What It Was Like to Be an Ancient Olympian

00:11:59
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0s9XfOI3jU

Summary

TLDRThe ancient Olympic Games, originating around 776 BCE, were a significant cultural event in Greece, seen as crucial for honoring Zeus. Held in Olympia, the games began with a single race and expanded to include various athletic competitions, such as chariot races, wrestling, and the pentathlon. Initially open only to free Greek men, the games eventually allowed limited female victories related to ownership roles in certain events. Wealthy athletes had advantages due to better training and nutrition. Spectators from diverse Greek regions attended these exciting games, although married women were prohibited on pain of death. Athletes trained rigorously, often avoiding sex before competitions to maintain strength. Winners earned prestige, with statues erected in their honor, and they were exempt from taxes. The games persisted even under Roman rule but declined as pagan rituals fell out of favor, ceasing around 400 CE due to changes under Emperor Theodosius, who promoted Christianity. The Olympics were revived in 1896.

Takeaways

  • 🏺 The ancient Olympic Games were a key cultural event in ancient Greece, likely starting in 776 BCE.
  • 🤼 Participants were originally only free Greek men, showcasing the period's exclusive traditions.
  • 🚁 Chariot racing and other events like wrestling were popular, involving significant physical feats.
  • 💰 Wealth played a crucial role in an athlete's ability to train and compete effectively.
  • 👖 While modern athletes wear sportswear, ancient Olympians competed naked, often slathered in olive oil.
  • ⚔️ Popular sporting events included combat sports, which were intense and celebrated like today's major sports leagues.
  • 🍽️ Athletes believed consuming certain foods, like testicles, could enhance performance.
  • 🚫 Married women were forbidden from attending, emphasizing strict societal norms.
  • 🔱 Winners gained immense prestige, honoring Zeus, and enjoyed rewards like tax exemptions.
  • 🙏 The games ended under Roman rule as pagan rituals were phased out in favor of Christianity.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    The video introduces the significance of the Olympic Games in ancient Greek culture, highlighting its role as a major cultural event to honor Zeus and bring fame and fortune to athletes. The games, dating back to 776 BCE as per Aristotle, were part of a religious festival in Olympia. The first recorded event was a stadion race won by a cook named Koroibos. Originally, the games featured only this race, gradually expanding to more events, held every four years for twelve centuries.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:11:59

    Initially open only to free Greek men, the Olympic Games saw participants from various backgrounds including soldiers and philosophers. Women were prohibited, though some like Kyniska of Sparta found ways to participate indirectly by owning winning horses in chariot races. In some cases by the first century CE, women started competing in direct events against men. Wealthy athletes had advantages due to better training resources. Spectators came from various regions, creating an eclectic atmosphere similar to modern festivals. However, married women were banned from attendance, with severe penalties for violations. The games began with ceremonial oaths to Zeus, involving symbolic offerings.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • When did the ancient Olympic games start?

    The widely accepted start date for the ancient Olympics is 776 BCE, although some evidence suggests they may have begun as far back as the ninth or 10th century BCE.

  • Who could participate in the ancient Olympic games?

    Only free Greek men were allowed to compete, although women later began to participate indirectly through owning horses in chariot races.

  • What events were included in the ancient Olympics?

    Events included equestrian events like chariot racing, horse racing, combat sports like wrestling, boxing, pankration, and the pentathlon. Trumpeting was also a genuine event where winners got to announce other victors.

  • Why were married women not allowed to watch the games?

    Married women were forbidden from watching, as the penalty for attending the games was death, showcasing the restrictive social rules of the time.

  • What is known about the diet and training of ancient Olympians?

    Olympians had a high-protein diet, eating more meat than the average Greek. Their training involved great discipline, and they believed abstaining from sex before a competition improved performance.

  • How did winners of the ancient Olympics celebrate their victory?

    Victors could erect statues in their honor, received crowns of wild olive, and were sometimes granted lifetime exemptions from taxes.

  • How did the Romans view the ancient Olympics?

    Romans saw the Olympics as entertainment, whereas Greeks emphasized the competition's importance.

  • Why were the ancient Olympic games eventually stopped?

    The Olympics were stopped around 400 CE, as Emperor Theodosius viewed the games as associated with paganism and thus contrary to the rise of Christianity.

  • Who documented the dates of the ancient Olympics?

    Aristotle provided the date 776 BCE as the start of the ancient Olympic games, which is generally accepted by historians.

  • What unusual items did ancient Olympians consume for performance enhancement?

    They believed in consuming testicles and mixtures of donkey hooves and rose petals for performance enhancement.

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  • 00:00:00
  • 00:00:00
    The ancient Greeks considered the Olympic games
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    to be the most important of all cultural events.
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    For the athletes who competed, it
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    was a chance to represent their hometown,
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    pay respect to the king of the gods,
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    and win fame and fortune beyond their wildest dreams.
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    So today we're going to take a look at what it was
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    like to be an ancient Olympian.
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    But before we get started, be sure to subscribe
  • 00:00:24
    to the Weird History channel.
  • 00:00:25
    After that, leave a comment and let
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    us know what other parts of ancient history you
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    would like to hear about.
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    OK, time to grab that ancient Wheaties box and let the games
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    begin.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    The Olympic games date all the way back to 776 BCE--
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    probably.
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    That date was provided to us by Aristotle.
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    And although there's no absolute proof of its correctness,
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    there's evidence suggesting some form of the games
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    might actually go as far back as the ninth or 10th century BCE.
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    Modern historians and archaeologists
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    generally accept this 776 date.
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    Also, Aristotle wouldn't get that date wrong.
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    He had Olympic posters all over his bedroom.
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    Held at a rural sanctuary in Olympia,
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    which was located in the Western part of the Peloponnese
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    Peninsula, the games were part of a religious festival
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    that honored Zeus, the big cheese of the Greek pantheon.
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    No one knows exactly what went down
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    at the first Olympic games, but several literary traditions
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    hold that the only event was a single 600 foot race, known
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    as the stadion race.
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    That sounds less of an Olympic event
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    and more of a dare between five drunk friends in a parking lot.
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    That race was won by a cook from the nearby city of Elis,
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    named Koroibos.
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    Good job, buddy.
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    It must have been a big hit with the crowd
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    because the first 13 Olympic festivals consisted
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    of just this single event.
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    They eventually added additional, more exciting
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    competitions, and the games continue
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    to be held in Olympia every four years between August 6
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    and September 19 for roughly the next 12 centuries.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    While the modern Olympic games are open to everyone,
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    the ancient Olympic games were only open to men--
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    free Greek men to be more specific.
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    But this policy still drew a pretty eclectic mix
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    of participants, including everything from soldiers
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    to shepherds to philosophers.
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    Even Alexander the first, the future King of Macedonia,
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    was allowed to participate.
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    Despite the fact that women were forbidden
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    from competing in the games a few, like Kyniska of Sparta,
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    still managed to eke out some victories
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    by owning the stable of horses who won chariot races.
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    This was possible because the rules were sort of
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    like the rules of the Kentucky Derby,
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    when the winner of the race as considered
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    to be the horse and its owner, rather than the jockey, which
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    seems fair.
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    It's not like the jockey is running anywhere.
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    Other women would follow in her footsteps,
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    and by the first century CE women
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    were even starting to compete directly
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    against men in foot races.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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  • 00:03:01
    When it came to the ancient Olympics,
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    wealthy citizens had a hefty advantage.
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    Although a public training facility
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    called the [INAUDIBLE] did emerge around the sixth century
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    BCE, the playing field was still heavily slanted
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    toward the rich.
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    Wealthy athletes spent their lives eating better foods,
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    had more time to train, and could hire better trainers.
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    It takes a lot of time and money to look like an Olympic statue.
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    Moreover, participating in the Olympics could be expensive.
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    Olympia wasn't easy to reach, so travel could be pricey.
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    Athletes also had to arrive a month early to train
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    and would have no income throughout the whole training
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    and competition period unless they participated
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    in local competitions.
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    Poor athletes could always try to find a sponsor,
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    like their hometown, a king or wealthy individual--
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    or Gatorade, probably.
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    But it's unclear how common these arrangements were.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    The ancient Olympians were competing in front of a crowd
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    and that crowd was typically buzzing with excitement.
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    Spectators came from the Greek mainland, as well as
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    the island's Ionia and Magna Graecia.
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    They lived in makeshift campsites
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    buzzing with food vendors, poets, musician, craftsmen,
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    and philosophers.
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    So kind of like Burning Man, especially with all the Togas.
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    No one knows exactly how many people showed up
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    to watch the games, but we do know the stadium
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    held approximately 45,000.
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    Interestingly, married women were strictly
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    forbidden from watching.
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    In fact, the penalty for a married woman
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    caught on the grounds of the Olympic sanctuary
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    during the festival was death.
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    The modern Olympics maintains that level
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    of severity for anyone caught sharing videos of the games
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    on social media.
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    To kick off the festivities, the athletes entered a temple
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    and stood before a statue of Zeus
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    so grand it was considered one of the seven
  • 00:04:50
    wonders of the ancient world.
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    A sliced piece of bore flesh would then
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    be offered to them, upon which they
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    would have to swear an oath promising
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    to obey the rules of the games.
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    They pledge allegiance to a pork chop, essentially.
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    Then on the third day, 100 bulls would
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    be marched up to the great altar of Zeus
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    and offered up to the gods.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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  • 00:05:12
    The daily diet of an ancient Greek consisted
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    of things like bread or corn porridge,
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    served with vegetables, dried figs, cheese, or olives.
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    Since meat was rarely eaten, the chief source of protein
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    was fish.
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    So we guess they just threw those 100 bulls away Olympic.
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    Athletes, who were typically wealthy,
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    tended to eat more meat than the average Greek
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    because they needed the extra protein
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    to facilitate muscle growth.
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    Beyond eating habits, athletes were also
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    expected to show great discipline
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    in how they live their lives, especially when it came
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    to things like sexual activity.
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    Having sex before a competition was considered a major no-no.
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    Why?
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    Well, athletes believed having sex prior to competing
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    made them weaker.
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    One famous athlete named Kleto Mathos
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    refused to even discuss sex before competing,
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    and is alleged to have averted his eyes when
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    he saw two dogs getting it on.
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    It's unclear how witnessing that would have affected
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    his performance in the javelin toss,
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    but you take any advantage you can get.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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    Athletes at the ancient Olympics were
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    trained by paidotribes, who taught wrestling holds,
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    or a gymnastes, who knew the best
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    diets, how to develop muscle, and how much exercise
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    the athlete should be getting.
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    Many athletes also had a sort of masseuse
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    called an aleiptes, whose job was to rub the athlete down
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    with oil and massage them before and after workouts.
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    Ancient Olympic athletes also consumed things
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    that they believed would enhance their performance,
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    specifically testicles.
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    The performance enhancing drug of the ancient world
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    was testicles.
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    And for those who didn't have any testicles, to eat they
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    could always opt for a ground up mix of donkey hooves
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    and rose petals.
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    Failing that, they could just eat live bees.
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    I do see how that would make you run faster.
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    You've probably noticed that modern Olympians wear clothes.
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    Ancient Olympians on the other hand
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    tended to compete in the buff while slathered in olive oil.
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    This was probably about freedom of movement,
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    but it presumably also made them very shiny
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    and allowed them to blind their opponents.
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    How the tradition of naked sports
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    got started in ancient Greece is a matter of debate.
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    Whatever the case, many of the athletes
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    would scrape the olive oil off their bodies after competing
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    and sell it to fans.
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    Nice.
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    Going to turn around and sell that on Epsilon Bay.
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    There was one exception to the whole nude competition thing--
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    charioteers.
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    You see, every so often one of them
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    would wind up being dragged by the horses,
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    so they were allowed to wear some protective gear
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    over their more tender areas.
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    [MUSIC PLAYING]
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  • 00:07:53
    The Olympics may have started out as a single 600 foot race,
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    but more events were added over time.
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    For example, the competition came
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    to feature equestrian events like chariot and horse racing.
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    Chariot racing was the most popular sport
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    in ancient Greece, and the way they
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    did it was as much like a demolition derby
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    as it was a race.
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    Up to 40 chariots could race at a time and crashes
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    were extremely common--
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    sort of like NASCAR, only presumably louder
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    because of all the horses.
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    After the chariot races usually came more straightforward horse
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    racing, which sounds like it should have been less
  • 00:08:27
    dangerous, but it wasn't.
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    The chariot usually left the track pretty torn up
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    and ancient Greek jockeys had no saddle or spurs,
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    so they were prone to getting thrown.
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    Combat sports were also big in the ancient games,
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    including wrestling, boxing, and the pankration--
  • 00:08:45
    a type of no-holds-barred wrestling
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    that was essentially like ancient UFC, only in the nude.
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    Those who prove themselves in these types of Olympic combat
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    sports became celebrities and could go on to win fortunes
  • 00:08:58
    in smaller competitions.
  • 00:08:59
    And for those athletes who could do it all,
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    there was the pentathlon, which included five events--
  • 00:09:05
    discus, javelin, long jump, running, and wrestling.
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    But the award for most unlikely event
  • 00:09:11
    has to go to the competition for trumpeters and heralds
  • 00:09:14
    that was added in 396 BCE.
  • 00:09:17
    This genuine event that we absolutely did not make up
  • 00:09:21
    was held on the first day of the games,
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    and the winners were those who sound carried the furthest.
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    Your prize for victory was the honor
  • 00:09:28
    of announcing the winners of the other competitions
  • 00:09:30
    on the final day of the games and probably
  • 00:09:33
    some type of fancy trumpet.
  • 00:09:34
    [MUSIC PLAYING]
  • 00:09:37
  • 00:09:38
    Being a champion of the modern Olympic games
  • 00:09:40
    comes with a lot of perks.
  • 00:09:42
    Winners might get lucrative endorsement deals,
  • 00:09:45
    become a correspondent for a sports network,
  • 00:09:47
    or maybe even land an appearance on Dancing With the Stars.
  • 00:09:50
    But the ancient world had its own version of prestige.
  • 00:09:54
    Victorious athletes of the ancient Olympics
  • 00:09:56
    were permitted to erect statues of themselves
  • 00:09:59
    inside the sanctuary of Zeus in commemoration of their victory.
  • 00:10:02
    A champion who won three times could even set up
  • 00:10:05
    a specially commissioned portrait statue, which let
  • 00:10:08
    us assure you, was not cheap.
  • 00:10:11
    In fact, a statue like that could cost up to 10 times
  • 00:10:14
    the average yearly wage.
  • 00:10:16
    These statues were typically made from bronze or marble,
  • 00:10:18
    but the basis for several did, sort of like your little league
  • 00:10:22
    trophies.
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    That little baseball guy on the top always broke off.
  • 00:10:25
    Winners also received crowns of wild olive
  • 00:10:28
    and were showered with leaves and flowers.
  • 00:10:31
    This form of celebration, known as the phylobollia,
  • 00:10:33
    was the inspiration for the modern practice
  • 00:10:36
    of throwing of confetti and tickertape
  • 00:10:38
    at victory celebrations.
  • 00:10:40
    According to some histories, winners
  • 00:10:42
    would become the subject of poems and songs,
  • 00:10:44
    be sent home in a chariot, and receive a pile of money.
  • 00:10:48
    They would also be excused from ever having to pay taxes again,
  • 00:10:51
    which is a perk modern Olympians probably
  • 00:10:54
    wish was still a thing.
  • 00:10:55
    [MUSIC PLAYING]
  • 00:10:58
  • 00:10:59
    Most people associate the Olympics with the Greeks,
  • 00:11:02
    but the truth is they were still played even under Roman rule.
  • 00:11:06
    But the Romans had a decidedly different attitude
  • 00:11:09
    toward the hole thing.
  • 00:11:10
    They saw the primary value of the Olympics
  • 00:11:13
    as a form of entertainment for the crowd,
  • 00:11:15
    whereas the Greeks put the emphasis on the importance
  • 00:11:17
    of the competition itself.
  • 00:11:19
    In other words, the Romans were into the sizzle,
  • 00:11:22
    but the Greeks were into the steak.
  • 00:11:24
    But in the end, even the entertainment value
  • 00:11:26
    wasn't enough.
  • 00:11:28
    Emperor Theodosius-- or possibly his son--
  • 00:11:31
    did away with the Olympic games around 400 CE.
  • 00:11:34
    It is believed that Theodosius associated the games
  • 00:11:37
    with the pagan gods, so he shut them
  • 00:11:39
    down in an effort to help push Christianity as the religion
  • 00:11:42
    of the Roman Empire.
  • 00:11:43
    The Olympics would not return until 1896.
  • 00:11:48
    So what do you think?
  • 00:11:49
    Could you have made it as an Olympian in the ancient world?
  • 00:11:52
    Let us in the comments below.
  • 00:11:53
    And while you're at it, check out some of these other videos
  • 00:11:56
    from our Weird History.
Tags
  • Ancient Olympics
  • Greek History
  • Zeus
  • Athletic Competitions
  • Greek Culture
  • Roman Influence
  • Olympic Games Evolution
  • Sports History
  • Greek Society
  • Ancient World