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Olympic victor monuments and Greek Athletic Art - Chapter I

THE FIRST GREEK GAMES AND PRIZES

OS PRIMEIROS JOGOS E PRÊMIOS GREGOS

Authors

  • Walter Woodburn Hyde Carnegie Institution of Washington
  • Paulo Franco Rosa RMTB 17982

Abstract

Before attempting to trace historically the development of monuments of victors in the gymnic and hippic contests at Olympia, and before attempting to reconstruct their different types, it will be useful to devote a preliminary chapter to the early history of Greek athletics and victor prizes in general.

It is a truism that the origin of Greek athletics is not to be found in the recently discovered Aegean civilization of Crete, nor in the latest phase of the same culture on Mycenæan sites of the mainland of Greece. Their origin is not to be sought in the indigenous Mediterranean stock which produced that culture, but rather among the northern invaders of Greece, the fair-haired Achæans of the Homeric poems, and especially among the later Dorians in the Peloponnesus. It was to the physical vigor of these strangers rather than to the more artistic nature of the Mediterraneans that the later Greeks owed their interest in sports. As these invaders settled themselves most firmly in the Peloponnesus, Greek athletics may be said to be chiefly the product of South Greece. It was here that three of the four national festivals grew up—at Olympia, Nemea, and on the Corinthian Isthmus. It was in the schools of Argos and Sikyon that athletic sculpture flourished best and in later Greek history physical exercise was most fully developed among the Dorian Spartans.

 

This article is an integral part of the EBOOK OLYMPIC VICTOR MONUMENTS AND GREEK ATHLETIC ART - Special Edition of the OLYMPIKA MAGAZINE editions 001 and 002

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— Persistent identifier for this article: ark:/40019/oly.v1i1A.10.g20


Published

2024-03-01

How to Cite

1.
Hyde WW, Rosa PF. Olympic victor monuments and Greek Athletic Art - Chapter I: THE FIRST GREEK GAMES AND PRIZES. OlyMag [Internet]. 2024 Mar. 1 [cited 2024 Sep. 19];1(1A). Available from: https://olympika.org/index.php/Olympika-Magazine/article/view/10

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