Sport in the Cultures of the Ancient World

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Agonistic Festivals
ancient athletics
Ancient Sport
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athletics
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Berenike II
Capitoline Games
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ceremonial performance studies
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Ephebic Training
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games
gladiatorial
Gladiatorial Combat
Gladiatorial Games
Gladiatorial Shows
gladiatorial spectacles
Greco-Roman competitions
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Greek Agones
Greek Athletics
Greek Ephebate
Greek Sports
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Lusus Troiae
Nemean Games
olympic
Olympic Victor List
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physical education history
Ptolemy II
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Roman Sports
Secular Games
sport and society in antiquity
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780415497152
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Sep 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Sport has been practised in the Greco-Roman world at least since the second millennium BC. It was socially integrated and was practised in the context of ceremonial performances, physical education and established local and international competitions including, most famously, the Olympic Games. In recent years, the continuous re-assessment of old and new evidence in conjunction with the development of new methodological perspectives have created the need for a fresh examination of central aspects of ancient sport in a single volume. This book fills that gap in ancient sport scholarship.

When did the ancient Olympics begin? How is sport depicted in the work of the fifth-century historian Herodotus? What was the association between sport and war in fifth- and fourth-century BC Athens? What were the social and political implications of the practice of Greek-style sport in third-century BC Ptolemaic Egypt? How were Roman gladiatorial shows perceived and transformed in the Greek-speaking east? And what were the conditions of sport participation by boys and girls in ancient Rome? These are some of the questions that this book, written by an international cast of distinguished scholars on ancient sport, attempts to answer. Covering a wide chronological and geographical scope (ancient Mediterranean from the early first millennium BC to fourth century AD), individual articles re-examine old and new evidence, and offer stimulating, original interpretations of key aspects of ancient sport in its political, military, cultural, social, ceremonial and ideological setting.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the International Journal of the History of Sport.

Zinon Papakonstantinou is Assistant Professor of Hellenic Studies at the University of Washington. He has authored Lawmaking and Adjudication in Archaic Greece, Duckworth: London 2008 and articles on Greek law, sport and commensality.