Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportBogForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States. / Nielsen, Thomas Heine.

Hildesheim : Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH, 2024. 162 s. (Nikephoros Beihefte, Bind 25).

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportBogForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Nielsen, TH 2024, Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States. Nikephoros Beihefte, bind 25, Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH, Hildesheim.

APA

Nielsen, T. H. (2024). Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States. Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH. Nikephoros Beihefte Bind 25

Vancouver

Nielsen TH. Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States. Hildesheim: Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH, 2024. 162 s. (Nikephoros Beihefte, Bind 25).

Author

Nielsen, Thomas Heine. / Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States. Hildesheim : Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH, 2024. 162 s. (Nikephoros Beihefte, Bind 25).

Bibtex

@book{46d05ae20f5f45bf904de1906b54b291,
title = "Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States",
abstract = "Were the ancient Olympics used, or abused, by the classical Greek city-states for purposes not strictly athletic or religious? This study attempts to outline an answer to this question by focusing on the way the city-state of Elis managed its role as permanent host of the Olympic festival, as well as by addressing the way that the hundreds of other Greek city-states attempted to project favorable images of themselves through activities at the games and at the sanctuary. Elis was a fine host of the Olympics and cannot be seriously accused of sportswashing or blamed for favoring its own athletes. Since ancient Greek athletes were not official representatives of their city-states, states had to improve their international profile primarily by way of dedications at Olympia. Such dedications consisted mainly of spoils of war, in raw or converted form. The study also discusses the motives of the athletes themselves and concludes that the chief motive was a quest for glory. The study then goes on to consider how the glory of victory was handled and enhanced by the victors and, not infrequently, by their city-states that attempted to bask in the fame of its victors. However, the quest for glory did not prevent athletes from pursuing material gain, and this considered alongside such phenomena as transfer of allegiance and match fixing. ",
author = "Nielsen, {Thomas Heine}",
year = "2024",
month = jul,
day = "23",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-615-00468-7",
series = "Nikephoros Beihefte",
publisher = "Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States

AU - Nielsen, Thomas Heine

PY - 2024/7/23

Y1 - 2024/7/23

N2 - Were the ancient Olympics used, or abused, by the classical Greek city-states for purposes not strictly athletic or religious? This study attempts to outline an answer to this question by focusing on the way the city-state of Elis managed its role as permanent host of the Olympic festival, as well as by addressing the way that the hundreds of other Greek city-states attempted to project favorable images of themselves through activities at the games and at the sanctuary. Elis was a fine host of the Olympics and cannot be seriously accused of sportswashing or blamed for favoring its own athletes. Since ancient Greek athletes were not official representatives of their city-states, states had to improve their international profile primarily by way of dedications at Olympia. Such dedications consisted mainly of spoils of war, in raw or converted form. The study also discusses the motives of the athletes themselves and concludes that the chief motive was a quest for glory. The study then goes on to consider how the glory of victory was handled and enhanced by the victors and, not infrequently, by their city-states that attempted to bask in the fame of its victors. However, the quest for glory did not prevent athletes from pursuing material gain, and this considered alongside such phenomena as transfer of allegiance and match fixing.

AB - Were the ancient Olympics used, or abused, by the classical Greek city-states for purposes not strictly athletic or religious? This study attempts to outline an answer to this question by focusing on the way the city-state of Elis managed its role as permanent host of the Olympic festival, as well as by addressing the way that the hundreds of other Greek city-states attempted to project favorable images of themselves through activities at the games and at the sanctuary. Elis was a fine host of the Olympics and cannot be seriously accused of sportswashing or blamed for favoring its own athletes. Since ancient Greek athletes were not official representatives of their city-states, states had to improve their international profile primarily by way of dedications at Olympia. Such dedications consisted mainly of spoils of war, in raw or converted form. The study also discusses the motives of the athletes themselves and concludes that the chief motive was a quest for glory. The study then goes on to consider how the glory of victory was handled and enhanced by the victors and, not infrequently, by their city-states that attempted to bask in the fame of its victors. However, the quest for glory did not prevent athletes from pursuing material gain, and this considered alongside such phenomena as transfer of allegiance and match fixing.

M3 - Book

SN - 978-3-615-00468-7

T3 - Nikephoros Beihefte

BT - Use and Abuse of the Ancient Olympics by the Classical Greek City-States

PB - Weidmannsche Verlagsbuchhandlung GmbH

CY - Hildesheim

ER -

ID: 399115043