- Heraea Games
The ancient Heraea Games, dedicated to the goddess
Hera (also spelled Heraia) is the first sanctioned (and recorded) women's athletic competition to be held in thestadium at Olympia , [cite web | author=Author not listed | title=THE HERAIA | work="History of the Olympic Games" | url=http://www.akropol.net/olympic_games_history/history_olympic_games_page.htm | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006] possibly in the Olympic year, prior to the men's events. It is dated as early as the6th century BC . Some texts, including Pausanias's "Description of Greece ", [cite web | author=Pausanias | title=Pausanias 5.15.1-6 | work=Olympia - Pausanias' Description of Greece | url=http://luna.cas.usf.edu/~murray/classes/ca/olympia-paus.htm | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006] c. 175 AD, state thatHippodameia gathered a group known as the "Sixteen Women " and madetrators of the Heraea Games, out of gratitude for her marriage toPelops . [cite web | author=Scanlon, Thomas F. | title=Games for Girls | work="Ancient Olympics Guide" | url=http://www.archaeology.org/online/features/olympics/girls.html | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006] Other texts indicate that the "Sixteen Women" were peace-makers from Pisa andElis and, because of their political competence, became administrators of the Heraea Games. [cite web | author=DesMarteau, Leslie | title=The Heraea Games | work=The History and Mythology of the Heraea Games and the Sixteen Women | url=http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cl135/Students/Leslie_DesMarteau/olympia3.htm | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006]Like the men's competition, Heraea originally consisted of foot races only. The Heraea champions won olive crowns, cow or ox meat from the animal sacrificed to
Hera and the right to dedicate statues inscribed with their names [cite web | author=Pausanias | title=Pausanias 5.15.1-6 | work=Olympia - Pausanias' Description of Greece | url=http://luna.cas.usf.edu/~murray/classes/ca/olympia-paus.htm | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006] or painted portraits of themselves on the columns of Hera's temple. It is still apparent where the portraits were attached on thetemple , though the artwork itself has disappeared. [cite web | author=Swaddling, Judith | title=Women at the Heraia | work=Ancient Greek Olympics Gallery | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/greeks/greek_olympics_gallery_06.shtml | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006] The women competed in three age groups, on a track inOlympic Stadium that was 5/6 the length of the men's track. Pausanias describes their appearance for the races such that, "their hair hangs down, a tunic (chiton) reaches to a little above the knee, and they bare the right shoulder as far as the breast." [cite web | author=Pausanias | title=Pausanias 5.15.1-6 | work=Olympia - Pausanias' Description of Greece | url=http://luna.cas.usf.edu/~murray/classes/ca/olympia-paus.htm | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006]Though the men competed nude and women dressed, chitons were clothing worn by men doing heavy physical work. Thus, the women competitors were dressed like men. Whether this and the existence of the Heraea Games tell us something about social climate for women of that period is uncertain. We do know women were forbidden from competing in or even viewing the
Ancient Olympics , under penalty of being thrown from the cliffs of Mount Typaion. Girls were not encouraged to be athletes. Those raised inSparta were the exception, where they were trained in the same athletic events as boys, because Spartans believed that strong women would produce strong future warriors. These girl athletes were unmarried and competed nude or wearing short dresses. Boys were allowed to watch the athletes, in the hopes of creating marriages and offspring. A race dedicated toDionysus (god of wine and pleasure) may have also been a communityrite of passage . [cite web | author=Scanlon, Thomas F. | title=Games for Girls | work="Ancient Olympics Guide" | url=http://www.archaeology.org/online/features/olympics/girls.html | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006]Heraea could have been an indication of changing social conditions and an easing in restrictions on women. Or it could have been a temporary change. Greek women were allowed to compete in the same festivals as men after the
classical period . The dearth of references is evidence that these changes may have been unwelcomed Roman influence. In Rome, girls from wealthy families were allowed to participate in men's festivals. The Heraea Games were started because the Olympic Games got very popular. Those on record werechariot owners, not drivers. ADelphi 1st century AD inscription tells that two young women competed in races (not the Olympics), possibly in women's races at theSebasta festival inNaples (during the imperial period) and inDomitian 's races for women at theCapitoline Games inRome , 86 AD. [cite web | author=Scanlon, Thomas F. | title=Games for Girls | work="Ancient Olympics Guide" | url=http://www.archaeology.org/online/features/olympics/girls.html | accessdate=February 18 | accessyear=2006]
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