|
 The
marathon
is
one
of
the
most
storied
races
of
all
time.
Originally
conceived
as
a
race
for
the
1896
Olympics
in
Athens,
the
marathon
immediately
captured
the
imagination
and
hearts
of
the
running
public.
Transported
to
Boston
in
1897
by
American
spectators,
the
history
of
the
marathon
in
the
new
world
is
almost
as
long
as
the
history
of
the
marathon
itself. In
his
book,
Olympic
Marathon,
Charlie
Lovett
devotes
a
short
chapter
to
each
of
the
Olympic
marathons
-
including
a
view
of
the
participants
of
each
race,
the
politics
and
the
perserverence.
Through
permission,
we
include
four
chapters
of
this
book
here,
describing
the
marathon
myth,
the
creation
of
the
first
marathon
and
that
race
itself,
the
struggle
to
include
a
women's
Olympic
Marathon
and
the
first
women's
race.
Fascinating
reading
and
a
fascinating
book
:
 The
Modern
Olympic
Games
are
perhaps
the
most
modern
spectacle
on
the
planet.
Their
pageantry,
ritual,
and
tradition
are
beamed
to
billions
via
satellite,
and
every
facet
of
their
competition
is
not
merely
tinged
with
but
ruled
by
modern
technology.
Yet
the
Olympics
have
their
roots
in
a
festival
more
ancient
than
the
rites
of
Christianity,
Islam,
or
Buddhism.
Indeed
if,
as
has
often
been
suggested,
the
coliseums
and
stadiums
our
society
has
constructed
in
the
twentieth
century
will
ultimately
be
viewed
as
the
cathedrals
of
our
time,
then
the
Olympic
Games
are
our
most
sacred
rite
and
Olympic
champions
our
high
priests.
But
the
Olympics
began
in
a
time
before
satellites
and
television,
a
time
before
electronic
timers,
photo
finishes,
and
computer
rankings,
a
time
when
the
greatest
of
gods
was
not
sport,
but
Zeus.
The
origin
of
the
ancient
Olympic
Games
is
shrouded
in
legend,
but
it
may
have
begun
as
a
commemoration
of
Zeus'
defeating
Kronos
in
a
wrestling
match-the
prize
being
possession
of
the
earth.
The
exact
date
of
the
first
Olympic
Games
is
also
lost.
Some
sources
say
1253
B.C.,
others
884
B.C..
One
thing
is
certain,
however,
every
four
years
from
776
B.C.
until
394
A.D.,
the
strongest
and
swiftest
men
in
Greece
assembled
to
compete
in
the
Olympic
Games.
The
Games
were
held
in
Olympia,
a
great
complex
that
included
a
60,000-seat
stadium,
a
vast
hippodrome
for
equestrian
events,
and
a
gymnasium
for
wrestlers,
boxers,
gymnasts,
and
others.
Religious
buildings
were
also
and
important
part
of
Olympia,
just
as
religious
ceremonies
were
and
important
part
of
the
Games.
One
building,
the
Olympium,
housed
a
forty-foot
ivory
statue
of
Zeus
with
robes
of
gold,
one
of
the
seven
wonders
of
the
world.
With
Zeus
watching
over
the
Olympics
the
Games
grew
in
both
size
and
importance.
Wars
were
suspended
during
the
time
of
Olympic
competition,
so
great
was
the
respect
given
the
Games.
The
Olympics
began
with
a
single
footrace,
but
grew
to
encompass
a
variety
of
events,
many
similar
to
those
in
modern
track
and
field.
However,
no
race
in
the
ancient
Olympics
was
greater
than
twenty-four
laps
around
the
Olympic
stadium,
a
distance
of
about
three
miles.
The
ancient
Greeks
were
no
strangers
to
long-distance
running,
but
to
them
it
served
as
a
means
to
communicate
not
to
compete.
The
Greeks
used
foot
couriers
to
take
important
messages
from
city
to
city.
Out
of
this
tradition
grew
a
legend
so
persistent
that
it
would
spark
the
imagination
of
men
nearly
2,500
years
later.
In
490
B.C.
and
army
from
Persia
landed
on
the
plain
of
Marathon,
about
twenty-five
miles
from
Athens,
with
the
intention
of
capturing
and
enslaving
that
city.
The
Athenians
prepared
for
a
battle
that
would
determine
the
course
of
history
for
centuries
to
come.
A
victory
for
the
powerful
Persian
Empire
could
destroy
the
independence
of
the
Greek
city-states
and
effectively
end
Greek
civilization
and
culture.
While
the
massive
Persian
army
landed,
the
Athenians
sent
a
messenger
named
Philippides
(his
name
was
corrupted
in
later
texts
to
Pheidippides)
to
Sparta
to
enlist
the
aid
of
the
Spartans
in
the
upcoming
battle.
He
covered
the
distance
of
about
150
miles
in
less
than
two
days,
a
remarkable
accomplishment
by
any
standard.
Back
at
Marathon,
however,
the
decision
was
made
not
to
wait
for
the
Spartans.
The
Athenian
army
fell
upon
the
vastly
larger
Persian
forces
while
they
were
still
preparing
for
battle.
Against
great
odds,
the
Greeks
prevailed.
Though
historians
writing
close
to
the
time
of
the
battle
make
no
mention
of
the
event,
writers
some
600
years
later
claim
that
a
runner
was
dispatched
to
Athens
to
carry
the
news
of
the
great
victory.
According
to
legend
he
reached
the
city,
said,
"Rejoice,
we
conquer,"
and
fell
to
the
ground
dead.
Though
one
source
gives
the
runner's
name
as
Philippides,
it
is
highly
unlikely
that
he
would
have
made
such
a
run
after
having
just
run
to
Sparta.
If
he
had,
contemporary
historians
would
surely
have
noted
it.
Whether
any
messenger
at
all
was
sent
to
Athens
with
the
news
of
victory
is
a
matter
of
some
doubt,
but
certainly
Philippides
was
not
the
messenger.
Still,
in
the
centuries
that
followed,
the
legend
of
Pheidippides
(as
he
began
to
be
called)
and
the
legend
of
a
runner
who
died
to
bring
news
of
victory
to
the
Athenians
merged,
and
many
later
writers
gave
the
name
Pheidippides
to
the
ill-fated
runner.
In
the
nineteenth
century
Robert
Browning
wrote
in
his
Dramatic
Idylls
of
Pheidippides'
dash
to
Athens,
his
announcement
of
victory,
and
his
death.
Though
Pheidippides
was
certainly
not
the
runner
who
carried
the
news
of
Greek
victory
to
Athens,
and
though
it
seems
unlikely
that
any
professional
foot
courier
of
ancient
Greece
would
have
perished
after
such
a
run,
the
legend
took
hold,
and
out
of
that
legend
grew
the
modern
marathon
race.
In
394
A.D.,
the
Roman
Emperor
Theodosius
banned
all
non-Christian
celebrations
in
the
Empire,
effectively
putting
an
end
to
the
Olympic
Games,
Religion,
for
the
time
being,
had
separated
from
and
usurped
sport.
In
the
mid-1900s,
interest
in
ancient
Greece
was
on
the
rise.
Archaeologists
began
to
uncover
the
ruins
of
the
ancient
stadium
at
Olympia,
and
the
idea
of
reviving
the
Olympic
Games
was
pursued
by
a
Greek
businessman
named
Evangelios
Zappas.
With
the
support
of
the
Greek
government,
Zappas
staged
an
Olympic
competition
on
November
15,
1859.
That
competition
and
three
others
(in
1870,
1875,
and
1889)
staged
by
the
Greek
government
with
money
left
by
Zappas
in
his
will,
were
not
successful.
Because
of
poor
planning
and
improper
facilities,
spectators
could
not
see
the
competition
and
some
got
into
fights,
which
spilled
over
onto
the
track.
It
appeared
that
the
Olympic
Games,
dormant
for
1,500
years,
would
not
continue
into
the
new
century.
A
French
baron
named
Pierre
de
Coubertin
changed
all
that.
Coubertin
was
an
aristocrat
who
had
worked
for
some
years
to
improve
the
quality
of
physical
education
in
France.
In
addition
to
a
keen
interest
in
athletics,
Coubertin
was
a
proponent
of
internationalism-cooperation
between
nations
which
he
felt
would
promote
peace.
Inspired
by
the
uncovering
of
the
ruins
at
Olympia,
the
failed
efforts
to
revive
the
ancient
Games,
and
his
interest
in
sports,
Coubertin
conceived
the
idea
of
reestablishing
the
Olympic
Games.
In
1892,
he
hosted
a
banquet
for
the
Union
of
French
Athletic
Sports
Clubs,
a
group
he
had
founded
five
years
earlier.
In
a
speech
at
the
banquet,
he
proposed
reviving
the
Olympic
Games,
but
the
suggestion
was
met
with
a
mixture
of
apathy
and
derision.
Was
Coubertin
suggesting
holding
footraces
in
the
nude
as
the
ancient
Greeks
had?
Was
he
seriously
suggesting
that
civilized
Europeans
should
compete
with
Africans
and
Asians?
Despite
the
close-mindedness
of
his
compatriots,
Coubertin
did
not
give
up.
In
1894
he
hosted
an
International
Congress
of
Amateurs.
On
the
program,
after
several
topics
concerning
amateurism
and
sports,
he
listed
"Reestablishment
of
the
Olympic
Games."
The
congress
was
not
to
discuss
whether
to
revive
the
Olympics,
but
rather
how
it
should
be
done.
By
the
end
of
the
conference,
Coubertin
had
formed
the
International
Olympic
Committee
(IOC),
and
plans
were
in
place
to
stage
the
first
modern
Olympic
Games
in
Athens,
Greece
in
1896.
He
was
able
to
convince
delegates
from
many
countries
to
enthusiastically
support
the
idea.
Though
much
work
remained
to
be
done
before
the
Games
could
begin,
Coubertin's
dream
seemed
destined
for
reality.
Another
French
delegate
to
the
conference,
Michel
Bréal,
a
linguist
and
historian,
was
enthralled
by
the
legend
of
Pheidippides
and
the
famous
run
from
Marathon
to
Athens.
Though
the
run
was
unrelated
to
Olympic
competition,
Bréal
proposed
the
establishment
of
a
long-distance
footrace
to
commemorate
the
effort.
He
offered
a
silver
trophy
to
whomever
would
win
such
a
race.
Coubertin
loved
the
idea
and
promoted
the
race
in
many
speeches
he
gave
to
stir
up
interest
in
the
Games.
The
new
race
was
called
"the
marathon"
and
was
included
as
the
final
event
on
the
Olympic
agenda.
Thus,
out
of
an
accomplishment
by
an
ancient
Greek,
a
legend
corrupted
by
historians
and
poets
from
Greece
to
England,
and
the
dreams
of
two
Frenchmen,
was
born
the
most
audacious
of
races,
the
marathon.
Little
did
Bréal
know
that
he
had
struck
a
chord
that
would
resonate
ever
louder
as
the
next
century
progressed.
For
there
is
something
in
man
that
seeks
out
challenge,
especially
the
challenge
of
a
single
man
taking
on
a
task
in
which
all
the
forces
of
nature,
and
often
the
opinions
of
men,
are
arrayed
against
him;
a
task
in
which
his
own
solitude
may
become
his
greatest
enemy;
a
task
that
his
own
drive,
his
own
desire,
and
his
own
ego
cannot
fail
to
make
him
accomplish.
There
is
something
in
man
that
seeks
out
the
challenge
of
the
unknown.
As
the
world
around
us
became
more
and
more
known
in
this
century,
man
increasingly
turned
to
the
unknown
within
himself
and
sought
to
challenge
the
limits
of
his
very
being.
There
is
something
in
man
that
makes
him
run
marathons.
There
is,
too,
something
in
the
Olympic
Games
that
makes
its
marathon
the
greatest
of
all,
not
merely
because
it
was
first
or
because
the
legend
of
Pheidippides
links
the
race
to
ancient
Greece.
After
the
first
modern
Olympic
Games
in
Athens
in
1896,
a
group
from
Boston
that
had
competed
for
the
United
States
returned
home
full
of
excitement
about
the
marathon
race
they
had
witnessed.
The
result
of
that
excitement
was
the
establishment
of
the
Boston
Marathon
the
following
year.
Run
every
April
since
1897,
the
Boston
race
is
considered
by
some
the
most
prestigious
of
all
marathons.
After
all,
the
Olympic
race
is
run
only
every
four
years,
while
Boston
is
an
annual
race.
How
many
great
marathoners
will
be
denied
an
Olympic
medal
because
they
are
not
at
the
peak
of
their
career
in
the
right
year?
Boston
is
run
in
the
cool
weather
if
New
England
spring,
while
the
Olympic
race
is
run
in
the
often
unfavorably
hot
conditions
of
midsummer.
How
can
such
poor
running
conditions
produce
a
true
champion?
Yet
winning
the
Olympic
Marathon
remains
the
ultimate
accomplishment
for
a
long-distance
runner,
in
part
because
of
the
very
limitations
of
the
race.
Like
any
other
long-distance
race,
the
Olympic
Marathon
requires
strength,
courage,
and
endurance
but
it
also
requires
something
else,
something
the
skeptics
might
call
the
blessing
of
the
gods.
So,
if
many
of
the
world's
greatest
marathoners
were
never
Olympic
champions,
it
is
all
the
more
reason
to
praise
the
few
who
have
triumphed
in
this
race,
for
in
the
religion
that
twentieth-century
sport
has
become,
they
have
truly
been
touched
by
the
gods.
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