Religious
Games
Athletics: Track, Field,
Wrestling, and Boxing
To
be an athlete in ancient Greece meant literally "to compete for a
prize." Prizes could be of material value (money or objects) or of
symbolic worth, like the plain wreaths of leaves awarded at Olympia,
Delphi, Isthmia and Nemea. At the Panathenaic Games in Athens the
amphoras presented to victorious athletes were filled with a
particularly high-quality grade of olive oil. They must have been
prized nearly as much for their contents as for their painted
athletic scenes.
An event composed of five individual contests,
which included the discus, javelin, long jump, wrestling, and a foot
race, was called the pentathlon. Its name continues in use
today, although in the modern pentathlon several of the events have
changed.
Attic Black Figure Amphora
ca. 510-490 BC
MS 403
A boxing contest or pugme. Two boxers wear soft leather
himantes or boxing gloves. The man with the long stick is
either a judge or trainer. A naked youth stands by, holding extra
himantes.
H. 29.2; L. 18.5; Dia. 17.0 cm. Photo by Maria Daniels for the
Perseus Project. (large
version)
Attic
Red Figure Kylix
ca. 460-450 BC
By the Penthesilea Painter
MS 5693
A pair of athletes leave a palaestra. One carries a bagged discus and
raises his bronze strigil or scraper. The other carries his
cloak. On the wall hangs an aryballos or container in which
athletes kept oil to clean their bodies. After exercise the oil was
scraped off with the bronze strigil.
H. 7.8; L. 29.0; Dia. 22.2 cm. Photo by Maria Daniels for the
Perseus Project. (large
version)
Attic Red Figure Kylix
ca. 490-480 BC
By Onesimos
Cortona, Italy
MS 2444
Two young men wrestle. Above them hangs a discus in its bag and a
pair of jumping weights called halteres. Long jumpers used
the weights to increase their competition distances by vigorously
swinging them forward at the moment of takeoff. The coach or trainer
stands to the left of the wrestlers, leaning on his staff and holding
a long forked branch. The low column at the left suggests either a
palaestra or gymnasium setting.
H. 9.4; L. 30.7; Dia. 23.6 cm. Photo by Maria Daniels for the
Perseus Project. (large
version)
The Ancient Greek World Index