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Panhellenic Games

Panhellenic Games is the collective term for four separate religious festivals held in ancient Greece that became especially well known for the athletic competitions they included. The four festivals were: the Olympic Games, which were held at Olympia in honor of Zeus;[1] the Pythian Games, which took place in Delphi and honored Apollo;[2] the Nemean Games, occurring at Nemea and also honoring Zeus;[3] and, finally, the Isthmian Games set in Isthmia and held in honor of Poseidon.[4] The places at which these games were held were considered to be "the four great panhellenic sanctuaries."[5] Each of these Games took place in turn every four years, starting with the Olympics. Along with the fame and notoriety of winning the ancient Games, the athletes earned different crowns of leaves from the different Games. From the Olympics, the victor won an olive wreath, from the Pythian Games a laurel wreath, from the Nemean Games a crown of wild celery leaves, and from the Isthmian Games a crown of pine.[6]

  1. ^ "Ancient Olympic Games | Greece, History, Events, Running, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2024-05-08. Retrieved 2024-05-25.;
  2. ^ "Pythian Games | Olympic, Athletic & Musical | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-05-23.;
  3. ^ "Nemean Games | Olympic, Panhellenic & Athletic | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-05-24.;
  4. ^ "Isthmian Games | Panhellenic, Athletic Competitions, Corinth | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-05-24..
  5. ^ "Panhellenism" in The Oxford Classical Dictionary, p.1106 (3rd ed., 2003). Panhellenism was the notion that "what the Greeks have in common as Greeks, and what distinguishes them from barbarians, is more important than what divides them." Id.
  6. ^ The Olympic Museum Educational and Cultural Services (2013). "The Olympic Games in Antiquity" (PDF). stillmed.olympic.org.

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