Panathenaic Stadium

Panathenaic Stadium
Kallimarmaro

The stadium in 2009
Location Athens, Greece
Coordinates 37°58′06″N 23°44′28″E / 37.96833°N 23.74111°E / 37.96833; 23.74111Coordinates: 37°58′06″N 23°44′28″E / 37.96833°N 23.74111°E / 37.96833; 23.74111
Owner Hellenic Olympic Committee
Capacity 144 AD: 50,000
1896: 80,000
current: 45,000[1]
Record attendance 80,000 (AEK Athens vs Slavia Prague, 1968)
Construction
Built 6th century BC (racecourse)
c.330 BC (in limestone by Lykourgos)
c.144 AD (in marble by Herodes Atticus)
Renovated 1896
Architect Anastasios Metaxas (1896 renovation)

The Panathenaic Stadium (Greek: Παναθηναϊκό Στάδιο, Panathinaïkó Stádio, [panaˈθinaiko staˈðio])[lower-alpha 1] or Kallimarmaro (Καλλιμάρμαρο [kaliˈmarmaro], literal translation "beautiful marble")[3][4] is a multi-purpose stadium in Athens, Greece. One of the main historic attractions of Athens,[5] it is the only stadium in the world built entirely of marble.[4]

A stadium was built on the site of a simple racecourse by the Athenian statesman Lykourgos (Lycurgus) c.330 BC, primarily for the Panathenaic Games. It was rebuilt in marble by Herodes Atticus, an Athenian Roman senator, by 144 AD and had a capacity of 50,000 seats. After the rise of Christianity in the 4th century it was largely abandoned. The stadium was excavated in 1869 and hosted the Zappas Olympics in 1870 and 1875. After being refurbished, it hosted the opening and closing ceremonies of the first modern Olympics in 1896 and was the venue for 4 of the 9 contested sports. It was used for various purposes in the 20th century and was once again used as an Olympic venue in 2004. It is the finishing point for the annual Athens Classic Marathon.[3] It is also the last venue in Greece from where the Olympic flame handover ceremony to the host nation takes place.[6][7]

Location

The stadium is built in what was originally a natural ravine between the two hills of Agra and Ardettos,[8] south of the Ilissos river.[9][10] It is now located in the central Athens district of Pangrati, to the east of the National Gardens and the Zappeion Exhibition Hall, to the west of the Pangrati residential district and between the twin pine-covered hills of Ardettos and Agra. Up to the 1950s, the River (now covered by, and flowing underneath, Vasileos Konstantinou Avenue) ran in front of the stadium's entrance, and the spring of Kallirrhoe, the sanctuary of Pankrates (a local hero) and the Cynosarges public gymnasium were nearby.

History

Originally, since the 6th century BC, a racecourse existed at the site of the stadium. It hosted the Panathenaic Games (also known as the Great Panathenaea), a religious and athletic festival celebrated every 4 years in honor of the goddess Athena. The racecourse had no formal seating and the spectators sat on the natural slopes on the side of the ravine.[11]

Stadium of Lykourgos

In the 4th century BC the Athenian statesman Lykourgos (Lycurgus) built a 850-foot (260 m) long stadium of Poros limestone.[12] Tiers of stone benches were arranged around the track. The track was 669 feet (204 m) long and 110 feet (34 m) wide.[11] In the Lives of the Ten Orators Pseudo-Plutarch writes that a certain Deinas, the owner of the property where the stadium was built was persuaded by Lykourgos to donate the land to the city and Lykourgos leveled a ravine.[13][14] IG II² 351 (dated 329 BC), records that Eudemus of Plataea gave 1000 yoke of oxen for the construction of the stadium and theater. According to Romano the "reference to the large number of oxen, indicating a vast undertaking, and the use of the word charadra have suggested the kind of building activity that would have been needed to prepare the natural valley between the two hills near the Ilissos."[14] The stadium of Lykourgos is believed to have been completed for the Panathenaic Games of 330/329 BC.[8][15][16][17][18] Donald Kyle suggests that it is possible that Lykourgos did not built but "renovated or embellished a pre-existing facility to give it monumental stature."[19] According to Richard Ernest Wycherley the stadium probably had stone seating "only for a privileged few."[15]

Reconstruction by Herodes Atticus

Herodes Atticus rebuilt the stadium in marble by 144 AD

Herodes Atticus, an Athenian who rose to the highest echelons of power in Rome, was responsible for numerous structures in Greece. In Athens he is best known for the reconstruction of the Panathenaic Stadium.[20][lower-alpha 2] Tobin suggests that "Herodes built the stadium soon after [his father] Atticus's death, which occurred around A.D. 138. The first Greater Panathenaia following his father's demise was 139/40, and it is probable that at that time Herodes promised the refurbishment of the stadium. According to Philostratus, it was completed four years later, which would have been in 143/4."[20] These dates (139/140-143-144 AD) are now widely cited as construction dates of the stadium of Herodes Atticus.[22][12][17] Welch writes that the stadium was completed by 143, in time for Panathenaic festival.[10]

The new stadium was built completely of ashlar masonry[23] in Pentelic marble,[11][12] using minimal concrete.[23] The stadium was built at a time of resurgence of Greek culture in the mid-2nd century. Although the stadium was a "quintessentially Greek architectural type",[10] it was "Roman in scale" with a massive capacity of 50,000,[15] which is roughly the same as that of the Stadium of Domitian in Rome.[23] Stadia of the Classical and Hellenistic periods were smaller.[23][8] According to Welch there is a possibility that criminals were executed in the stadium, however, no evidence exists.[24]

Herodes Atticus built it as "an architectural means of self-representation, and it did something analogous. The architecture of the building makes allusions to the Classical past while remaining unmistakably modern. It is Roman in scale, but it self-consciously rejects the distinguishingly Roman features of monumental facade and extensive vaulting."[23] Its cavea was decorated with owls in relief, which symbolize Athena.[23] Katherine Welch wrote in a 1998 article "Greek stadia and Roman spectacles":[25]

Though traditional in building materials and construction technique, the track included modern features that were specifically designed to accommodate Roman entertainments. [...]

It may thus be argued that the Panathenaic Stadium of Herodes Atticus, who was both Athens' leading son and a Roman consul, represents a middle ground between two conflicting cultural expectations. Its architectural for was self-consciously old-fashioned, yet in scale and function the building was thoroughly modern. Herodes Atticus built a new Panathenaic Stadium whose architecture reflected the prevailing nostalgia for Classical Greece but whose functions reflected the new realities of Roman power. While the building continued to be used chiefly for athletic competitions, its running track was also a place where during the imperial cult festival wild animals were slaughtered and hardened criminals (gladiators) fought, bled, and died.

Abandonment

Hellenistic festivals and bloody spectacles were banned by Roman Emperor Theodosius I in the late 4th century. The stadium was abandoned and fell into ruin. Gradually, its significance was forgotten and a field of wheat covered the site.[22] During the Latin rule of Athens, Crusader knights held feasts of arms at the stadium. A 15th century traveler saw "not only several rows of white marble benches, but also the portico at the entrance of the Stadion, which he calls the North entrance, and the Stoa round the koilon, which he calls the South entrance."[26] The derelict stadium's marbles were incorporated into other buildings. European travelers wrote of "magical rites enacted by young Athenian maidens in the ruined vaulted passage, aimed at finding a good husband."[16]

The stadium 1870, following excavations by Ziller

Modern reconstruction

Excavations and Zappas Olympics

Following Greece's independence, archaeological excavation as early as 1836 uncovered traces of the stadium of Herodes Atticus. Further, more thorough, excavation was conducted by the German-born architect Ernst Ziller in 1869-70.[27] The Zappas Olympics, an early attempt to revive the ancient Olympic Games, were held at the stadium in 1870 and 1875. They were sponsored by the Greek benefactor Evangelis Zappas.[16] The games had an audience of 30,000 people.[28]

1896 Olympics

The Greek government, through crown prince Constantine, requested the Egypt-based Greek businessman George Averoff, to sponsor the second refurbishment of the stadium prior to the 1896 Olympics.[29] Based on the findings of Ziller, a reconstruction plan was prepared by the architect Anastasios Metaxas in the mid-1890s.[3] Darling writes that "He duplicated the dimensions and design of the second-century structure, arranging the tiers of seats around the U-shaped track."[4] It was rebuilt in Pentelic marble and is "distinguished by its high degree of fidelity to the ancient monument of Herodes."[16] Averoff donated 920,000 drachmas to this project.[4][29] As a tribute to his generosity, a statue of Averoff was constructed and unveiled on 5 April 1896 outside the stadium. It stands there to this day.[30]

The stadium held the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1896 Olympics.[31] On 6 April (25 March according to the Julian calendar then in use in Greece), the games of the First Olympiad were officially opened; it was Easter Monday for both the Western and Eastern Christian Churches and the anniversary of Greece's independence.[32] The stadium was filled with an estimated 80,000 spectators, including King George I of Greece, his wife Olga, and their sons. Most of the competing athletes were aligned on the infield, grouped by nation. After a speech by the president of the organizing committee, Crown Prince Constantine, his father officially opened the games.[33] The stadium also served as the venue for Athletics, Gymnastics, Weightlifting and Wrestling.[34]

20th century

1906 Olympics

The stadium hosted the 1906 Intercalated Games from April 22 to May 2.[35]

Archery matches in the stadium during the 2004 Olympics
A.E.K Basketball Club venue

From the mid- to late 1960s, the stadium was used by AEK Basketball Club. On 4 April 1968, the 1967–68 FIBA European Cup Winner's Cup final was hosted in the stadium where A.E.K. defeated Slavia Prague in front of around 80,000 seated spectators inside the arena and another 40,000 standing spectators. It is believed that since that game the Panathenaic Stadium holds the world record attendance for any basketball game as of 2009.[36]

Regime of the Colonels

During the Regime of the Colonels (1967–74), large annual events were held at the stadium, particularly the "Festival of the Military Virtues of the Greeks" (in late August-early September) and the "Revolution of April 21, 1967", the date of the coup that brought the right-wing regime to power. In these festivals, the stadium, "with its aura of antiquity stood as a monument to Greek rebirth, national pride, and international interest." The dictators exploited its setting to showcase their supposed popularity and propagate their new, "revolutionary" political culture.[37]

2004 Olympics

The stadium "needed no major refurbishing" prior to the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens.[38] During the games the stadium hosted the archery competition (August 15–21) and was the finish of the Marathon for both women (August 22) and men (August 29).[39][40]

Concert venue

On occasions, the stadium has also been used as a venue for selected musical and dance performances.

Other concerts include those of Spanish tenor Placido Domingo (June 27, 2007)[44] and a dance performance by Joaquín Cortés (September 14, 2009).[41]

Other events

The stadium hosted the opening ceremony of the World Athletics Championships in 1997 on a concept by composer Vangelis and along with the performance of soprano Montserrat Caballé.[41][45]

In more recent years, the stadium has been often used to honour the homecoming of victorious Greek athletes, most notably the Greek national football team after its victory at the 2004 European Football Championship (on July 5, 2004)[41] as well as winners and medalists in the recent Olympic Games.

Architecture

Katherine Welch described the stadium as a "great marble flight of steps terraced into the contours of a U-shaped ravine — splendid in materials but ostentatiously simple in construction technique."[23]

Influence

The Panathenaic Stadium influenced the stadium architecture in the West in the 20th century. Harvard Stadium in Boston, built in 1903, was modeled after the Panathenaic Stadium.[46][47] Designated as a National Historic Landmark, it is the first collegiate athletic stadium in the United States. Deutsches Stadion in Nuremberg, designed by Albert Speer, was also modeled on the Panathenaic Stadium.[48][49][50][51] The stadium was designed for some 400,000 spectators and was one of the monumental structures of the Nazi regime. Its construction began in 1937, but was never completed.

Commemorations

The Panathenaic Stadium was selected as the main motif for a high value euro collectors' coin; the €100 Greek The Panathenaic Stadium commemorative coin, minted in 2003 to commemorate the 2004 Olympics. In the obverse of the coin, the stadium is depicted. It is shown on the obverse of all Olympic medals awarded in the 2004 Olympics, and it was also used for the following Summer Olympics in Beijing in 2008, in London in 2012 and in Rio de Janeiro in 2016.

Panorama of the Panathenaic stadium from the entrance

References

notes
  1. Ancient Greek: στάδιον Παναθηναικόν, stádion Panathēnaikón, as spelled by Philostratus.[2]
  2. The dominant view is that Herodes Atticus built the stadium on the site of the Lykourgan stadium.[10] However, Romano suggested a long terrace at the Pnyx hill was the location of the Lykourgan stadium because when Ernst Ziller excavated the site of the Panathenaic Stadium he "found no trace of an earlier stadium."[21] Miller et al. criticize Romano's proposed location: "There is certainly no indication in Ziller's account that he was even concerned with looking for traces of anything earlier that the Stadium of Herodus Atticus."[13]
references
  1. "Stadiums in Greece". worldstadiums.com. Multi-use Athens Panathenaic Stadium 45 000
  2. Welch 1998, p. 139.
  3. 1 2 3 Kakissis, Joanna (15 October 2014). "36 Hours in Athens". The New York Times.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Darling 2004, p. 135.
  5. Behan, Rosemary (22 March 2016). "Ultratravel cityguide: Ancient Athens is great value and affluent in all the right ways". The National. Abu Dhabi.
  6. "Greece hands over Olympic flame to Rio 2016 organisers". The Week. Kochi, India. 28 April 2016. The flame that will burn for Rio Olympic Games was handed over to the Brazilian organisers in a spectacular ceremony held at Panathenaic Stadium in Athens.
  7. "Olympic flame handover from Greece to London". The Guardian. 17 May 2012. The Olympic flame is due to be handed over from Greece to London this afternoon at the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens...
  8. 1 2 3 "Panathenaic Stadium". culture.gr. Hellenic Republic Ministry of Culture and Sports. 2012.
  9. Tobin 1993, p. 89.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Welch 1998, p. 133.
  11. 1 2 3 Darling 2004, p. 133.
  12. 1 2 3 Dinsmoor, William Bell (1950). The Architecture of Ancient Greece: An Account of Its Historic Development. Biblo & Tannen Publishers. p. 250. ISBN 9780819602831. The Panathenaic stadium at Athens, 850 feet long, was constructed of poros stone by the legislator Lycurgus [...]; it was only long afterwards, at about A.D. 143, the stadium was reconstructed in Pentelic marble by Herodes Atticus.
  13. 1 2 Miller, Stephen G.; Knapp, Robert C.; Chamberlain, David (2001). The Early Hellenistic Stadium. University of California Press. pp. 211. ISBN 9780520216778.
  14. 1 2 Romano 1985, p. 444.
  15. 1 2 3 Wycherley, Richard Ernest (1978). The Stones of Athens. Princeton University Press. p. 215.
  16. 1 2 3 4 "History". panathenaicstadium.gr. Hellenic Olympic Committee. 2011.
  17. 1 2 Miller, Stephen G. (2006). Ancient Greek Athletics. Yale University Press. p. 137. ISBN 9780300115291.
  18. Abrahams, Harold. "Olympic Games". Encyclopædia Britannica. The track-and-field events were held at the Panathenaic Stadium. The stadium, originally built in 330 bce, had been excavated but not rebuilt for the 1870 Greek Olympics and lay in disrepair before the 1896 Olympics, but through the direction and financial aid of Georgios Averoff, a wealthy Egyptian Greek, it was restored with white marble.
  19. Kyle, Donald G. (1993). Athletics in Ancient Athens. BRILL. pp. 94–95. ISBN 9789004097599.
  20. 1 2 Tobin 1993, p. 81.
  21. Romano 1985, pp. 444-445.
  22. 1 2 Darling 2004, p. 134.
  23. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Welch 1998, p. 135.
  24. Welch 1998, p. 137.
  25. Welch 1998, pp. 137-138.
  26. Polites 1896, p. 48.
  27. Tobin 1993, p. 82.
  28. Young 1996, Chapter 4
  29. 1 2 Young 1996, p. 128.
  30. "George Averoff Dead: A Benefactor of Greece and Egypt". The New York Times. 4 August 1899.
  31. Young 1996, p. 153.
  32. Martin, David E.; Gynn, Roger W. H. (2000). "The Olympic Marathon". Running through the Ages. Human Kinetics. pp. 7–8. ISBN 0-88011-969-1. OCLC 42823784.
  33. Athens 1896 – Games of the I Olympiad, International Olympic Committee
  34. "The first Modern Olympic Games". panathenaicstadium.gr. Hellenic Olympic Committee. 2011.
  35. Polley, Martin (2013). The British Olympics: Britain's Olympic Heritage 1612-2012. English Heritage. pp. 101. ISBN 9781848022263. ...staged their first Intercalated Games, held once again at the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens, from April 22 to May 2, 1906.
  36. "Partizan sets crowd record at Belgrade Arena!". euroleague.net. Euroleague. 5 March 2009. Archived from the original on 15 June 2016.
  37. Van Steen, Gonda (2015). Stage of Emergency: Theater and Public Performance Under the Greek Military Dictatorship of 1967-1974. Oxford University Press. pp. 164–167. ISBN 9780198718321.
  38. Robbins, Liz (18 July 2004). "The Hurdles Before the Games". The New York Times.
  39. Official Report of the XXVIII Olympiad (pdf). 2. Athens Organising Committee for the Olympic Games. November 2005. pp. 237, 242, 244. ISBN 960-88101-8-3. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 August 2008.
  40. "Athens 2004". panathenaicstadium.gr. Hellenic Olympic Committee. 2011.
  41. 1 2 3 4 5 "Memorable moments". panathenaicstadium.gr. Hellenic Olympic Committee. 2011.
  42. Papadimitriou, Lena (24 May 1998). "10 ροκ συναυλίες που δεν θα ξεχάσουμε [10 rock concerts that we will not forget]". To Vima (in Greek).
  43. "R.E.M. Help Welcome MTV Greece At Concert In Athens". www.mtv.com. October 6, 2008.
  44. "Placido Domingo - Γιατροί Χωρίς Σύνορα - Μια φωνή για το Νταρφούρ". www.hotstation.gr (in Greek). June 6, 2007.
  45. "March with Me - Vangelis with Montserrat Caballe (Live in Athens - Greece)". dailymotion.com.
  46. Guiliano, Jennifer (2015). Indian Spectacle: College Mascots and the Anxiety of Modern America. Rutgers University. p. 27. ISBN 9780813565569. The first modern stadium was built in 1903 at Harvard University. Modeled on the Olympic Panathenaic stadium that debuted in Athens, Greece, in 1896...
  47. Williams, Jack (22 November 2014). "Harvard triumph over Yale to show heart of The Game is still beating strong". The Guardian. ...the century-old design based on the Panathenaic Stadium in Athen, which hosted the first modern Olympic Games, in 1896...
  48. Brockmann, Stephen (2006). Nuremberg: The Imaginary Capital. Camden House Publishing. p. 149. ISBN 9781571133458. Speer modeled [...] the planned Deutsches Stadion (German stadium) on the Olympic stadium in ancient Athens.
  49. Landfester, Manfred; Cancik, Hubert; Schneider, Helmuth, eds. (2008). Brill's New Pauly: Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World. Classical tradition, Volume 3. Brill. p. 816. ISBN 9789004142237. A 'Deutsches Stadion' was to copy the horseshoe shape of the stadium in Athens, renovated in 1896.
  50. Dietzfelbinger, Eckart; Liedtke, Gerhard (2004). Nürnberg - Ort der Massen: das Reichsparteitagsgelände: Vorgeschichte und schwieriges Erbe [Nuremberg - site of the masses: the Nazi party rally grounds: history and troubled legacy] (in German). Berlin: Ch. Links Verlag. p. 58. ISBN 9783861533221. Speers architektonische Vision basierte auf einem hufeisenförmigen Grundriß, der sich am Olympiastadion des antiken Athen orientierte...; translation: Speers' architectural vision was based on a horseshoe-shaped plan, which was based at the Olympic Stadium of ancient Athens...
  51. Karow, Yvonne (1997). Deutsches Opfer: Kultische Selbstauslöschung auf den Reichsparteitagen der NSDAP [German victims: Cult self-extinction of the NSDAP party rallies] (in German). Akademie-Verlag. p. 38. ISBN 9783050031408. Deutsches Stadion (Modell) der typischen Form des langgestreckten Hufeisens - Speer nennt das Athener Stadion des Herodes Atticus, das ihn bei seinem Besuch 1935 tief beeindruckte, als architektonisches Vorbild... translation: Deutsches Stadion (model) of the typical shape of the elongated horseshoe - Speer called the Athens Stadium of Herodes Atticus, the deeply impressed him during his visit in 1935 as an architectural model...
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