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The Revival of the Ancient Olympics

The Revival of the Ancient Olympics From Ancient to Modern 776 B.C. First Ancient Olympic Games 393 A.D. Last Ancient Olympic Games 1827 Greek Independence from the Ottoman Empire 1896 First Modern Olympic Games (in Athens) Call for Revival of the Olympics Games

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The Revival of the Ancient Olympics

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  1. The Revival of the Ancient Olympics

  2. From Ancient to Modern • 776 B.C.First Ancient Olympic Games • 393 A.D.Last Ancient Olympic Games • 1827 Greek Independence from the Ottoman Empire • 1896First Modern Olympic Games (in Athens)

  3. Call for Revival of the Olympics Games in a poem by Alexandros Soutsos in 1833 in a newspaper called Helios

  4. Soutsos’ Poem If our shadow could fly to your earth it would daringly shout to the Ministers of the Throne:Leave your petty politics and vain quarrels.Recall the pastsplendour of Greece.Tell me, where are your ancient centuries?Where are your Olympic Games?Where your Panathenaic Games? Your majestic celebrations and great theatres? Where are your sculptures and busts, where are your altars and temples?Every city, every wood and every temple was filled before with rows of silent marble statues. Foreign nations decorated your altars with offerings, gold jars from Gygas. Kraters, silver plates and precious stones from Croesus. When the glorious Olympic festival opened, large crowds gathered to watch the games where athletes and kings came to compete.Ieron and Gelon and Philip and others before forty thousand bedazzled Greeks. Herodotus presented in his elegant history their recent triumphs. Thucydides listened to the beautiful harmony of his prose and prepared to meet him in competition as a worthy rival. (G. Dolianitis, Vikelas, First I.O.C. President, International Olympic Academy, [S.Y.])

  5. Evangelis Zappas 1800-1865 Inspired by Soutsos’ poem Finances games of 1859 Left fortune for future games

  6. The Zappian Games • 1859 / 1870 / 1875 / 1889 • Track and running events • Cash prizes • Trend from worker/athletes in 1859 to university athletes in 1889 • Ceremonies, uses of medals and organization paved way for IOC

  7. Zappian Games of 1859 • Held in Athens in a public square • Large crowds • Participants from spectators • Mixed competition of agricultural, industrial and athletic events • Criticized by press for poor organization

  8. Zappian Games of 1870 Use of ancient Panathenaic Stadium

  9. Zappian Games of 1870 • Program and rules announced in advance • Athletes chosen in advance, mostly Greek • 30000 spectators • Monetary and symbolic prizes • Extremely successful Giorgos Akestoridis, winner at the event of rope climbing in the 2nd Zappian Olympic Games.

  10. Zappian Games of 1875 • Organized by Ioannis Phokianos, director of Public Gymnasium • Strongly gymnastic • Heavily academic • General public banned from competition Medal from the third Zappian Olympic Games in 1875 with the bust of king George I.

  11. Zappian Games of 1889 • Organized by Phokianos again • Heavily gymnastic • Held in Gymnasium, not stadium The catalogue of exhibitors at the 4th Zappian Olympic Games.

  12. International Olympic Committee (IOC) The first Session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) was held in Paris on 18-23 June 1894. It was during the first Session that the city of Athens was selected for the Games of the I Olympiad. The first Olympic Committee meets in 1896: Baron de Coubertin is the second from left.

  13. 1896—First Modern Olympics The first Session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) was held in Paris on 18-23 June 1894. It was during the first Session that the city of Athens was selected for the Games of the I Olympiad. The cover of the book by Charles Beck about the 1896 Olympic Games became the first Olympic poster.Hellenic Olympic Committee.

  14. Scenes from Athens 1896 100 metre race

  15. Some Stats 1896 • All 295 athletes were male. • The American Thomas Burke won the 100-meter dash in 12.0 seconds. • 10-year old Dimitrios Loundras of Greece finished third in the parallel-bars competition, becoming the youngest athlete to finish in top three. • Carl Schuhmann of Germany was one of the most versatile athletes. He won the super heavyweight Greco-Roman wrestling and the long horse vault. He also competed in long jump, triple jump and shot put. Spyros Louis, The first Marathon winner Last torch bearer at 1936 Olympics

  16. The U.S. Team 1896 Several members of America's first Olympic team. Standing: T.E. Burke, Thomas P. Curtis, Ellery H. Clark. Seated: W.W. Hoyt, Sumner Paine, Trainer John Graham, John B. Paine, Arthur Blake.

  17. 1st Modern Olympic Champion • James Connolly (USA-athletics) won the triple jump on 6 April 1896, and thus became the first Olympic champion since the Ancient Games. He also finished second in the high jump and third in the long jump. He left Harvard University to travel to Athens on a cargo ship and then by train to compete.

  18. Modern Olympic Movement • MISSIONSWhat is the goal of the Olympic Movement? According to the Olympic Charter, established by Pierre de Coubertin, the goal of the Olympic Movement is to contribute to building a peaceful and better world by educating youth through sport practised without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play.Essential missions of the Olympic Movement:Choice of the host cityOrganisation of the Olympic GamesEquality in sportPromotion of women in sport Protection of athletesHuman development assistanceProtection of the environmentThe Olympic Truce

  19. Baron de Coubertin1863-1937 The man most responsible for the revival of the modern Olympic Games was a French nobleman, Pierre de Fredi, known as Baron de Coubertin.

  20. The Modern Olympic Ideal "The idea of the revival of Olympic Games was not a passing fancy: it was the logical culmination of a great movement. The 19th century saw the taste for physical exercises revive everywhere ... At the same time the great inventions, the railways and the telegraph have abridged distances and mankind has come to live a new existence; the peoples have intermingled, they have learned to know each other better and immediately they started to compare themselves. What one achieved the other immediately wished also to endeavor: universal exhibitions brought together to one locality of the globe the products of the most distant lands; Literary or scientific congresses have brought together, into contact, the various intellectual forces. How then should the athletes not seek to meet, since rivalry is the basis of athletics, and in reality the very reason of its existence?" (Baron Pierre de Coubertin, 1896)

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