History
During the Bronze Age (3000-1200 BC) the powerful
Cycladic, Minoan and Mycenaean maritime civilizations flourished.
According to Homer, this was a time of violence and wars based on trade
rivalries, although it is thought that Minoan culture was generally
peaceful and harmonious. By the 11th century BC the Minoan and Mycenaean
cultures had collapsed, due to changing patterns of trade and a Dorian
invasion from the north, and a 'dark age' ensued.
By 800 BC Greece was undergoing a cultural and
military revival, with the evolution of city-states, the most powerful of
which were Athens and Sparta. Greater Greece was created, with southern
Italy as an important component. This period was followed by an era of
great prosperity known as the classical (or golden) age. During this time,
Pericles commissioned the Parthenon, Sophocles wrote Oedipus the King,
Socrates taught young Athenians the rigours of logic, and a tradition of
democracy (literally, 'control by the people') was ushered in. The
classical age came to an end with the Peloponnesian Wars (431-404 BC) in
which the militaristic Spartans defeated the Athenians.
While embroiled in the Peloponnesian Wars, the
Spartans failed to notice the expansion of Philip of Macedon's kingdom in
the north, which enabled him to easily conquer the war-weary city-states.
Philip's ambitions were surpassed by his son Alexander the Great, who
marched into Asia Minor, Egypt (where he was proclaimed pharaoh and
founded the city of Alexandria), Persia and parts of what are now
Afghanistan and India. The reign of the Macedonian empire, which lasted in
the form of three dynasties after Alexander's death at the age of 33, is
known as the Hellenistic period, due to the merging of Greek ideas and
culture with the other proud cultures of antiquity, creating a new
cosmopolitan tradition.
From 205 BC there were Roman incursions into
Greece, and by 146 BC Greece and Macedonia had become Roman provinces.
After the subdivision of the Roman Empire into Eastern and Western empires
in 395 AD, Greece became part of the illustrious Byzantine Empire. By the
12th century, the Crusades were in full flight and Byzantine power was
much reduced by invasions by Venetians, Catalans, Genoese, Franks and
Normans.
In 1453 the Turks captured the Byzantine capital,
Constantinople, and by 1500 almost all of Greece had also fallen under
Turkish control. The lands of present-day Greece became a rural backwater,
with many merchants, intellectuals and artists exiled in central Europe.
It was traditional village life and Orthodox religion that held together
the notion of Greekness. A cultural revival in the late 18th century
precipitated the War of Independence (1821-32), during which aristocratic
young philhellenes such as Byron, Shelley and Goethe supported the Greeks
in their battle against the Turks. The independence movement lacked unity,
however, and in 1827 Russia, France and Britain decided to intervene.
After independence, the European powers decided Greece should become a
monarchy, with a non-Greek ruler to frustrate Greek power struggles, and
installed Otto of Bavaria as king in 1833. The monarchy, with an
assortment of kings at the helm, held on despite popular opposition until
well into the 20th century, although George I established a new
constitution in 1864 that returned democracy and pushed the king into a
largely ceremonial role.
During WWI, Greek troops fought on the Allied
side and occupied Thrace. After the war, Prime Minister Venizelos sent
forces to 'liberate' the Turkish territory of Smyrna (present-day Izmir),
which had a large Greek population. The army was repulsed by Ataturk's
troops and many Greek residents were slaughtered. This led to a brutal
population exchange between the two countries in 1923, the resultant
population increase (1,300,000 Christian refugees) straining Greece's
already weak economy. Shanty towns spilled from urban centres, unions were
formed among the urban refugee population and by 1936 the Communist Party
had widespread popular support.
In 1936 General Metaxas was appointed as prime
minister by the king and quickly established a fascist dictatorship.
Although Metaxas had created a Greek version of the Third Reich, he was
opposed to German or Italian domination and refused to allow Italian
troops to traverse Greece in 1940. Despite Allied help, Greece fell to
Germany in 1941, leading to carnage and mass starvation. Resistance
movements sprang up and polarised into royalist and communist factions,
and a bloody civil war resulted, lasting until 1949, when the royalists
claimed victory. During the civil war, America, inspired by the Truman
Doctrine, gave large sums of money to the anticommunist government, and
implemented the Certificate of Political Reliability, which remained valid
until 1962. This document declared that the wearer did not hold left-wing
sympathies; without it Greeks could not vote and found it almost
impossible to get work.
Fearing a resurgence of the left, a group of army
colonels staged a coup d'etat in 1967, said by Andreas Papandreou to be
'the first successful CIA military putsch on the European continent'. The
junta distinguished itself by inflicting appalling brutality, repression
and political incompetence upon the people. In 1974 the colonels attempted
to assassinate Cyprus' leader, Archbishop Makarios, leading to Turkey's
invasion and occupation of Northern Cyprus. This is still a volatile issue
for the Greeks, and tensions with Turkey are easily inflamed.
In 1981 Greece entered the European Community
(now the EU), and Andreas Papandreou's socialist party (PASOK) won
elections. PASOK promised removal of US air bases and withdrawal from
NATO, but these promises were never fulfilled. Women's issues fared
better, though, with the abolition of the dowry system and legalisation of
abortion. In the end, scandals got the better of Papandreou and his
government was replaced by an unlikely coalition of conservatives and
communists in 1989. Elections in 1990 brought the conservatives to power
with a majority of only two seats, and intent on redressing the country's
economic problems, the government imposed unpopular and severe austerity
measures. A general election in 1993 returned the ageing, ailing
Papandreou and PASOK to power.
Kostas Simitis was appointed prime minister in
early 1996 when it became clear that Papandreou's time was drawing nigh -
Greece's elder statesman died mid-1996. Simitis was re-elected by the skin
of his teeth in April 2000, with a victory margin of one percentage point.
Since receiving a fresh mandate, he has pledged to forge better relations
with Turkey and to carry out economic reforms that secured Greece a place
in the European Monetary Union at the beginning of 2001, and adopted the
Euro currency in 2002. The country is currently looking forward to 2004,
when Athens will host the Olympic Games.
Ancient Olympic Games
The Olympic Games begun at Olympia in Greece in 776
BC. The Greek calendar was based on the Olympiad, the four-year period
between games. The games were staged in the wooded valley of Olympia in Elis.
Here the Greeks erected statues and built temples in a grove dedicated to
Zeus, supreme among the gods. The greatest shrine was an ivory and gold
statue of Zeus. Created by the sculptor Phidias, it was considered one of
the Seven Wonders of the World. Scholars have speculated that the games in
776 BC were not the first games, but rather the first games held after they
were organized into festivals held every four years as a result of a peace
agreement between the city-states of Elis and Pisa. The Eleans traced the
founding of the Olympic games to their King Iphitos, who was told by the
Delphi Oracle to plant the olive tree from which the victors' wreaths were
made.
According to Hippias of Elis, who compiled a list
of Olympic victors c.400 BC, at first the only Olympic event was a 200-yard
dash, called a stadium. This was the only event until 724 BC, when a two-stadia
race was added. Two years later the 24-stadia event began, and in 708 the
pentathlon was added and wrestling became part of the games. This pentathlon,
a five-event match consisted of running, wrestling, leaping, throwing the
discus, and hurling the javelin. In time boxing, a chariot race, and other
events were included.
The victors of these early games were crowned with
wreaths from a sacred olive tree that grew behind the temple of Zeus.
According to tradition this tree was planted by Hercules (Heracles), founder
of the games. The winners marched around the grove to the accompaniment of a
flute while admirers chanted songs written by a prominent poet.
The Olympic Games were held without interruptions
in ancient Greece. The games were even held in 480 BC during the Persian
Wars, and coincided with the Battle of Thermopylae. Although the Olympic
games were never suspended, the games of 364 BC were not considered Olympic
since the Arkadians had captured the sanctuary and reorganized the games.
After the Battle of Chaironeia in 338 BC, Philip of
Makedon and his son Alexander gained control over the Greek city-states.
They erected the Philippeion (a family memorial) in the sanctuary, and held
political meetings at Olympia during each Olympiad. In 146 BC, the Romans
gained control of Greece and, therefore, of the Olympic games. In 85 BC, the
Roman general Sulla plundered the sanctuary to finance his campaign against
Mithridates. Sulla also moved the 175th Olympiad (80 BC) to Rome.
The games were held every four years from 776 BC to
393 AD, when they were abolished by the Christian Byzantine Emperor
Theodosius I. The ancient Olympic Games lasted for 1170 years.
The successful campaign to revive the Olympics was
started in France by Baron Pierre de Coubertin late in the 19th century. The
first of the modern Summer Games opened on Sunday, March 24, 1896, in Athens,
Greece. The first race was won by an American college student named James
Connolly.
Chronology of
athletic events added to the Olympic Games
According to the tradition of Hippias of Elis ca.
400 BC, the events of the Olympic Games were added to the program in the
following order.
Year |
Olympiad |
Event |
776 BC |
1st Olympiad |
Stadium race |
724 BC |
14th Olympiad |
double-stadium race |
720 BC |
15th Olympiad |
long-distance race |
708 BC |
18th Olympiad |
Pentathlon |
708 BC |
18th Olympiad |
Wrestling |
688 BC |
23rd Olympiad |
Boxing |
680 BC |
25th Olympiad |
4-horse chariot race |
648 BC |
33rd Olympiad |
horse race |
648 BC |
33rd Olympiad |
Pankration |
520 BC |
65th Olympiad |
race in armor |
408 BC |
93rd Olympiad |
2-horse chariot race |
The Importance of the Olympic Games
The Importance of Ancient Greek Athletics
The ancient Greeks were highly competitive and
believed strongly in the concept of "agon", or "competition" or "contest".
The ultimate Greek goal was to be the best. All aspects of life, especially
athletics, were centered around this concept. It was therefore considered
one of the greatest honors to win a victory at Olympia. The fact that the
only prize given at Olympia was an olive wreath illustrates this point. The
athletes competed for honor, not for material goods.
Athletics were of prime importance to the Greeks.
The education of boys concentrated on athletics and music as well as
academic subjects such as philosophy. Education took place in the gymnasion
and the palaistra as well as the academy.
The Religious
Aspects of the Ancient Olympic Games
In ancient Greece, games were closely connected to
the worship of the gods and heroes. Games were held as part of religious
ceremonies in honor of deceased heroes, a concept displayed in the funeral
games for Patroklos in Book 23 of Homer's epic poem, The Iliad.
Games were also held in the context of many ancient fertility festivals. The
games at Olympia were connected with both the funeral games of Oinomaos,
established by Pelops, and a fertility cult involving any number of gods and
goddesses who were worshipped at the site. The Olympic games began to be
usurped by the prominent cult of Zeus, and eventually lost much of their
religious character.
The Olympic Games
and the Greek Calendar
The Greek calendar was based on the conception of
the four-year Olympiad. When Greek historians referred to dates, they most
often referred to a year (i.e., first, second, third, fourth) within the
Olympiad that the event occurred. The winner of the stadium race in a given
year had the Olympiad named in honor of him. The first Olympiad is therefore
known as that of Koroibos of Elis, the winner of the stadium race in 776 BC.
The
Sacred Truce
The sacred truce was instituted during the month of
the Olympiad. Messengers known as "spondorophoroi" carried the word of the
truce and announced the date of the games all over the Greek world. The
truce called for a cessation of all hostilities for a period of one month (later
three months) to allow for the safe travel of athletes to and from Olympia.
Armies and armed individuals were barred from entering the sanctuary. In
addition, no death penalties could be carried out during the period of the
truce.
The
Internationalization of the Olympic Games
From the beginning, the games at Olympia served as
a bond between Greeks and strengthened the Greek sense of national unity.
During the Hellenistic period, Greeks who came to live in foreign
surroundings such as Syria, Asia, and Egypt, strove to hold on to their
culture. One of the ways to achieve this was to build athletic facilities
and continue their athletic traditions. They organized competitions, and
sent competitors from their towns to compete in the Panhellenic games.
In the 2nd century A.D., Roman citizenship was
extended to everyone within the Roman empire. From then on, the
participation of many competitors from outside of Greece in the Olympic
games, gave them to a degree, international nature.
When the Greek government reinstated the games in
1896, this international character of the competitions was preserved by
Baron de Coubertin. Now, 16 centuries later, the Olympic games attract
competitors from countries all over the world.