Olympia was a town sanctuary in the Elis region during the splendor of the ancient
Greece. This town was the site where the original ancient Greek Olympic Games were
realized every four years. It believes that first Olympic Games of the history were
realized around 776 BC.
Ruins of Olympia
The ancient Olympia had many temples and ceremonial buildings like the hippodrome,
the stadium, the Prytaneion (the seat of government), the Philppeion (an ionic circular
memorial monument of ivory and gold, which contained statues of King Philip’s family.
Which was the family of Alexander the Great), the temple of Hera and the temple
of Zeus, which hosted the famous statue of ivory of the father of the gods that
was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
At west of the Sanctuary were the workshop of Phidias (the sculptor who made the
statue of Zeus), the Gymnasion and the Leonidaion (the
place where competitors were
staying during the games).
The city had its greatest splendor in the classical period (from V to IV centuries).
It was in this period when most buildings and temples were constructed. In the Roman
period the Olympics games were opened to all citizens of the empire and some temples
were restored and some other were built.
Olympia’s decline began in the III century AD when a series of earthquakes destroyed
many buildings. Besides, also in the third century, several tribes raided and looted
the city. Nevertheless, Olympic Games were realized until 393, when Christian Emperor
Theodosius banned the games, because they were considered pagan. Then, the city
was abandoned.
In the XIX century the first archaeological excavations rediscovered the ancient
Olympia. These excavations were responsibility of the German Archaelogical Institute.
The archeologists found in the ancient sanctuary many vestiges of the temples and
buildings, including several statues, ceramics and bronze objects.
In the second half of the XX century an excavation leaded by the architect Alfred
Mallwitz found the Phidias’ workshop and the Prytaneion, where he found many tools
of bronze, which apparently belonged to the famous sculptor of the Olympic Zeus.
Now, modern Olympia is an small nice Town where the flame of the modern Olympic
Games is lit using the reflection of the sunlight in a mirror in the stadium of
Olympia, which has been restored. This flame is transported from Olympia to the
seat of the Games, like Athens in 2004 or Beijing in 2008
The main mean of transport of the modern Olympia is the train. The city is the final
east station of the line Olympia-Pyrgos. Besides, Olympia has one of the most important
museums of Greece, the Archaeological Museum of Olympia, whose collection presents
several vestiges of the Temple of Zeus and the ancient Olympic Games.
The town counts also with a great variety of hotels, shops, restaurants and bars.
Its population is around 1000 people (it is very small). Olympia is today one of
the most popular tourist destinations of the country; therefore there is an excellent
tourist office
on Praxitelus Kondylli, where
it can change money and get schedules
of buses, ferries and trains.