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The Participation of Ancient
Macedonians in the Olympiads
and
their Contribution to the Greek Cultural Heritage
by
Nicholas Martis
Former Minister of
Macedonia-Thrace
President of
“Makedoniki Estia”
A summary of the Macedonian participation in the Olympics
and in the Hellenic and Hellenistic cultural
development.
(Translated in
English by Nina Gatzoulis – Secretary of the Pan-Macedonian Association)
Macedonia,
with its precipitous and abrupt mountains, forming natural barriers and making
communication with
the rest of Greece difficult, could not participate very
actively in the political, cultural and social life of the other Greeks.
For
this reason the Greeks in the south, did not very well mix with the Greeks in
the north, i.e. with those in Macedonia.
Up until King Philip II’s era, there
were no significant contacts and conflicts between Macedonian Greeks and the
rest of the Greek City-States in the south.
The endeavor of King Alexander I to
protect the Greek City-States from
the eminent Persian danger, obtained him the
title of “Philhellene” by the southern Greeks. “Philhellene” at that
time had
the connotation of “Philopatris” (he who loves his fatherland) and was bestowed
to those Greeks, who
were not just concerned with their
own City-State’s welfare, but they displayed Pan-Hellenic anxieties. It should
be
remembered that, in spite geographic accessibility problems, which restrained
intermingling of Macedonians and
the rest of the Greeks in the south:
·
Macedonians had the
same language, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same religion, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians used the
same architecture, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians served the
same arts, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians used the
same names, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same traditions, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same myths, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same heroes, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same rituals, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians had the
same customs, as all other Greeks
·
Macedonians were
Greeks.
Macedonians,
through their agrarian and bucolic lives, their mountainous terrain, their
continuous struggles to
keep at bay barbarians from raiding the Greek peninsula
and their intermittent internal struggles for succession to
the Throne of
Macedonia, ended up being rather isolated from the rest of the Greeks. They
held on to their traditions,
but their cultural development was not very
significant. The cultural distance between the southern Greek
City-States and
Macedonia was quite substantial, because Athens did not have to play the
protecting role of keeping
the northern raiders off the Greek land. Macedonians bore that responsibility.
Dr. Apostolos Daskalakis in his book The Greeks of Ancient Macedonia
states:
“If the Macedonians had not become the shield, protecting the
lands beyond
Mount Olympus by the continuous barbarian attacks, the Greek element would not
be preserved uninterrupted for so many centuries. Had the Greek City-States in
the south not remained
for centuries undisturbed by invaders, Hellenism could
had never reached the elevated thought about
freedom, arts, philosophy and
sciences, which were universally inherited by humanity.
The without
doubt culturally more advanced academic and artistic world of southern Greece,
did not stay
indifferent to this new venue towards the land of Macedonian. Thus a multitude of men of letters, arts and
sciences
found fertile ground amongst Macedonians. By the 4th century BCE this assimilation was complete.
The enormous economic prosperity of the Macedonian State and able leadership of
its Kings, became
contributing factors towards collective changes, with
innovative creations in all aspects of artistic endeavors;
especially in
metallurgy, painting and architecture. Such Arts became the archetype later on
for the Romans,
as it is evident even today in the city of Pompey, Italy.
This wide
move of the center of Hellenism from the southern to the northern part of the
Greek peninsula,
began with the emergence of the Macedonian King Philip II. His
conquests and at the same time the decline of
the Greek City-States in the
south, caused a sensation of envy and dissatisfaction to the other Greeks,
especially to
the citizens of Athens, which formed the hub of public opinion at
the time, against the, in some ways, “uncultivated”
Greeks of Macedonia. All
the insults about “barbarian” Macedonians did not originate by philosophers,
poets or
other authors, but by political Athenian orators.
The Athenian
politician-orator Demosthenes, King Philip’s main opponent, speaking to the
Athenians, said:
“…aren’t all our powerful locations placed in the hands of
this man? Will we not suffer the most awful humiliation?
Are we not already at
war with him? Isn’t he our enemy? Isn’t he in possession of our lands?
Isn’t he
a barbarian? Doesn’t he deserve all this name-calling?”
Demosthenes, in his
speech, spoke with human anger against an opponent. When he called King Philip “barbarian”,
he did not mean that
Philip was “not Greek”. This was taken for granted, since in his Olympian II
oration, Demosthenes
praises the State of Macedonia. At the same time
Demosthenes could not call anyone a “barbarian”, given that his own
origin was
“barbarian”. Aeschinus, in his oration against Ktisiphon, calls Demosthenes
“libelous”, because he is “barbarian”
by his Scythe mother and only a “Greek”
by language.
Macedonian
King Alexander I, lover of Arts and friend of poet Pindar, participated in the
80th Olympiad of 460 BCE.
He
competed in the “Stadion” field event and was placed close second to the first
runner.
His participation marked
not
only the beginning of the involvement of Macedonians in the Olympics, but it
also constituted the
foundation of future Macedonian interaction with the other
Greeks and, furthermore, had very far reaching
effects on the future of
Hellenism.
Macedonians,
who participated in the Olympics at Olympia, were as follows:
·
King Alexander I, in the 80th Olympics, in
460 BCE. He run the “Stadion” and was placed very close second.
·
King Arhelaos Perdikas, competed in the 93rd
Olympics, in 408 BCE and won at Delphi the race of the
four-horse chariot.
·
King Philip II was an Olympic champion three times. In
the 106th Olympics, in 356 BCE, he won the race,
riding his horse.
In the 107th Olympics, in 352 BCE, he won the four-horse chariot
race. In the 108th
Olympics,
in 348 BCE, he was the winner of the two colt chariot.
·
Cliton run the Stadion in the 113rd Olympics, in 328 BCE.
·
Damasias from Amphipolis won in the Stadion in the 115th
Olympics, in 320 BCE.
·
Lampos from Philippi, was proclaimed a winner in the
four-horse chariot race in the 119th Olympics, in 304 BCE.
·
Antigonos won in the Stadion race, in the 122nd
Olympics, in 292 BCE and in the 123rd Olympics in 288 BCE.
·
Seleucos won in the field-sports competition in the 128th
Olympics in 268 BCE.
·
During the 128th Olympics, in 268 BCE and in the 129th Olympics, in
264 BCE, a woman from Macedonia
won the competition. Pausanias mentions that:
“…it is said that the race of the two-colt chariot was won by a
woman, named Velestihi
from the seashores of Macedonia”.
Pausanias
mentions the Philippeion in Olympia: “In the grove there is the Records
Building and an edifice
called Phippeion…Philip built it after the battle at
Chaeroneia…there are statues of Philip, of Alexander
and Amyntas…there
are pieces that were made of ivory and gold carved by Leoharus, just like the
statues
of Olympia and Euridice”. Also
Pausanias points out that various statues were made by order as oblations and
he mentions that: “representing the Macedonians, the inhabitants of Dion, a
city by the Macedonian Pieria
mountain range, had a statue made, which portrays Apollo holding a deer”.
During the
Vergina excavation a tripod was found, which is kept at the Museum of
Thessaloniki, and carries the
inscription: “I come from the Argos athletic
competitions, the Heraia”. According to Archeology Professor Andronikos,
the tripod belonged to the Macedonian King Alexander I and it was a family
heirloom.
King Arhelaos
I (413-399 BC) established in Dion magnificent athletic competitions every two
years
“the Olympian Dion”, which lasted nine days, as it corresponded to the
nine Pierian Muses, originating from the
Macedonian mountain range Pieria. During these events ancient tragedies were
presented. Arhelaos I organized the
Macedonian Army, structured a
transportation system and transferred the Capital from Aiges to Pella. In his
court lived
the tragic poet Agathon, the epic poet Horilos, the dithyramb
writer Timotheos, the tragic poet Melanipidis and the
doctor and son of
Hippocrates Thessalos. Tragedian Euripides composed his tragedies Arhelaos
and Bachae right in
Arhelaos’s court.
Euripides died and was buried in Macedonia.
Three ancient
Theaters were discovered in Macedonia; one is at Dion, dating back to the 5th
century BCE; the
second is at Vergina (Aegai) – 4th century BCE and
the third at Philippi. Ancient plays used to be performed in these
Theaters. At
the Dion Theater, Euripides’ Bachae and Arhelaos were introduced
for the first time.
Some experts believe that Iphigeneia in Aulis was
presented there. The theme of the play Arhelaos is associated
with the
migration of the Argive Timenidis, Prince of Macedonia and founder of the Royal
House of Aegai.
These tragedies, played
in these Theaters, were written in the Greek language, since they were intended
for
Greek audience, the Macedonians.
Dion, the
sacred place of Macedonians, is one of the largest (about 4 acres) and most
archeologically significant
districts of Greece, featuring multifarious bath
areas, taking up about 1 acre, with tiled floors, marble bathtubs,
complete
plumbing system (led and clay pipes) and lavish colonnaded tiled halls. A fact
that has been overlooked is that Dion
was also the center of intellectual competitions and therefore the birth place
of the cultural Olympics.
The
“Hellenistic Era” is an enormous issue and it could be appropriately
illuminated, only if Universities create
chairs and research it fully. We could
also become more knowledgeable of the influence King Alexander the Great
had on
Islam, which according to Dr. Constantine Romanos, is the missing link in the
History of Civilization.
All ancient authors refer to the impact of the
Hellenistic cultural and intellectual thinking that was passed on by the
Macedonians to the peoples of the Far East.
Plutarch
mentions that: “All of Asia, civilized by Alexander the Great, was reading
Homer and Euripides’
as well as Sophocles’ tragedies”. It is not by coincidence that the Koran refers to Alexander the Great
as Prophet. Jews have adopted his
name. Buddhists worshipped him as equal
to God. Saint Vasileios the Great
and Saint Nectarios promote Alexander and his
deeds. Diodoros points out:
“…the
enemies were compelled by the victor to thrive”.
Macedonians In
Olympics
Macedonians in the
Olympiads and their Contribution (in Greek)
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