Monday, March 26, 2018
Local Games at Epidauros, Argos, Sparta, and Larissa
Essay 3: Digital Curation
- look in notes/on canvas for more info
Epidauros and Asklepieion
- epidauros is a healing sanctuary
- Asklepios
• hero/god of healing
• son of Apollo and a mortal woman
- Asklepieion
• sanctuary of Asklepios
• possibly began in the 6th c BCE
• expanded greatly in 4th c BCE
• public and private aspects of the Asklepieion
- private: personal pilgrimages throughout the year to receive cures
- public: state festival with sacrifices and games
• abaton: place where patients slept at night
Asklepeia
- no reported foundation legend
- timing: 9 days after the Isthmian festival in late April/early May
• travel is fairly easy between festivals
- procession with sacrificial animals from the city of Epidauros to the sanctuary
- schedule of the festival not known in detail
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Monday, March 26, 2018
- sacrifice and banquet
• meant consumed in the sanctuary
- games
• first attested in the first half of the 5th c BCE
- Events
• not fully known
• gymnic
- stadion
- pankration
- pentathlon
• no hippic
• musical
- kitharesis and kitharodia?
- aulesis and aulodia?
- rhapsodia (recitation)
- acting
- administration
• controlled by a board of four state officials of the city of Epidauros called the
hieromnemones
- Stadium
• second half of 4th c BCE
• set in natural depression
• squared off end, like Olympia
• stone seats in the eastern (closed) part of the stadium
• track: 180 m between starting lines
- distance markers at 100 ft intervals
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• water channel with basin around the track
• balbis with double foot-grooves
- theater
• built in the late 4th-3rd c BCE
• one of the best preserved theaters in the greek world
Larissa
- Larissa: capital of the Tessalian League
- Local games (called “the games” on inscriptions)
• restricted to Thessalians
• probably held every year
- Eleutheria: international festival w/ games in honor os Zeus Eleutherios (liberator), so
“freedom games”
• founded in 196 BCE to commemorate liberation from Macedon as a result of
Roman intervention in Greece
• held every 4 years
• only for citizens of Larissa
• one agonothetes (director of the games) was the strategos of the Thessalians
(highest political and military position in Thessaly)
- not a lot of info on types of prizes
- events (three age categories, except for hoplitodromos)
• gymnic
- stadion
- diaulos
- dolichos
- hoplitodromos
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Monday, March 26, 2018
- pentathalon
- pankration
- pygme
• military-esque events (individual winners, not teams)
- cavalry marksmanship
- cavalry charge
- infantry charge
- infantry marksmanship
- archery
• hippic
- tethrippon for foals and horses
- synoris for foals and horses
- keles for foals and horses
- apobates
• thessalian triad (hippic events specific to these games)
- aphippolampas: torch race on horseback
- aphippodroma: rider dismounts and mounts a moving horse
- taurotheria: bull wrestling/hunt
• introduced to Rome by Caesar
• relation to modern bull-fighting…?
• non-athletic
- salpinx
- keryx
- literary composition
- rhetoric
- music? (sources are unclear)
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Monday, March 26, 2018
Sparta and the Karneia
- long hair
- focused almost exclusively on war
- spartan women participated in sports from a young age in order to be strong enough
to bear strong Spartan children/soldiers
- The Karneia
• sacred to apollo
• founded ca 675 BCE
• includes gymnic, hippic, musical events
• events:
- gymnic
• stadion
• diaulos
• dolichos
• makros (even longer distance)
• pente dolichos
• hoplitodromos? (not much evidence)
• pentathlon
• combat sports??? (little evidence for individual events)
- doesn’t really exist because it involves the loser quitting
- this goes against spartan beliefs of never surrendering
• sphaireis (close to rugby, team sport)
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Monday, March 26, 2018
Other Spartan Events
- “The competition at the platanistas”
• tribe-based teams of ephebes
• push other team off the island
- Rites at the Sanctuary of Artemis Orthia
• goal: youths steal cheese from the altar
• obstacles: whipping
• by roman period: endurance
Argos and the Hekatombaia/Heraia
- in the 2nd c CE games in honor of Hera (the Heraia or Aspis of Argos) were held in
the city of Argos
• “aspis” means shield
• heraia are pretty much any games related/associated with Hera
- late sources link the founding of the games to a legendary king of Argos, Archinos or
Lynkeus
• Archinos is said to have awarded shields as the prizes
- could be why they’re also called the Aspis of Argos (shield of argos)
• Lynkeus is said to have established games called the shield of argos when, at the
death of Danaus, he became the king
- city of Argos is located at the bottom of a large hill and the Aspis Hill
• Aspis hill looks like one of the Argos shields turned on its side
• looks like: ( < )
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Monday, March 26, 2018
Early Festival and Games for Hera
- Hekatombaia
• sacrifice of 100 cattle
• festival of the hekatombs
Argive Heraion
- sanctuary outside of the city walls, across the plain
- early temple of Hera (probably 7th c BCE
• destroyed 423 BCE
• replaced by classical temple (ca 423-400 BCE)
- no direct evidence for stadium, hippodrome, theater
- there is indirect evidence for hippodrome in the plain below the sanctuary
• inscribed column capital (part of a grave marker), early 5th c BCE
• inscription indicated a woman buried her husband near the hippodrome
Change of name/Venue for Hekatombaia > Heraia
- before end of 3rd c BCE references to the Hekatombaia disappear
• soon references to the Heraia start to appear
- name change connected to venue?
- one of the earliest inscriptions mentioning the Heraia refer to the Helanodikai of the
Heraia and the Nemeia games
- in 209 BCE Philip V of Macedon was name agonothete (honorary director) of both
games
- events held:
• standard gymnic events
• hippic:
- less evidence for these
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Monday, March 26, 2018
- thethrippon, war-chariot
• non-athletic events
- program and timing
• no evidence for the program, how long the festival lasted
• probably held before every (or every other) Nemeia in June
- prizes
• mostly bronze
Addressing Recent Questions from class
- Why were Spartan women looked down on, but also seen as the most beautiful?
- Was the Heraion at Olympia similar to the regular Olympics?
• in some ways it’s similar, but really only consists of footraces
- How old were women who competed?
• mostly “pre-marriage age”, 12 and younger
- Why do ancient Greek buildings always get burned down or destroyed?
• they are religious centers/very political places are appear in conflict a lot
• fire was a big danger prior to the 20th century
• all buildings eventually fall down or have something happen to them
- Did the concept of funeral games originate in ancient Greece?
• the greek version is more or less independent to the other types of funeral games
• evidence of funerary games in Samaria long before Ancient Greece