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A stone carving featuring a chariot being pulled by four horses.
Image: Hans Goette.
9 May 2025

Written by 

The Olympic Games immediately spring to mind when people think about sport in ancient Greece.

This is easy to understand because these Games are what has inspired our modern Olympics.

The ancient Greeks celebrated their Olympics for a truly staggering 1000 years.

Their Games attracted sportsmen from the 1000 Greek microstates of the Mediterranean basin.

These Olympics, like ours, were the world’s largest event.

Our focus on this four-yearly festival in honour of Zeus, who was the ruler of the gods, is thus perfectly understandable. 

Yet, what most people do not realise is that the Olympics were only one aspect of sport in ancient Greece.

Often overlooked is that these Games were part of a periodos or circuit of 4 international sporting festivals.

The other 3 Games in this circuit took place at Corinth, Nemea and Delphi. Each of Greece’s 1000 microstates also staged their own sporting festivals.

We know of many hundreds of these local Games.

Traditional male education also included classes for the events that were common to all Games.

Therefore, ancient Greek sport was both a competitive and educational activity.  

By far, the largest local Games of ancient Greece were the Great Panathenaea.

Ancient democratic Athens staged this sporting festival every 4 years in honour of its chief deity, Athena, who was a daughter of Zeus.

Local as it was, the Great Panathenaea was, in important ways, as great as the Olympics.

The heyday of both Games was the fourth century BC. During this century, Athens spent an incredible 650 kilograms of silver on each Great Panathenaea.

This explains why it actually had twice as many contests as those at the Olympics and lasted twice as long.

The Athenians also celebrated their Panathenaic Games for a staggering thousand years.

Yet, there were also three big differences between the Games at Olympia and Athens.

The first difference was the prizes. Those at the Olympics were purely symbolic: wreaths of olive leaves.

The Athenians, by contrast, handed out storage pots, which were commissioned for each Games.

Such an amphora depicted Athena on one side and a sporting event on the other.

Panathenaic amphoras have been discovered right around the Mediterranean basin. This shows that the sportsmen at this festival were as international as those at the Olympics.

Beautiful as they are, it is easy to think that these pots were the prizes.

But the real prize was what they stored: olive oil.

The Athenians gave victors and placegetters an amazing quantity of such oil. At each Games, they awarded 2100 storage pots as prizes, filling each one with 36 litres.

Filling them all would have required more than 75,000 litres of olive oil.

What motivated them to dispense so much oil was their myth about how Athena had become their chief goddess.

According to this story, she had competed with her uncle, Poseidon, to be their city-protecting deity.

As part of this contest, Poseidon created a salty spring on the Acropolis, while Athena made appear there the world’s first olive tree.

Because Zeus, understandably, judged such a tree more useful than undrinkable water, Athena was declared the winner.

The Olympics and the Great Panathenaea included the common events of ancient Greek sport.

There was a stadion or sprint race as well as 3 or 4 other footraces.

Sportsmen could compete in wrestling, boxing and the pankration, which was like our kickboxing.

The pentathlon at both had the same 5 events: stadion, javelin, long jump, discus and wrestling. The two festivals had the full suite of races for horse-drawn chariots, racehorses and mule carts. 

But events also represented the second big difference between these two Games.

Two events at the Great Panathenaea were completely unique. The first was a race for a charioteer and a passenger, which was called the apobates.

This contest required the passenger, who was armed as a soldier, to jump on and off a speeding chariot.

The second unique event was the purrhikhe, which was a dancing contest. Each troupe in this contest carried spears and shields.

We used to think that the Great Panathenaea was a birthday party for this goddess.

But it is now clear that the Athenians had a different origins-story for their Games.

This myth accounts for these two unique events that it had. When Zeus became the ruler of the gods, he was forced to fight the Giants, who were an earlier generation of unruly gods.

In doing so, he relied on Athena, who was the best of his warriors, to lead the Olympian gods in the battle.

The story explained that the Great Panathenaea started as the celebration of the victory to which Athena had led them.

She had done so by fighting as a soldier, who had jumped on and off a chariot.

Consequently, the apobates race saw mounted soldiers mimic how their cherished goddess had once fought.

The purrhikhe was the spontaneous dance that Athena invented in celebration of her smashing victory.

It was this that she was always depicted dancing on Panathenaic amphoras.

Sport and war were closely linked together in ancient Greece.

The Great Panathenaea had many contests for members of the cavalry-corps.

There were also team events for the Athenian armed forces.

The anthippasia saw cavalry-units charge each other. There was also a race of warships and a team event in euandria or manly courage.

War was also put on display in the pompe or procession of the Great Panathenaea, which was depicted on the Parthenon frieze.

It included cavalrymen and soldiers in their thousands, with hundreds more bearing weapons as gifts for Athena.

The Athenians boldly asserted that they were the children of Athena.

Like their divine mother, they were the best warriors, who, with her help, would always be victorious.

A version of this article was originally published in Kathimerini.