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Olympia (Elis), Stater (silver coin replica) 452 - 432 BC.
OBV: Eagle flying, holding serpent in talons.
R: Nike seated l. on square base within ΠΣ signature.
Original worth c. £1500.
From Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia:
Olympia (Greek:
Ολυμπία Olympí'a or
Ολύμπια Olýmpia, older
transliterations, Olimpia, Olimbia), a city of ancient Greece
in Elis, is
known for having been the site of the Olympic
Games in classical times, comparable in importance to the Pythian
Games held in Delphi.
Both games were held every olympiad
(i.e. every four years), the Olympic
Games dating back at least as far as 776
BC. In 394
emperor Theodosius
I abolished them because they were reminiscent of paganism.
Olympia is also known for
the gigantic ivory
and gold statue
of Zeus that used to stand there, sculpted by Phidias,
which was named one of the Seven
Wonders of the Ancient World by Herodotus. Very close to the temple
of Zeus (see photo of ruins below) which housed this statue, the studio
of Phidias was excavated in the 1950s.
Evidence found there such as sculptor's tools, corroborates this
opinion.
Excavation of the Olympia
temple district and its surroundings began with a French
expedition in 1829.
German
archaeologists
continued the work in the latter part of the 19th
century. The latter group uncovered, intact, the Hermes
of Praxiteles
statue, among other artifacts. In the middle of the 20th
Century, the stadium
where the running contests took place was excavated.
The Olympic
flame of the modern-day Olympic
Games is lit by reflection of sunlight in a parabolic
mirror at the restored Olympia stadium and then transported by a
torch to the place where the games are held.
When the modern Olympics
came to Athens
in 2004,
the men's and women's shot
put competition was held at the restored stadium.
The ancient ruins sits
north of the Alfeios
River and lies next to Cronius
or Kronios
hill (the hill of Kronos,
or Saturn). Kladeos, a tributary of Alfeios, flows around the area.
The town has a school and
a square (plateia).
Tourism is popular throughout the late-20th
century. The city has a train station and is the easternmost
terminus of the line of Olympia-Pyrgos
(Ilia). The train station which the freight yard is west of it is
about 300 m east of the town centre.
It is linked by GR-74
and the new road was opened in the 1980s,
the next stretch N and NE of Olympia will open in around 2005.
Distance from Pyrgos
is 20 km E(old: 21 km), about 50 km SW of Lampeia,
W of Tripoli
and Arcadia
and 4 km north of Krestena
and N of Kyparissia
and Messenia.
The highway passed north of the ancient ruins.
A reservoir is located 2 km
southwest damming up the Alfeios river and has a road from Olympia and
Krestena which in the late-1990s
has been closed.
The area is hilly and
mountains, most of the area within Olympia is forested. |