Every four years, athletes from
around the world come together to compete in the Olympic Games. Do you know why
this event is called the Olympics? The games were first held at Olympia in
ancient Greece. The ancient Olympic Games honored the Greek god Zeus. Today, the
Olympic Games are held in different cities around the world.
THE ANCIENT GAMES
We know that the ancient Olympics
began as far back as 776 bc.
That’s when the Greeks began keeping records of the winners. The ancient Games
continued until about ad 392, more
than 1,000 years!
Athletes came from cities
throughout Greece to compete in races, boxing and wrestling matches, gymnastics,
and weightlifting. They also threw spears, hurled a discus (bronze disk),
and jumped for distance. Wealthy Greeks raced their horses. Winners were crowned
with wreaths of olive or palm leaves.
The ancient Olympic Games were not
just a sporting event, however. There were competitions in poetry, music,
speechmaking, and other arts as well.
At the beginning and end of the
Games, animals were sacrificed (killed and offered) to Zeus. A splendid
temple was built at Olympia in Zeus’s honor. When people stopped worshiping the
Greek gods, the Olympic Games were canceled.
THE MODERN GAMES
The Olympic Games were brought
back in 1896. The first modern Olympic Games were held in Athens, the capital of
Greece. Only nine countries participated in the first Games, and all the
athletes were male.
Today, some 10,000 athletes
compete in the Olympic Games, and nearly half of them are female. They represent
about 200 nations.
At first, the modern Olympics
included only summer sports, such as swimming, rowing, and track and field.
Figure skating was added in 1908, and ice hockey in 1920.
The first winter Olympic Games
were held in 1924. More winter sports were later added to the Winter Games,
including downhill skiing, bobsledding, and ski jumping. Snowboarding and
freestyle skiing followed in the 1990s.
From 1924 through 1992, the Winter
Games and the Summer Games took place in the same year. After 1992, the next
Winter Games were moved up two years, to 1994. Winter Games and Summer Games now
occur two years apart. Each of these Games takes place every four years.
GOING FOR THE GOLD
After each Olympic event, medals
are awarded to the competitors who finish in first, second, and third place.
First-place winners receive a gold medal. Those who finish in second place
receive a silver medal, and those in third place, a bronze medal.
Olympic athletes often dazzle the
world. In 1912, Jim Thorpe of the United States won the gold medal for two of
the most difficult contests in track and field: the pentathlon, which consists
of five different events, and the decathlon, which consists of ten events.
Thorpe is still the only athlete to have won the pentathlon and decathlon at the
same Olympics.
In 1932, Babe Didrikson of the
United States became the only Olympic athlete ever to win medals in separate
running, jumping, and throwing events. Four years later, African American track
star Jesse Owens won four gold medals.
During the 1970s, the thrilling
performances of Olga Korbut of the Soviet Union and Nadia Comaneci of Romania
inspired a generation of girls to take up gymnastics. Also in the 1970s,
American Mark Spitz amazed the world by winning a total of seven gold medals in
swimming. In the 1980s and 1990s, Carl Lewis of the United States won a total of
nine Olympic gold medals in track-and-field events. Sarah Hughes charmed
audiences as she skated her way to a gold medal at the 2002 Winter Olympics. The
star of the Summer Olympics in 2004 was American swimmer Michael Phelps, who won
a total of eight medals.
pub-8320715677200499 |
No comments:
Post a Comment