Greek mythology tells us that it has Hercules, the
strongest of all men, who challenged his four brothers to a race before
the Gods in the fields of Olympia – and so began the Olympic Games, which
took character of a festival of sport. The recorded history actually begins
in 776 B.C. – a point at which the Greeks marked their calendars in four-year
periods called Olympiads.
In ancient Greece, the Olympic Games became one of
the world’s most enduring and hallowed institutions. They were celebrated
continuously for almost 1,200 years. The athletes who won were lauded as
heroes for life, and often elevated to the status of royalty in their hometowns.
Statues were erected in their honor around the extraordinary Temple of
Zeus, near the Sacred Grove of Altis and the stadium at Olympia.
In 393 A.D., the Roman Emperor Theodosius declared
the Olympic Games corrupt and put an end to them. Earthquakes and floods
buried Olympia and the temple of Zeus until the German excavations of the
1870's. When the statues emerged from the vaults of antiquity – and the
overwhelming cultural beauty of Greek sport was put on display – Europe
went into a frenzy for all things classical.
A young Frenchman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, found
the sacred ground of Olympia particularly fascinating. In his inspiration,
he conceived the idea of Modern Olympic Games – and successfully proposed
it to a gathering of the world’s leading sports authorities on 23 June
1894 in the Grand Hall of the Sorbonne in Paris.
Coubertin’s dream of creating the world’s greatest
sporting event - a truly international spectacle that would travel among
the capitals of the world every four years – was always a means to a far
greater end. Coubertin and his colleagues—like their heirs in the Modern
Olympic Movement—believed that global sport could become a global platform
for peace.
During the last century, the Olympic Movement has succeeded
in many ways beyond Coubertin’s dream. It has survived the traumas of two
World Wars, endured the horrors of modern terrorism, suffered political
boycotts and overcome economic hardships that threatened its very existence.
Today, the Olympic Movement is stronger and healthier than ever.