Listed 24 sub titles with search on: Olympic games for wider area of: "STEREA HELLAS Region GREECE" .
KARYSTOS (Ancient city) EVIA
-520
Olympic victor in boxing 520 BC, 65th Olympiad.
Glaucus, (Glaukos), of Carystus, the son of Demylos, was one of the most celebrated Grecian athletes. He was a periodonikes, having gained one Olympic, two Pythian, eight Nemean, and eight Isthmian victories in boxing. It is said that while stilt a boy, he refixed a ploughshare which had dropped out of its place by the allows of his fist, without the help of a hammer. His state at Olympia was made by Glaucias of Aegina. (Muller, Aeginet. iii. 4.; Krause, Olymp.)
-348
Children boxing, 348 BC, 108th Olympiad.
THIVES (Ancient city) VIOTIA
Son of Theopompus, a Theban, Olympic victor, 360 B.C., 105th Olympiad
unknown event, 352 BC,107th Olympiad.
A Theban, Olympic victor.
Tethrippon, 520 BC, 65th Olympiad.
472 BC, 75th Olympiad.
404 BC, 94th Olympiad.
ANTIKYRA (Ancient city) VIOTIA
THIVES (Ancient city) VIOTIA
Cleitomachus (Kleitomachos), a Theban athlete, whose exploits are recorded by Pausanias (vi. 15; comp. Suid. s.v. Kleitomachos). He won the prize at Olympia in the pancratium in 01. 141. (B. C. 216.) Aelian mentions (V. H. iii. 30) his great temperance, and the care he took to keep himself in good condition.
-332
Olympic victor in stadium 332 BC. The one hundred and twelfth Olympic Games were held, in which Grylus of Chalcis was the victor (Diodorus Siculus, Library: book 17, chapter 40, section 1).
The Olympian and Pythian Odes, Commentary on Olympian Odes (O.9.1) by Basil
L. Gildersleeve
The date of this ode is uncertain, and the Scholiasts are at variance.
According to Bockh the victory was won Ol. 81 (456 B.C.), shortly after a Pythian
victory, Ol. 80, 3 (458 B.C.), which is celebrated in this ode together with the
Olympian one. Leopold Schmidt finds that Bockh's computation agrees with his theory
of P.'s poetical decline. Fennell puts the date Pyth. 30 (468 B.C.), acc. to one
Scholiast, on the ground that at the later date (456) the Lokrian oligarchy was
threatened, if not overthrown, by the Athenians. Cf. Thuk. 1, 108. Besides his
many local successes, Epharmostos had been victorious in all the great national
games, and was, consequently, a periodonikes. Pindar tells us all we know of him
-- his noble personal appearance, his ancient stock, his intimacy with Lampromachos,
also a friend of Pindar's.
The song was sung in Opus at a festival of Aias Oiliades ... The Lokrians
are better known to us through the Epizephyrian representatives of the stock than
by the members of the family that remained in Central Greece, and for us Opuntian
Lokris is more lighted up by this ode of Pindar's than by the rude inscriptions,
which doubtless give a false impression of the people. Writing may be rude, and
song, for which the Lokrians were famous, refined. The position of woman among
the Lokrians seems to have been exceptionally influential, and even one who knew
nothing of Lokris and the Lokrians could hardly fail to be struck by the predominance
of woman in this ode. Pindar is a manner of "Frauenlob," at any rate,
but here "das Ewig-Weibliche" is paramount. Archilochos does not suffice;
we must have the Muses. Lydian Pelops is mentioned for the sake of the dowry of
his bride, Hippodameia. Themis and Eunomia are the patronesses of the renowned
city, mother of the Lokrians. The city is the city of Protogeneia. Opus, son of
Zeus and an Epeian heroine, bore the name of his mother's father. When Menoitios
is mentioned, his mother is not forgotten; Achilles is only Thetis's son.
The fundamental thought is to de phuai kratiston hapan. It matters
not that in the previous song P. had sung: agnomon de to me promathein (O. 8.60).
Here no Melesias is to be praised. The phua comes from God; hence P. sings, aneu
de theou sesigamenon ou skaioteron chrem' hekaston. The poem is full of the strange
dealings, the wonderful workings of the deities, of the Supreme, culminating in
the story of Protogeneia and her son. The fortune of Lydian Pelops reminds us
of Poseidon. The dowry of Hippodameia was a gift of God, as Pindar's garden of
song was allotted him by Fate. The Charites are the bestowers of all that is pleasant.
Men are good and wise according to the will of Heaven. If Herakles withstood the
gods themselves, it is clear that there was a greater god within him. That god
was Zeus, and P., after deprecating impiety toward the gods, tells of the marvels
Zeus hath wrought. Behold the miracle of the stones raised up as seed to Deukalion
and Pyrrha. That is the decree of Zeus, aiolobronta Dios aisai. Behold the deluge
abated. That is the device of Zeus, Zenos technais. Protogeneia is caught up.
Zeus interferes again to give life to the dying house.
Epharmostos has been singularly favored by nature and fortune. Nature
and fortune mean God, and the narrative of his successes closes the poem with
a recognition of the divine decree that made him quick of hand, ready of limb,
and valorous of eye.
The Lokrian or Aiolian (logaoedic) rhythms are light and festive.
They whirr like arrows, they flame, they speed faster than mettlesome horse or
winged ship.
The first triad contains the introduction. The myth, the story of
the heroine who made Opus what it was, is announced in the first epode, the theme
of which is continued in the second triad. After unfolding his moral (agathoi
de kai sophoi kata daimon' andres egenonto), P. resumes the myth, tells of Deukalion
and Pyrrha and the stone-folk, and the union of Zeus and the ancestress of Opus
and the Opuntian nobles. About the city thus founded gathered nobles of different
Grecian lands, chief of them Menoitios, father of Patroklos. From this story,
which shows what God can do, P. passes, at the close of the third triad, to the
achievements of the descendants of this favored stock, and, in the last triad,
recounts the exploits of Epharmostos
ERETRIA (Ancient city) EVIA
Olympic victor 492 BC, 72nd Olympiad.
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