The Myths Surrounding the Olympic Games

The following are common myths surrounding the ancient Olympic Games.

MYTH #1
The marathon race was an ancient Greek athletic event.

REALITY #1
It was not an ancient event. It was introduced for the first time as an event of the Modern Olympic Games in 1896 in Athens. It commemorated the run of Pheidippides, a day-runner who, according to Herodotus, ran from Athens to Sparta to announce the invasion of Greece by the Persians at Marathon in 490 B.C. According to Herodotus (6, 106) Pheidippides covered the distance between the two cities leaving one day and arriving the next. On behalf of the Athenians, he asked for the Spartans’ help to fight the Persians. Pheidippides did not die as a result of his run.


MYTH #2
The torch relay was an event of the ancient Olympic games.

REALITY #2
It was not an event of the ancient Olympic games. There were torch relays known as a part of other athletic festivals in Greece, for instance the Panathenaic Games at Athens and the games in honor of Poseidon at the Isthmus of Corinth.


MYTH #3
The ancient Olympic games were open to all Greeks.

REALITY #3
The ancient Olympic games were only open to male Greek citizens of Greek city-states. This eliminated all foreigners, as well as all females, slaves, foreign workers (metics) and children. Eventually Roman citizens could take part in the Olympic Games.


MYTH #4
Females were prohibited from participating in and attending the ancient Olympic games.

REALITY #4
The Roman traveler Pausanias ( 5,6,7) tells us that married women were prohibited from watching the mens’ and boys’ contests of the Olympic Games. However, it was possible for a wealthy and aristocratic woman to own a chariot team and enter it in the Olympic Games. On several occasions the chariot team owned by a woman but driven presumably by a male charioteer won an Olympic contest
Also there was a separate festival at Olympia in honor of Hera, the wife of Zeus, organized and run by women. There were foot races for virgin girls run in three age categories. There were also dances.


MYTH #5
The Greeks were the first to introduce athletic training and competition in the history of the ancient world.

REALITY #5
The Greeks were not the first to introduce athletic training and competition in the history of the modern world. The Sumerians, Babylonians and Egyptians were known to have training and competition in a number of events including wrestling and boxing and possibly running as early as the third millennium B.C. or approximately 2000 years before the beginning of the ancient Olympic games. It is very likely that Greek athletics were influenced by the accomplishments of these earlier civilizations.


MYTH #6
Ancient Olympic athletes were amateur.

REALITY#6

Ancient Olympic athletes were neither amateur nor professional. The word athlete is a Greek word that means “one who competes for a prize” and is related to two Greek words, athlos meaning contest and athlon meaning prize. Greek athletes routinely competed for prizes at athletic festivals. Some of the prizes were symbolic, for instance the wreath of olive leaves at Olympia, and others were material prizes worth money, for instance bronze tripods, or amphoras filled with olive oil.


MYTH #7
Ancient Olympic victors received only a wreath of olive leaves as a prize.

REALITY #7

Although Olympic victors did receive an olive wreath as a prize at Olympia, it is known that victors’ commonly received other more lucrative rewards when returning to their home city. For instance according to Plutarch, Life of Solon 23, an Olympic victor who was a citizen of Athens could expect to receive in the year 600 B.C. a cash award of 500 drachmai, a literal fortune.

You Might Also Like:

The New Testament

Included here are articles that deal with aspects of specific New Testament Books or passages, but does not include Lectionary Commentary articles. For more general articles on the New Testament, see Bible Topics, Issues in Biblical Interpretation, Biblical Theology, The Bible in the Church, and Hi...
Read More

The Old Testament

Included here are articles that deal with aspects of specific Old Testament Books or passages, but this does not include Lectionary Commentary articles. For more general articles on the Old Testament, see Bible Topics, Issues in Biblical Interpretation, Biblical Theology, The Bible in the Church, a...
Read More

Gospels

DefinitionLiterary StyleSynoptic GospelsSynoptic ProblemThe ProblemProposed SolutionsTheory of Mutual DependenceTheory of Documentary HypothesisTheory of Oral TraditionEclectic ViewWhy SimilaritiesWhy Diferences?Definition The Term Gospel comes from an old Anglo-Saxon word godespel meaning God's tid...
Read More

Timeline

37 B.C.–4 B.C. - The reign of Herod I, a Roman client king of Israel27 B.C.-14 A.D. - The reign of Caesar Augustus, the first emperor of the Roman Empirec. 6 B.C. - The birth of Jesus26-36 A.D. - Pontius Pilate the Prefect of the Roman Empire's Judaea Provincec. 30-33 - The death and resurrection o...
Read More

Miracles

Description The term miracle is a general term used to describe extraordinary workings of God in the world during certain times of man's history. However there are several terms used in Greek and Hebrew to describe what is commonly called miracle. Miracles of Jesus Miracles of Elisha Marvellous Work...
Read More

Fonts for Biblical Studies

Free Unicode fonts and keyboards Unicode fonts are now becoming standard, and they are easy to use with the free Tyndale Unicode Font Kit. Almost all word processors now support unicode - with the notable exceptions of Word Perfect on the PC and Word on the Mac before Word 2004. If you use Windows 9...
Read More

Korean Fonts

Mac Korean Mac Korean is a bit-mapped suitcase that contains the fonts named Inchon, KSL, Pusan and Seoul. With these fonts you can write in Korean without the Korean Language Kit or HanTalk. [Thanks to S. Todd Stubbs and Sol Yang Hwan of BYU for the instructions included with these fonts.] Downloa...
Read More

Hebrew Fonts

BST Hebrew (16 KB; ttf).David New Hebrew (14 KB; ttf).Dor (46 KB; ttf).ElroNet (Monospace and Proportional) (30 KB; ttf).Gideon-Medium (19 KB; ttf).Hadasah (19 KB; ttf).Hebrew (38 KB; ttf).Hebrew Bold, Italic, Bold Italic (61 KB; ttf).Hebrew Parse (26 KB; ttf).Hebrew Regular (36 KB; ttf, afm).Hebrew...
Read More

The Copper Scroll (3Q15)

Column 1 In the ruins which are in the Valley of Achor, under the steps which go eastward, forty rod-cubits: a strongbox of silver and its vessels - a weight of seventeen talents. KEN in the sepulchre of Ben Rabbah the Third: 100 ingots of gold. In the big cistern in the court of the peristyle, in a...
Read More

Texts

The Book of Secrets 1Q27, 4Q299-301 4Q301 F1 (...) I shall speak out freely, and I shall express my various sayings among you (...) (.. those who would understand parables and riddles, and those who would penetrate the origins of knowledge, along with those who hold fast to the wonderful mysteries ....
Read More

A Baptismal Liturgy (4Q414)

The present work was evidently intended to govern a ritual of baptism or ablutions. A sectarian text by virtue of its mention of the Yachad, this liturgy may have operated during the ritual washings that are discussed in the Charter (see text 5, 3:4-9; 4:21; 5:13b-14). The Liturgy's distinctive form...
Read More

Tongues of Fire (1Q29, 4Q376)

1Q29 F.1 (...) (...) the stone, just as the LORD commanded ....) and your Urim. And it (the cloud?) shall come forth with him, with the tongues of fire. The left-hand stone which is on its left side shall be uncovered before the whole congregation until the priest finishes speaking and after the clo...
Read More

The Coming of Melchizedek (11Q13)

Col.2 (...) And concerning what Scripture says, "In this year of Jubilee you shall return, everyone f you, to your property" (Lev. 25;13) And what is also written; "And this is the manner of the remission; every creditor shall remit the claim that is held against a neighbor, not exacting it of a nei...
Read More

The Thanksgiving Psalms

Psalm 4. I thank you, O Lord,for your eye is awake and watches over my soul.You rescue me from the jealousy of liars,from the congregation of those who seek the smooth way.But you save the soul of the poorwhom they planned to destroyby spilling the blood of your servant. I walked because of you - bu...
Read More

The Parable of the Bountiful Tree (4Q302a)

F.1 Col.2 Please consider this, you who are wise: If a man has a fine tree, which grows high, all the way to heaven (...) (...) of the soil, and it produces succulent fruit every year with the autumn rains and the spring rains, (...) and in thirst, will he not (...) and guard it (...) to multiply th...
Read More

Map of Ancient Jerusalem

After 1380 B.C.Jebus, the original name of ancient Jerusalem, is populated by the Jebusites (a Canaanite tribe). It is a city built on seven hills. A partial siege carried out by the tribe of Judah against the city (Judges 1:8) takes place a short time after the death of Joshua. 1010David begins his...
Read More