(Neither Messi, Ronaldo, Federer, Jordan, Schumacher or Tiger Woods are the best paid sports
player in history. In fact Cristiano Ronaldo is not even the top athlete in
Portuguese history! The top earnings prize goes to a Lusitanian (old
Portuguese) chariot racer born in 104 AD. Also, in Roman Races even a dead man
could win if his horses finished the race, a true posthumous glory! And fights
among ancient “hooligans” reached a violence far above
today.)
The predecessors of most sports started as Funeral Games in Ancient
Greece. All of the Pan-Hellenic Games – the Olympics, Pythian, Nemean and
Isthmian festivals – honored a patron god and a deceased human hero. Homer in
the Iliad describes how sports in the Bronze Age were already a tradition
during funerals of great warriors. In a previous post I wrote how Alexander the Great paid for an elaborate set of athletic games for his deceased friend Hephaestion.
The Olympic Games were the oldest of the four festivals and according to tradition begun in 776 BC. Some of the games played by the Hellenic peoples still exist such as wrestling, boxing, foot races, long jump, discus throw and the pentathlon. Chariot racing was perhaps the most popular of all ancient sports. While chariot races no longer exist it is easy to imagine them as a close predecessor to some modern sports, such as equestrian races and car races such as Formula 1. Chariot races in Greece and Rome were done at special venues, the hippodromes, which resemble quite well the elliptical shapes of modern horse or car race circuits. Above I show a modern recreation in France of how a roman chariot race could have been like. Another pic shows a gymnasium in Olympia where Hellenic athletes would train to improve their skill.
The Olympic Games were the oldest of the four festivals and according to tradition begun in 776 BC. Some of the games played by the Hellenic peoples still exist such as wrestling, boxing, foot races, long jump, discus throw and the pentathlon. Chariot racing was perhaps the most popular of all ancient sports. While chariot races no longer exist it is easy to imagine them as a close predecessor to some modern sports, such as equestrian races and car races such as Formula 1. Chariot races in Greece and Rome were done at special venues, the hippodromes, which resemble quite well the elliptical shapes of modern horse or car race circuits. Above I show a modern recreation in France of how a roman chariot race could have been like. Another pic shows a gymnasium in Olympia where Hellenic athletes would train to improve their skill.
In Greece and Rome the owner and
driver of the chariot were different persons, since the drivers were often
slaves or men of low birth. Even nowadays in equestrian races the owners are
often more prestigious than the jockeys. Races were risky events where drivers
and horses would often crash or be trampled to death by the other competitors.
Women were not allowed to drive, but they could own the cart and horses, a prominent
case being Cynics, daughter of a Spartan King. Unlike other Hellenic sports
which were practiced by males in the nude, charioteers wore sleeved garments
and a leather helmet to protect themselves from the dust and the crashes. Below
I show a mosaic with a Roman charioteer. Greeks and Romans no longer used
chariots for battle at this time, since they were unstable and riders could be
thrown out of their cart. However, the most enthusiastic moments of these races were really the
round turns when the spectators could expect incredible crashes with deadly
results for both horses and driver, sometimes of several cars in a row as competitors
would knock and crush into each other around the post.
The largest hippodrome ever built
was the Circus Maximus in Rome which could seat up to 250,000 people. In this
circus you could do extensive betting on the winners of a race. There was an
extensive market of bookies and professional betters willing to take advantage
of the naïve and greedy. Some people would lose their fortunes and even their
freedom from lost bets. Rules of winning were tricky at times, because the
winner of the race was the first chariot passing the finishing line – even if
the man had been trampled to death way behind. Nowadays we celebrate deceased
athletes, but the Roman racers could actually claim a truly posthumous glory
for their victory! In the center of the race there was a series of pillars with
sculptures and engravings on top. These pillars and adornments increased the
number of crashes (the Romans called these accidents, naufragia or "shipwrecks"). and the death risk of the
races. Racers would want to be as close as possible to the center of the track
in order to reduce space and pass their opponents, but the closer to the center
the riskier their moves were. In general the bravest and most intelligent horse
had to be the one closest to the center of the track, since his movements would
be the ones to either lead him to glory or to death. Above I show a picture of
the Circus Maximus in Rome which is pretty much an abandoned field nowadays and below I show the hippodrome of Constantinople which forms part of the city center of Istambul.
There were four teams disputing the championship of races in ancient Rome and
Constantinople, with their identities being given by their colors – Red, Blue,
White and Green. Fanatics of these teams often descended into violence and
hooliganism and their power was enough to topple down big politicians. In 532
AD the Nika riots started as a dispute between different chariot teams and
threatened the reign of emperor Justinian, ending up with half of
Constantinople burnt and tens of thousands of people killed.
Finally, no modern athlete, neither
Messi, Ronaldo, Federer, Jordan, Schumacher nor Tiger Woods can claim
to be the best paid sports player in history, since even the richest of these have only earned slightly more than 1 billion USD. In fact Cristiano Ronaldo is not
even the top athlete in Portuguese history! The top earnings prize goes to Gaius
Appuleius Diocles, a Lusitanian (the roman name for the ancient Portuguese
people) chariot racer born in 104 AD. Diocles earned the sum of 35,863,120
sesterces which amounts to roughly 15 billion USD and all of these winnings
came from race prizes, not advertising revenues. Diocles was known for being
a strong finisher, who would wait for an opportunity and then pass his opponent
from behind at the finish line. He won
1,462 of his 4,257 races and finished second 861 times. Through his long career
Diocles raced for three teams – White, Green and Red – and retired at 42 years
of age, still quite able to enjoy a good life. His supporters erected him a monument
in Rome detailing his victories. Most of the chariot champions died young, with one example being Scorpus who won over 2000 races before
dying in a collision at 27 years of age. As a finish note, Cristiano
Ronaldo does not have to mind being passed by his Portuguese ancestor. I am a
Portuguese and a fan of Sporting, therefore he is still my big hero.
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