ISTHMIAN GAMES

The 'Isthmian Games' or 'Isthmia' (ancient Greek Ἴσθμια) were one of the Panhellenic Games of Ancient Greece, and were held at the isthmus of Corinth every two years, at the second and fourth years of an Olympiad.
If we are to accept the traditional date of the first Olympician Games (776 BC), we can say that the first Isthmian Games would have been held in 582 BC.[1]
The name is derived from the isthmus of Corinth, where the games were held. (An "isthmus" is a narrow land-bridge joining two continents or landmasses.)
As with the Nemean Games, the Isthmian Games were held both the year before and the year after the Olympic Games, while the Pythian Games were held in the third year of the Olympiad cycle.
At least until the 5th century BC (Pindar's time) the 'winners' of the Isthmian games received a wreath of celery;[2] later, the wreath was altered such that it consisted of pine leaves.[3][4][5] Victors could also be honored with a statue[6] or an ode. Besides these prizes of honor, the city of Athens awarded victorious Athenians with an extra 100 drachmas.[7]

Contents
Origin
History
Famous victors
Isthmian truce
Location of the games
Notes
Links

Origin


The games were reputed to have originated as funeral games for Melicertes (also known as Palaemon), instituted by Sisyphus, legendary founder and king of Corinth, who discovered the dead body and buried it subsequently on the Isthmus.[8][9] In Roman times, Melicertes was worshipped in the region.[10]
Theseus, legendary king of Athens, expanded Melicertes' funeral games from a closed nightly rite into fully-fledged athletic-games event which was dedicated to Poseidon, open to all Greeks, and was at a suitable level of advancement and popularity to rival those in Olympia, which were founded by Herakles.[11] Theseus arranged with the Corinthians for any Athenian visitors to the Isthmian games to be granted the privilege of front seats (''prohedria'', Ancient Greek προεδρία).[12] Another version states that Kypselos, tyrant of Corinth in the 7th century BC, returned to the Games their old splendour [1].[13]

History


From 228 BC or 229 BC onwards the Romans were allowed to take part in the games.[14]
The Games of 196 BC were used by Titus Quinctius Flamininus to proclaim the freedom of the Greek states from Macedonian rule.[15]
Since the games' inception, Corinth had always been in control of them. When Corinth was destroyed by the Romans in 146 BC, the Isthmian games continued,[16] but were now administered by Sicyon. Corinth was perhaps rebuilt by Caesar in 44 BC.[17] Corinth recovered ownership of the Games at some point between 7 BC and AD 3. The Isthmian Games thereafter flourished until Theodosius I suppressed them as a pagan ritual.
Nero.[18]
==Contests[19]==
Comparable to the Olympic games.

Chariot races

Pankration

★ Wrestling

★ Musical and poetical contests, in which apparently women were allowed to compete.[20]
And more

Famous victors


In 216 BC: Cleitomachus of Thebes (won wrestling, boxing and pankration on the same day).[21]

Isthmian truce


Before the games began, a truce was declared by Corinth to grant athletes safe passage through Greece.[22] In 412 BC, even though Athens and Corinth were at war, the Athenians were invited to the games as usual.[23]

Location of the games


Near the sanctuary of Poseidon on the Isthmus.

Notes


1. According to Solinus, the Isthmian Games were reconstituted in the 49th Olympiad (Solinus, ''Wonders of the World'' 7.14). The 49th Olympiad began in 584 BC. The Olympic Games took place in July/August; the Isthmian Games in April/May of the second year of the Olympiad. The second year of the 49th Olympiad was from July/August 583 to July/August 582 BC. The date 582 BC is accepted by historically-derived documents, for instance, ''Der neue Pauly'' (under ''Isthmia'').
2. Ancient Greek σέλινον: Pindar, Isthmian Odes 2.16, 8.64.
3. “At the Isthmus the pine, and at Nemea celery became the prize to commemorate the sufferings of Palaemon and Archemorus.” (Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 8.48.2).
4. “As he was marching up an ascent, from the top of which they expected to have a view of the army and of the strength of the enemy, there met him by chance a train of mules loaded with parsley; which his soldiers conceived to be an ominous occurrence or ill-boding token, because this is the herb with which we not unfrequently adorn the sepulchres of the dead; and there is a proverb derived from the custom, used of one who is dangerously sick, that he has need of nothing but parsley. So to ease their minds, and free them from any superstitious thoughts or forebodings of evil, Timoleon halted, and concluded an address suitable to the occasion, by saying, that a garland of triumph was here luckily brought them, and had fallen into their hands of its own accord, as an anticipation of victory: the same with which the Corinthians crown the victors in the Isthmian games, accounting chaplets of parsley the sacred wreath proper to their country; parsley being at that time still the emblem of victory at the Isthmian, as it is now at the Nemean sports; and it is not so very long ago that the pine first began to be used in its place.” “” (Plutarch, ''Life of Timoleon'').
5. 'Todo:' Oscar Broneer, ‘The Isthmian victory crown’, ''American Journal of Archaeology'' 66 (1962), pp.259–263.
6. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.1.7. None of the statues have survived.
7. From Solon (638–558 BC) onwards, for he laid it down that “the victor in the Isthmian games was to be paid a hundred drachmas, and the Olympic victor five hundred” (Plutarch, ''Live of Solon'' 23.3). According to Diogenes Laertius, Solon “''diminished'' the honours paid to Athletes who were victorious in the games, fixing the prize for a victor at Olympia at five hundred drachmae, and for one who conquered at the Isthmian games at one hundred” (Diogenes Laertius, ''Lives of Philosophers'' 1.55: ''Solon''; Greek). For comparison: the daily wage for a skilled worked was approximately 1 drachma. Victors in the Isthmian games were not included in those athletes that were entitled to free meals in the [Prytaneion] (IG I3 131).
8. Apollodorus, ''Library'' 3.4.3; Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.1.3, 1.44.8. It is likely that Pindar already described this version of the origin of the games (in a fragment of the Isthian odes). For more information, see E.R. Gebhard & M.W. Dickie, ''Melikertes-Palaimon, Hero of the Isthmian Games''.
9. “… the Isthmia lament Melicertes …” (… Μελικέρτην ὀδύρεται τὰ Ἴσθμια …: Eusebius, ''Preparation'' 2.6 (= Clemens, ''Protrepticus'' 2.34.1).
10. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.1.3, 2.2.1.
11. Plutarch, ''Life of Theseus'' 25.4–5.
12. Plutarch, ''Life of Theseus'' 25.4–5.
13. Solinus, ''Wonders of the World'' 7.14.
14. Polybius, ''Histories'' 2.12.8.
15. Polybius, ''Histories'' 18.46. Compare Appian's account:
16. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.2.1.
17. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 2.1.2.
18. Suetonius, ''Nero'' 24.
19. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 5.2.4.
20. Aristomache, a poetess from Erythraea, had won the prize at the Isthmian Games: … ὡς ἐν τῷ Σικυωνίων θησαυρῷ χρυσοῦν ἀνέκειτο βιβλίον Ἀριστομάχης ἀνάθημα τῆς Ἐρυθραίας ἐπικῷ … ποιήματι δὶς Ἴσθμια νενικηκυίας (Plutarch, ''Symposiacs/Quaestiones convivales'' 675b7–10 5.2).
21. Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 6.15.3.
22. ”ἐς ὃ Ἰσθμικὰς σπονδὰς Κορινθίων ἐπαγγειλάντων” (Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' 5.2.1).
23. Thucydides, ''History of the Peloponnesian War'' 8.10.

Links



The 'Sanctuary' of Poseidon at the Hellenic Ministry of Culture.

Archaeological 'Museum' of Isthmia.

University of Chicago 'Excavations' at Isthmia.

★ Perseus Site Catalog: Isthmia.

★ Britannica 1911: Classical games

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