In Coroehus' time, theOlympic arena meant little more than an open
space in a grove where the ground had been cleared for running or
wrestling. With construction costs underestimated at $1.7 billion
for the'96 summer games, athletes can look forward to experiencing
the best this country and this industry has to offer. Since we're
not allowed to view the gold medal facilities until after the Olympics, PM took
a step back in time to fifth-century B.C. Greece and discovered how
they plumbed the games.
In his treatise on the Athenian Republic written around 450 B.C.,
Xenophon writes that there are three essential parts to a competition
and training center, "besides the actual runs and wrestling-rings,
some place where those who use them may undress and oil themselves
before exercise, and may wash themselves afterwards."
Called the gymnasium and the palaestra, athletes trained and competed
in these centers and men of all ages resorted to them for their daily
exercise. They also served as learning centers where philosophers
such as Plato discussed the fundamentals of life with their pupils
in the bench-lined dressing rooms. In these rooms, competitors would
unclothe themselves, anoint themselves with oil, then place their
belongings in as safe a place as possible. Because the rooms were
large and overpopulated, the Greeks found it necessary to enact severe
laws against theft. A law attributed to Solon imposed the penalty
of death on any one who stole any object, for example a jar of oil,
worth more than10 drachmae.
After a day of running, throwing the javelin and discus, jumping
and wrestling under the harsh eye of an elder instructor, a youth
would take to the bath. While Greece is known for its hot baths and
vapor baths, these plunge baths had nothing to do with the gymnasium.
To frequent such baths was considered a sign of effeminacy and Plato
wrote that they only were suitable for the old and feeble.
Instead, after using a strigile, a highly ornamental iron or bronze
and sometimes gold or silver curved scraper to remove dirt and sweat
and also remove moisture and lather, after the bath, the athlete
would wash in cold water. One form of washing is represented on a
black-figured engraving which dates from the closeof the sixth century.
Hanging their clothes on branches of the trees, a group of young
men and boys wash in cold water issued from two panthers' heads.
On either side stand others preparing for their baths by either oiling
or powdering thanselves. The Greeks used powder, oil and scrapers
much more frequently than soap, which was made of goat fat and wood
ashes. Excavations have found several of these uncovered washing
areas with fountains in the shape of animals' heads placed so the
water falls conveniently over the heads and shoulders of the bathers.
Basins catch the water which then falls into large stone troughs
that carry the water outside the building and into the ravine.
Another way to wash is represented by the two figures illustrating
this story. The washing takes place in a bathroom with a large stone
or metal basin placed in the middle. In the figure to the left, the
youth on the right pours water into the basin from a bucket he has
drawn up from the cistern below. The athlete next to him uses a strigile
to remove moisture while another splashes the water over himself.
With drains in the floor, often times an assistant would dump the
cold water on the youth, for a more satisfactory way of washing.
Later years brought about the inclusion of the hot baths and rows
of stone troughs with lion head spouts about 3 feet from the ground
where competitors as well as spectators could sit and bathe their
feet. What is lacking though, is any mention of the toilet. While
many private residences in Greece had latrines that drained into
a sewer beneath the street, mention of their presence in the gymnasium
or palaestra is scattered. We hope with Atlanta's billion-dollar
investment, that necessary fixture won’t be so hard to find.