Olympiad

Stadium at ancient Olympia

An olympiad (Greek: Ὀλυμπιάς, Olympiás) is a period of four years, particularly those associated with the ancient and modern Olympic Games.

Although the ancient Olympics were established during Greece's Archaic Era, it was not until Hippias that a consistent list was established and not until Ephorus in the Hellenistic period that the first recorded Olympic contest was used as a calendar epoch. Ancient authors agreed that other Olympics had been held before the race won by Coroebus but disagreed on how many; the convention was established to place Coroebus's victory at a time equivalent to the summer of 776 BC in the Gregorian calendar and to treat it as Year 1 of Olympiad 1. Olympiad 2 began with the next games in the summer of 772 BC.

Thus, for N less than 195, Olympiad N is reckoned as starting in the year  BC and ending four years later. For N greater than or equal to 195, Olympiad N will begin in AD  and ended four years later. By extrapolation, the 4th year of the 700th Olympiad will begin roughly around 2 August 2024.

In reference to the modern Olympics, their Olympiads are four year periods beginning on January 1 of the year of the Summer Games. Thus, the modern Olympiad I began 1 January 1896, Olympiad II began 1 January 1900, and so on. Olympiad XXXIII began 1 January 2024.[1] Because the Julian and Gregorian calendars go directly from 1 BC to AD 1, the cycle of modern Olympiads is ahead of the ancient cycle by one year.

Ancient Olympics

Each olympiad started with the holding of the games, which originally began on the first or second full moon after the summer solstice. After the introduction of the Metonic cycle about 432 BC, the start of the games was determined slightly differently. Within each olympiad, time was reckoned by referring to its 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th year. Ancient writers sometimes describe their Olympiads as lasting five years but do so by counting inclusively; in fact each comprised a four year period. For example, the first year of Olympiad 140 began in the summer of 220 BC and lasted until the middle of 219 BC. After the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th years of Olympiad 140, the games in the summer of 216 BC would begin the first year of Olympiad 141.

Historians

The sophist Hippias was the first writer to compile a comprehensive list of the Olympic victors (ολυμπιονίκες, olympioníkes). Although his Olympic Record (Ὀλυμπιονικῶν Ἀναγραφή, Olympionikō̂n Anagraphḗ) is now entirely lost, it apparently formed the basis of all later Olympic dating.[2] By the time of Eratosthenes, his dating of Coroebus's victory to 776 BC had been generally accepted.[3] The panhellenic nature of the games, their regular schedule, and the improved victor list allowed Greek historians to use the Olympiads as a way of reckoning time that did not depend on the various calendars of the city-states. (See e.g. the Attic calendar of the Athenians.) The first to do so consistently was Timaeus of Tauromenium in the third century BC. Nevertheless, since for events of the early history of the games the reckoning was used in retrospect, some of the dates given by later historian for events before the 5th century BC are very unreliable.[4] In the 2nd century, Phlegon of Tralles summarized the events of each Olympiad in a book called Olympiads; fragments survive in the work of the Byzantine writer Photius.[5] Christian chroniclers continued to use this Greek system of dating as a way of synchronizing biblical events with Greek and Roman history. In the 3rd century, Sextus Julius Africanus compiled a list of Olympic victors up to 217 BC, and this list has been preserved in the Chronicle of Eusebius.[6]

Examples of Ancient Olympiad dates

A relief of the Greek Olympiad
  • Early historians sometimes used the names of Olympic victors as a method of dating events to a specific year. For instance, Thucydides says in his account of the year 428 BC: "It was the Olympiad in which the Rhodian Dorieus gained his second victory."[7]
  • Dionysius of Halicarnassus dates the foundation of Rome to the first year of the seventh Olympiad, 752 & 751 BC. Since Rome was founded on April 21, which was in the last half of the ancient Olympic year, it would be 751 BC specifically. In Book 1 chapter 75 Dionysius states: "...Romulus, the first ruler of the city, began his reign in the first year of the seventh Olympiad, when Charops at Athens was in the first year of his ten-year term as archon."[8]
  • Diodorus Siculus dates the Persian invasion of Greece to 480 BC: "Calliades was archon in Athens, and the Romans made Spurius Cassius and Proculus Verginius Tricostus consuls, and the Eleians celebrated the Seventy-fifth Olympiad, that in which Astylus of Syracuse won the stadion. It was in this year that king Xerxes made his campaign against Greece."[9]
  • Jerome, in his Latin translation of the Chronicle of Eusebius, dates the birth of Jesus Christ to year 3 of Olympiad 194, the 42nd year of the reign of the emperor Augustus, which equates to the year 2 BC.[10]

Anolympiad

Though the games were held without interruption, on more than one occasion they were held by others than the Eleians. The Eleians declared such games Anolympiads (non-Olympics), but it is assumed the winners were nevertheless recorded.

End of the era

During the 3rd century, records of the games are so scanty that historians are not certain whether after 261 they were still held every four years. Some winners were recorded though, until the last Olympiad of AD 393. In 394, Roman Emperor Theodosius I outlawed the games at Olympia as pagan. Though it would have been possible to continue the reckoning by just counting four-year periods, by the middle of the 5th century reckoning by Olympiads had ceased.

Modern Olympics

Olympiad First year Last year Host City Country
I (1st) 1896 1899 Athens Greece Greece
II (2nd) 1900 1903 Paris France France
III (3rd) 1904 1907 St. Louis United States United States
IV (4th) 1908 1911 London United Kingdom Great Britain
V (5th) 1912 1915 Stockholm Sweden Sweden
VI (6th)[a] 1916 1919 Berlin Germany Germany
VII (7th) 1920 1923 Antwerp Belgium Belgium
VIII (8th) 1924 1927 Paris France France
IX (9th) 1928 1931 Amsterdam Netherlands Netherlands
X (10th) 1932 1935 Los Angeles United States United States
XI (11th) 1936 1939 Berlin Germany Germany
XII (12th)[b] 1940 1943 Tokyo Japan Japan
Helsinki Finland Finland
XIII (13th)[b] 1944 1947 London United Kingdom Great Britain
XIV (14th) 1948 1951 London United Kingdom Great Britain
XV (15th) 1952 1955 Helsinki Finland Finland
XVI (16th) 1956 1959 Melbourne Australia Australia
XVII (17th) 1960 1963 Rome Italy Italy
XVIII (18th) 1964 1967 Tokyo Japan Japan
XIX (19th) 1968 1971 Mexico City Mexico Mexico
XX (20th) 1972 1975 Munich West Germany West Germany
XXI (21st) 1976 1979 Montreal Canada Canada
XXII (22nd) 1980 1983 Moscow Soviet Union Soviet Union
XXIII (23rd) 1984 1987 Los Angeles United States United States
XXIV (24th) 1988 1991 Seoul South Korea South Korea
XXV (25th) 1992 1995 Barcelona Spain Spain
XXVI (26th) 1996 1999 Atlanta United States United States
XXVII (27th) 2000 2003 Sydney Australia Australia
XXVIII (28th) 2004 2007 Athens Greece Greece
XXIX (29th) 2008 2011 Beijing China China
XXX (30th) 2012 2015 London United Kingdom Great Britain
XXXI (31st) 2016 2019 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Brazil
XXXII (32nd)[c] 2020 2023 Tokyo Japan Japan
XXXIII (33rd) 2024 2027 Paris France France
XXXIV (34th) 2028 2031 Los Angeles United States United States
XXXV (35th) 2032 2035 Brisbane Australia Australia

Start and end

The Summer Olympics are more correctly referred to as the Games of the Olympiad. The first poster to announce the games using this term was the one for the 1932 Summer Olympics, in Los Angeles, using the phrase: Call to the games of the Xth Olympiad.

The modern Olympiad is a period of four years: the first Olympiad started on 1 January 1896, and an Olympiad starts on 1 January of the years evenly divisible by four.[12]

This means that the count of the Olympiads continues, even if Olympic Games are cancelled: For instance, the regular intervals would have meant (summer) Olympic Games should have occurred in 1940 and 1944, but both were cancelled due to World War II.

Nonetheless, the count of the Olympiads continued: The 1936 Games were those of the XI Olympiad, while the next Summer Games were those of 1948, which were the Games of the XIV Olympiad. The current Olympiad is the XXXIII of the modern era, which began on 1 January 2024.

Note, however, that the official numbering of the Winter Olympics does not count Olympiads, it counts only the Games themselves.

For example, the first Winter Games, in 1924, are not designated as Winter Games of the VII Olympiad, but as the I Winter Olympic Games. (The first Winter Games were termed as "Olympic" in a later year.)

The 1936 Summer Games were the Games of the XI Olympiad. After the 1940 and 1944 Summer Games were canceled due to World War II, the Games resumed in 1948 as the Games of the XIV Olympiad. However, the 1936 Winter Games were the IV Winter Olympic Games, and on the resumption of the Winter Games in 1948, the event was designated the V Winter Olympic Games.[13]

The 2020 Summer Games were the Games of the XXXII Olympiad. On 24 March 2020, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, it was postponed to 2021 rather than cancelled, and thus becoming the first postponement in the 124-year history of the Olympics.[11]

Some media people have from time to time referred to a particular (e.g., the nth) Winter Olympics as "the Games of the nth Winter Olympiad", perhaps believing it to be the correct formal name for the Winter Games by analogy with that of the Summer Games. Indeed, at least one IOC-published article has applied this nomenclature as well.[14] This analogy is sometimes extended further by media references to "Summer Olympiads".

However, the IOC does not seem to make an official distinction between Olympiads for the summer and winter games, and such usage particularly for the Winter Olympics is not consistent with the numbering discussed above.

Quadrennium

Some Olympic Committees often use the term quadrennium, which it claims refers to the same four-year period. However, it indicates these quadrennia in calendar years, starting with the first year after the Summer Olympics and ending with the year the next Olympics are held. This would suggest a more precise period of four years, but, for example, the 2001–2004 Quadrennium would then not be exactly the same period as the XXVII Olympiad, which was 2000–2003.[15]

Cultural Olympiad

A Cultural Olympiad is a concept protected by the International Olympic Committee and may be used only within the limits defined by an Organizing Committee for the Olympic Games. From one Games to the next, the scale of the Cultural Olympiad varies considerably, sometimes involving activity over the entire Olympiad and other times emphasizing specific periods within it. Baron Pierre de Coubertin established the principle of Olympic Art Competitions at a special congress in Paris in 1906, and the first official programme was presented during the 1912 Games in Stockholm. These competitions were also named the "Pentathlon of the Muses", as their purpose was to bring artists to present their work and compete for "art" medals across five categories: architecture, music, literature, sculpture and painting.

Nowadays, while there are no competitions as such, cultural and artistic practice is displayed via the Cultural Olympiad. The 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver presented the Cultural Olympiad Digital Edition. The 2012 Olympics included an extensive Cultural Olympiad with the London 2012 Festival in the host city, and events elsewhere including the World Shakespeare Festival produced by the RSC.[16] The 2016 games' Cultural Olympiad was scaled back due to Brazil's recession; there was no published programme, with director Carla Camurati promising "secret" and "spontaneous" events such as flash mobs.[17] Cultural events in time for the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo were planned[18] but subsequently cancelled due to pandemic restrictions in Japan and was replaced by an alternative virtual event instead.

Other uses

The English term is still often used popularly to indicate the games themselves, a usage that is uncommon in ancient Greek (as an Olympiad is most often the time period between and including sets of games).[19] It is also used to indicate international competitions other than physical sports. This includes international science olympiads, such as the International Geography Olympiad, International Mathematical Olympiad, International Forensics Olympiad, and the International Linguistics Olympiad and their associated national qualifying tests (e.g., the United States of America Mathematical Olympiad, the USA Forensics Olympiad or the United Kingdom Linguistics Olympiad), and also events in mind-sports, such as the Science Olympiad, Mindsport Olympiad, Chess Olympiad, International History Olympiad and Computer Olympiad. In these cases Olympiad is used to indicate a regular event of international competition for top achieving participants; it does not necessarily indicate a four-year period.

In some languages, like Czech and Slovak, Olympiad (Czech: olympiáda) is the correct term for the games.

The Olympiad (L'Olimpiade) is also the name of some 60 operas set in Ancient Greece.

Notes

General
  1. ^ Not celebrated because of World War I
  2. ^ a b Not celebrated because of World War II
  3. ^ Celebrated in 2021 as the COVID-19 pandemic postponed the Olympics by one year.[11]
Specific
  1. ^ Olympic Charter.
  2. ^ Christesen, Paul (2012), "Imagining Olympia: Hippias of Elis and the First Olympic Victor List", A Tall Order: Writing the Social History of the Ancient World, Berlin: B.G. Teubner, pp. 319–356, doi:10.1515/9783110931419.319, ISBN 978-3-598-77828-5.
  3. ^ Bickerman 1980, p. 75.
  4. ^ Bickerman 1980, p. 88.
  5. ^ Photius, Bibliotheca, Terlullian, p. 97.
  6. ^ Eusebius, Chronicle, Attalus, p. 193.
  7. ^ Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War, Tufts.
  8. ^ of Halicarnassus, Dionysius (1937), The Roman Antiquities - Book 1 Chapters 72-90, University of Chicago, 1.75, archived from the original on 14 Jul 2012.
  9. ^ Siculus, Diodorus (1946), The Library of History - Book XI Chapters 1-19, University of Chicago, 11.1.2, archived from the original on 17 Jul 2012.
  10. ^ Jerome, Chronological Tables, Attalus, 2015, archived from the original on Feb 25, 2024.
  11. ^ a b IOC Media Relations Team (30 March 2020). "IOC, IPC, Tokyo 2020 Organising Committee and Tokyo Metropolitan Government announce new dates for the Olympic and Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020". Olympic News. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
  12. ^ "Olympic Charter" (PDF). International Olympic Committee. October 2007. Bye-law to Rule 6. Archived (PDF) from the original on Nov 16, 2022.
  13. ^ "Olympic Games Chronology". Team USA. Archived from the original on 2016-08-09.
  14. ^ Kendall, Nigel (2011-04-08). "Community Spirit". International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 2011-06-22. The XXI Winter Olympiad was to be the first 'social media Games'.
  15. ^ USOC Quadrennial Congressional Report, June 2009 Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine.
  16. ^ "World Shakespeare Festival tickets go on public sale". BBC Online. 10 October 2011. Retrieved 15 August 2017.
  17. ^ Lang, Kirsty (29 July 2016). "Rio 2016: The 'secret' Cultural Olympiad". BBC Online. Retrieved 15 August 2017.
  18. ^ Culture360.asef.org
  19. ^ Liddell, Scott, and Jones, A Greek-English Lexicon, s.v. Ὀλυμπιάς, A. II. 1

References

  • Bickerman, Elias J (1980), Chronology of the Ancient World (Aspects of Greek & Roman Life) (2nd sub ed.), Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-1282-0

External links

  • "Olympiad" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). 1911.
  • Chris Bennett, The Olympiad System, on tyndalehouse.com
  • Valerie Vaughan, The Origin of the Olympics: Ancient Calendars and the Race Against Time (2002) on OneReed.com, an astrologically-oriented site.
  • Hellenic Month Established Per Athens, [1]
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