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Pages in category "Ancient Greek runners" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Running was important to members of ancient Greek society, and is consistently highlighted in documents referencing the Ancient Olympic Games. The stadion , for example, was so important that "[t]he Olympiad would be named after the victor, and since history itself was dated by the Games, it was he who thus gained the purest dose of immortality."
Competing in the Olympic Games of the 154th Olympiad in 164 BC, the last of the "golden age" of the ancient Games, [4] Leonidas captured the crown in three separate foot races: the stadion, the diaulos, and the hoplitodromos. He repeated this feat in the three subsequent Olympics, in 160 BC, in 156 BC, and finally in 152 BC at the age of 36.
Ancient Greek runners (16 P) H. Greek hurdlers (2 C) L. ... Greek mountain runners (1 P) S. Greek sprinters (2 C) Greek steeplechase runners (2 C) Pages in category ...
Ancient runners from an Attic black-figured Panathenaic prize amphora. Ergoteles (Ancient Greek: Ἐργοτέλης) or Ergotelis, was a native of Knossos and Olympic runner in the Ancient Olympic Games. Civil disorder (ancient Greek: Stasis) had compelled him to leave Crete. He came to Sicily and was naturalized as a citizen of Himera, Magna ...
The Greek historian Herodotus was the first person to write about a Athenian runner named Pheidippides participating in the First Persian War. His account is as follows: [10] Before they left the city, the Athenian generals sent off a message to Sparta. The messenger was an Athenian named Pheidippides, a professional long-distance runner.
He was a five-times Olympic winner in the stadion and diaulos running races (akin to the 200m and 400m sprints of modern Olympics).. From then he reigned for over a decade in the stadia of Ancient Greece.
776 BC) was a Greek cook, [1] baker, [2] and athlete from Elis. He is remembered as the winner ( ολυμπιονίκες , olympioníkes ) [ 3 ] of the first recorded Olympics , which consisted of a single footrace known as the stade or stadion .