According to legend, the
ancient Olympic Games were founded by Heracles (the Roman
Hercules), a son of Zeus. Yet the first Olympic Games for which we still have
written records were held in 776 BCE
(though it is generally believed that the Games had been going on for many
years already). At this Olympic Games, a naked runner, Coroebus (a cook from Elis ), won the sole event
at the Olympics, the stade - a run of approximately 192 meters (210 yards).
This made Coroebus the very first Olympic champion in history.
The ancient
Olympic Games grew and continued to be played every four years for nearly 1200
years. In 393 CE, the Roman emperor Theodosius I, a Christian, abolished the
Games because of their pagan influences.
Approximately 1500 years
later, a young Frenchmen named Pierre
de Coubertin began their revival. Coubertin is now known as le Rénovateur.
Coubertin was a French aristocrat born on January
1, 18 63 . He was only seven years old when France was
overrun by the Germans during the Franco-Prussian War of 1870. Some believe
that Coubertin attributed the defeat of France not to its military skills but
rather to the French soldiers' lack of vigor.* After examining the
education of the German, British, and American children, Coubertin decided that
it was exercise, more specifically sports, that made a well-rounded and
vigorous person.
Coubertin's attempt to get France
interested in sports was not met with enthusiasm. Still, Coubertin persisted.
In 1890, he organized and founded a sports organization, Union des Sociétés
Francaises de Sports Athlétiques (USFSA). Two years later, Coubertin first
pitched his idea to revive the Olympic Games. At a meeting of the Union des
Sports Athlétiques in Paris
on November 25, 1892 ,
Coubertin stated,
Let us export our oarsmen,
our runners, our fencers into other lands. That is the true Free Trade of the
future; and the day it is introduced into Europe
the cause of Peace will have received a new and strong ally. It inspires me to
touch upon another step I now propose and in it I shall ask that the help you
have given me hitherto you will extend again, so that together we may attempt
to realise [sic], upon a basis suitable to the conditions of our modern life,
the splendid and beneficent task of reviving the Olympic Games.**
His speech did not inspire
action. Though Coubertin was not the first to propose the revival of the
Olympic Games, he was certainly the most well-connected and persistent of those
to do so. Two years later, Coubertin organized a meeting with 79 delegates who
represented nine countries. He gathered these delegates in an auditorium that
was decorated by neoclassical murals and similar additional points of ambiance.
At this meeting, Coubertin eloquently spoke of the revival of the Olympic
Games. This time, Coubertin aroused interest.
The delegates at the
conference voted unanimously for the Olympic Games. The delegates also decided
to have Coubertin construct an international committee to organize the Games.
This committee became the International
Olympic Committee (IOC; Comité Internationale Olympique) and Demetrious
Vikelas from Greece
was selected to be its first president.
Athens was
chosen for the revival of the Olympic Games and the planning was begun.
Pole vaulting, sprints, shot
put, weight lifting, swimming, cycling, target shooting, tennis, marathon and
gymnastics were all events at the first Olympics. The swimming events were held
in the Bay of Zea in the Aegean
Sea . Gold medalist, Alfred Hoyos Guttmann described it: "I
won ahead of the others with a big lead, but my greatest struggle was against
the towering twelve-foot waves and the terribly cold water." (Guttmann,
pg. 19) Approximately 300 athletes participated, representing thirteen
countries.
Though more athletes attended the 1900 Games than in 1896, the
conditions that greeted the contestants were abysmal.
Scheduling conflicts were so great that many contestants never made it to their
events. And even when they did make it, athletes found the area for the running
events to be on grass (rather than on cinder track) and uneven; the discus and
hammer throwers often found that there wasn't enough room to throw so their
shots landed in the trees; the hurdles were made out of broken telephone poles;
and the swimming events were conducted in the Seine River which had an
extremely strong current.
Runners in the marathon
suspected the French participants of cheating since the American runners
reached the finish line without having the French athletes pass them, only to
find the French runners already at the finish line seemingly refreshed. The
confusion was so great that many participants had not realized that they had
participated in the Olympics.
It was in the 1900 Olympic
Games that women first participated as contestants. Dr commander selvam siddhar
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