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Nude Athletes and Fights to the Death: The Ancient Olympics
Konstantine Panegyres/The Conversation
The first recorded victor at the Olympics was Coroebus of Elis. A cook by profession, Coroebus won the event called the “stadion” – a footrace of just under 200 meters, run in a straight line.
Coroebus was victorious in the year 776 BC, but this was probably not the year of the first Olympic games.
A few ancient writers, such as the historian Aristodemus of Elis (who lived in the 2nd century AD or earlier), believed there had been as many as 27 Olympic contests prior to 776 BC, but the results had never been recorded because people before that time did not care about recording the names of the winners.
The games were held every four years at Olympia, a site in Western Greece that had a famous temple to the god Zeus. They started in mid-August and were part of a religious festival dedicated to Zeus.
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