The Olympic Games
Olympic Games, international sports competition, held every four years at a
different site, in which athletes from different nations compete against each
other in a variety of sports. There are two types of Olympics, the Summer
Olympics and the Winter Olympics. Through 1992 they were held in the same year,
but beginning in 1994 they were rescheduled so that they are held in alternate
even-numbered years. For example, the Winter Olympics were held in 1994 and the
Summer Olympics in 1996. The Winter Olympics were next held in 1998, and the
Summer Olympics occured in 2000.
After they had
achieved national independence from Turkey in 1829, the Greeks sought
repeatedly to revive the Olympian Games in order to emphasize their ancient
heritage. Their Games, which were limited to ethnic Greeks, were unsuccessful,
were staged sporadically, and gained little international attention. They
ceased entirely in 1889. Coubertin succeeded in his
effort to reestablish the Games primarily because his conception of the Games
was international rather than nationalistic. Although earlier in his career he
had been interested in sports as a way to improve the
military preparedness of France,
he eventually envisioned them as an instrument to overcome conflicts among
nations.
Coubertin had begun developing his ideas for an
international sports competition in the 1880s. In 1894 he invited delegates to
come to Paris
to discuss amateur sports at an international athletic congress. The conference
hosted 78 delegates from nine countries. During the conference Coubertin used art and music with classical themes to
influence the delegates. When he surprised them with a proposal to revive the
Olympian Games of classical times, they voted unanimously to begin the modern
cycle. Coubertin wanted the Olympic Games to feature
both ancient and modern sports. The discus event, for instance, symbolized
continuity with the past, because the ancient Greeks had practiced the sport.
Bicycle races, on the other hand, which were a more recent sporting innovation,
represented modernity. The marathon race was meant to commemorate the distance
from the town of Marathon to Athens run by a Greek soldier in 490 BC to announce a Greek victory over the
invading Persians, which was slightly less than the current marathon distance
of 42.2 km . (The longest race of the ancient Olympics
was about 1000 m
Instability in the
Greek government threatened preparations for the 1896 Games, but Coubertin traveled to Athens
and enlisted support from the Greek royal family to help organize the event.
The program for the
1896 Games, comprising only summer events (the Winter Olympics were not
established until 1924), included about 300 athletes from fewer than 15
countries competing in 43 events in nine different sports. In contrast, the
program 100 years later for the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia,
included more than 10,000 athletes from more than 190 countries competing in
271 events in 29 different sports. The Olympic Games have always included a number of ceremonies,
many of which emphasize the themes of international friendship and peaceful
cooperation. The opening ceremony has always included the parade of nations, in
which the teams from each nation enter the main stadium as part of a
procession. The Greek team always enters first, to commemorate the ancient
origins of the modern Games, and the team of the host nation always enters
last. The opening ceremony has evolved over the years into a complex
extravaganza, with music and speeches. It is eagerly anticipated and well attended. The torch relay, in which the Olympic Flame
symbolizes the transmission of Olympic ideals from ancient Greece to the modern world, was introduced as
part of the opening ceremony at the 1936 Summer Games in Berlin. In the relay the torch is lit in Olympia, Greece,
and is carried over several weeks or months from there to the host city by a
series of runners. After the last runner has lit the Olympic Flame in the main
Olympic stadium, the host country's head of state declares the Games officially
open, and doves are released to symbolize the hope of world peace.
Two other important
ceremonial innovations had appeared earlier at the 1920 Games in Antwerp, Belgium.
The Olympic Flag, with its five interlocking rings of different colors against
a white background, was flown for the first time. The five rings represent
unity among the nations of Africa, the Americas,
Asia, Australia, and Europe. Another innovation occurring in 1920 was the
first reciting of the Olympic Oath, taken in the name of all the athletes by a
member of the host's team. The oath asserts the athletes' commitment to the
ideals of sportsmanship in competition.
Medal ceremonies are
also an important part of the Games. After each individual event during the
Games, medals are awarded in a ceremony to the first-, second-, and third-place
finishers. The ceremony occurs after each event, when these competitors mount a
podium to receive gold (actually gold-plated), silver (silver-plated), and
bronze medals. While the national flags of all three competitors are hoisted,
the national anthem of the winner's country is played.
Bibliography
Spiritul olimpic, Eugen
Cristea
Olimpiadele moderne, C. Teasca