fingernails. |
Pentathlon included
the long jump, discus and javelin throwing, running, and wrestling - adults
Long Jump
In the ancient games the runway for the long jump was very short. A jump was
disqualified if you did not land entirely and only on your feet. The Greeks held
small weights in their hands called halteres. These weights helped the
contestants to jump farther.
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The Discus Ancient Olympians used a discus made of metal or stone. It weighed from 5 to 8 pounds. Many contestants engraved messages on their discus. The contestants did not spin like they do in today's competition. The thrower faced one direction. He swung the discus back and forth and then took one step forward to throw. |
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Javelin To throw the javelin two fingers went through a leather strip wrapped around the javelin's shaft. This helped the contestant rotate the javelin as it was being released. |
Horse Racing -
adults
The horse racing took place in a large arena called the hippodrome. The riders
usually raced 1200 meters.
| Four-horse
Chariot Races - adults Only the wealthy could afford to compete in this event which required maintaining the chariot. The racers competed in various courses going by a number of obstacles.
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Photo courtesy
and ©1996 |
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The Ancient Olympics were held from 776 B. C. to 393 A. D. They were stopped by Theodosius I. After this no Olympic events were held for 1503 years until the Baron Pierre de Coubertin suggested they be started up again in 1896. Thirty-four countries became involved with the idea and convinced Baron de Coubertin to hold the event in Athens, Greece. |
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