Archaeology Odyssey, July/August 2004

Volume7Number4

Features

When the Games Began

Sport, Religion and Politics Converged in Ancient Olympia

By David Gilman Romano

It’s one of history’s curiosities. A rural sanctuary of Zeus in a relatively obscure part of Greece—far from the bustle and brilliance of Athens—became the site of the most famous athletic-religious festival of the entire ancient world, the direct precursor of the modern Olympic Games. As in...Read more ›

Walking to Olympia

Who Went, How They Got There, and Where They Stayed

By Tony Perrottet

“There was a man who thought the journey to Olympia would be too much for him, and Socrates said: ‘What are you afraid of? Don’t you walk around all day in Athens? Don’t you walk home to have lunch? And again for dinner? And...Read more ›

The Other Games

When Greeks Flocked to Nemea

By Stephen G. Miller

The Olympics may be the best known of ancient Greece’s athletic competitions, but the sanctuary at Olympia was only one of four sites where games were held. Greeks also flocked to games at Delphi, Isthmia and Nemea. These so-called panhellenic festivals were governed by a sacred truce...Read more ›

Ancient Combat Sports

By Michael B. Poliakoff

“You know that the Olympic crown is olive, yet many have honored it above life,” wrote the Greek orator Dio Chrysostom (c. 40-110 C.E.).1 Indeed, the occasional philosopher or doctor may have condemned the brutality and danger of ancient athletics, but the Greek public nevertheless accepted a...Read more ›

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