At the starting line... Host Cities
Transcription
At the starting line... Host Cities
Passing The Baton At the starting line... These posters describe how the Olympic and Paralympic Games grew to become the biggest event in the world. Frenchman Pierre de Coubertin founded the modern Olympic Games at the end of the 19th century. He revived the four yearly Olympic Games held in ancient Greece with the aim of helping to build a peaceful and better world by educating young people through sport. He was influenced by the Olympian Games held in Much Wenlock, Shropshire since 1850. 241 athletes came from 14 countries to compete in nine sports. Now, 15,000 athletes come from over 200 countries to compete in 26 Olympic and 20 Paralympic sports. Millions of spectators and billions of television viewers watch the Games. Similarly, the cost has grown. The Games can make – and break – both athletic reputations and cities’ economies. The posters are taken from the panels used at an exhibition called Passing the Baton about the Games that was held at Islington Museum in autumn 2009. Torch from the 1948 and 1956 Olympic Games Host Cities 1896 Athens, Greece 1900 Paris, France 1904 St Louis, USA 1908 London, UK 1912 Stockholm, Sweden 1920 Antwerp, Belgium 1924 Paris, France 1928 Amsterdam, Holland 1932 Los Angeles, USA 1936 Berlin, Germany 1948 London, UK 1952 Helsinki, Finland 1956 Melbourne, Australia 1960 Rome, Italy 1964 Tokyo, Japan 1968 Mexico City, Mexico 1972 Munich, West Germany 1976 Montreal, Canada 1980 Moscow, Soviet Union 1984 Los Angeles, USA 1988 Seoul, South Korea 1992 Barcelona, Spain 1996 Atlanta, USA 2000 Sydney, Australia 2004 Athens, Greece 2008 Beijing, China 2012 London, UK 2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Athens 1896 “I shivered at the thought of what would happen if I got a cramp from the cold water. My will to live completely overcame my desire to win.” Alfréd Hajós At the first modern Games in Athens, Greece, there were few of the features that we now associate with the Games. No flag, flame, torch, motto, gold medals – or women. 241 men from 14 nations competed in nine sports: athletics, cycling, fencing, gymnastics, shooting, swimming, tennis, weightlifting and wrestling; all of which are still Olympic sports. On 6 April 1896, James Connolly (USA) won the triple jump to become the first Olympic champion in over 1500 years. All competitors had to be amateurs, except in fencing. Some competed across sports: Carl Schuhmann (Germany) won in wrestling and gymnastics. National identity at the Games was not strong: the tennis doubles final had players from four countries. Fair play was paramount. Leon Flameng (France) won a cycling event despite waiting for his opponent to fix a mechanical problem. Brothers John and Sumner Paine (USA) were first and second in a shooting event. Afterwards they decided that only one of them would compete in the next shooting event so as to not embarrass their hosts. Hungarian Alfréd Hajos won the 1,200m swimming event. The swimmers were transported by boat and left to swim back to shore alone. Hajos said, ‘I shivered at the thought of what would happen if I got a cramp from the cold water. My will to live completely overcame my desire to win.’ Greek water-carrier Spiridon Louis was the hero of the Games. Fortified by wine, he won the marathon to the delight of the home crowd. Athens 1896 French cycling team mates Leon Flameng and Paul Masson. ©CIO_Albert Meyer Athens 1896 Greek Marathon winner Louis Spyridon. ©CIO London 1908 The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part. Olympic Creed The London 1908 Games revitalised the Olympics. The Games had become downgraded in Paris, France (1900) and St Louis, USA (1904) when they had been held as part of a four-month long World Fair. Many athletes did not even know that they had competed as part of the Olympic Games. London became host of the 1908 Games when Rome withdrew to rebuild Naples following the eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius. White City in west London was the first purpose-built Olympic stadium. In the middle of the running track was a swimming pool and platforms for wrestling and gymnastics. Other innovations included the introduction of the Olympic creed. Boxing was held at City University – then the Northampton Institute – on St John Street. In one day Great Britain won all five boxing gold medals on offer. Training for swimming also took place there. Countries now paraded behind their national flag at the opening ceremony. 2,008 athletes (1,971 men, 37 women) from 22 countries competed in 22 sports. These included rugby union, water motorsports and the tug of war, which was won by the City of London police. The marathon distance of 26 miles 385 yards was first established here. The route was fixed to start at Windsor Castle and finish underneath the Royal Box in White City stadium. Again the hero of the Games was a marathon runner. The leading runner, Dorando Pietri (Italy), collapsed repeatedly in the stadium. He was helped across the finish line, for which he was disqualified. However, sympathy for him meant that he became better known than the actual winner, Johnny Hayes (USA). Commemorative postcard showing the 1908 stadium at White City. Image courtesy of Hammersmith and Fulham Archive and Local History Service London 1908 women’s archery contest. Image courtesy of Hammersmith and Fulham Archives and Local History Centre London 1908 pole vault contestant. Image courtesy of Hammersmith and Fulham Archives and Local History Service Berlin 1936 Citius, Altius, Fortius – Faster, Higher, Stronger. Olympic Motto By 1936 almost all of the features of the Games were in place including the Olympic flag of five rings representing the five continents, the Latin motto Citius, Altius, Fortius (faster, higher, stronger), and the flame. The Berlin Games added the torch relay. Adolf Hitler tried to use the Games to prove the supremacy of the Aryan race. Jews and other “non-Ayrans” were banned from the German national team. Many countries considered a boycott, however, no boycott went ahead as many people believed that sports and politics should be kept separate. The Games had the largest number of countries taking part to that point. 3,963 athletes (3,632 men, 331 women) from 49 countries competed in 19 sports. The left-wing government in Spain organised a People’s Olympiad in defiance of Hitler. 6,000 athletes registered; more than the number of athletes at the Berlin Games. They came from 19 countries including Great Britain, the USA, and exiles from Germany. However, the Games were cancelled at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. The hero of the Games was the black American Jesse Owens. He won four gold medals: 100 metres, 200 metres, long jump, 4x100 metre relay. German long jumper Luz Long gave some advice to Owens that helped him to win the long jump and was the first to congratulate him. Owens said, ‘It took a lot of courage for him to befriend me in front of Hitler – you can melt down all the medals and cups I have and they wouldn’t be a plating on the twenty-four carat friendship that I felt for Luz Long at that moment’. Opening ceremony; in the middle the Olympic cauldron and to the left the Olympic flag. ©CIO Long jump contestants: USA’s Jesse Owens (1st) and Germany’s Luz Long. ©CIO_Lothar Rübelt Berlin 1936 Olympic poster USA’s Jesse Owens in action London 1948 “A warm flame of hope for a better understanding in the world which has burned so low.” Lord Burghley at the opening ceremony London 1948 ticket to the closing ceremony at the Empire Stadium Wembley. Image courtesy of Brent Archives Due to World War Two (1939-45), the London Games were the first to be held since 1936. Rationing was still in place and much of Europe and beyond remained devastated. Germany and Japan were not allowed to participate. The Games are known as the “austerity Games”. Athletes were asked to bring their own food. Men stayed in an army camp in Uxbridge and women at Southlands College. The events were held at existing sports venues. The Wembley Empire Exhibition Grounds, which included Wembley Stadium, was the main venue with 22 other venues across the country hosting events. Highbury hosted two football matches. Training for diving took place at Ironmonger Row Baths in Finsbury. Lord Burghley, chairman of the organising committee, said London represented a ‘warm flame of hope for a better understanding in the world which has burned so low’. A volunteer programme was created to help run the Games. Sir Ludwig Guttmann organised a sports competition for disabled war veterans in Stoke Mandeville, Buckinghamshire. The competition subsequently grew to become, from 1960 (Rome), the Paralympic Games. By contrast, the art competition that been held at the Olympic Games since 1912 took place for the last time. 4,104 athletes (3,714 men, 390 women) from 59 countries competed in 17 sports. The hero of the Games was Fanny Blankers-Coen (Holland). A 30-year-old mother of two children, and pregnant with a third, she won four gold medals in athletics. Called “The Flying Housewife”, her success helped to promote women’s athletics at a time when it did not receive the same recognition as men’s sport. Holland’s Fanny Blankers-Coen in action. ©CIO_Lothar Rübelt Group photograph of the female corps of drivers provided by the Ministry of Supply, together with their vehicle. Image courtesy of Brent Archives Mexico City 1968 These Games were the first to be hosted by a developing country. Many newly independent countries in Africa, Asia and the West Indies took part for the first time. 5,530 athletes (4,750 men, 780 women) from 112 countries competed in 20 sports. The Paralympic Games took place in Tel Aviv, Israel. 750 athletes from 29 countries competed in 10 sports. All sports were for wheelchair competitors only. Robert (Bob) Beamon jumping into the record books with his medal winning leap. ©CIO The Games took place against a backdrop of political unrest. Czech Gymnast Vera Cáslavská bowed her head on the medal podium as the national anthem of the Soviet Union was played in protest at the recent Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. On the podium for the 200 metres medal ceremony Tommie Smith and John Carlos, both from the USA, bowed their heads and each raised a black-gloved fist as the American national anthem was played. Peter Norman (Australia), also on the podium, had suggested that they divide the gloves between them and he wore a badge in support. Their act was in support of black civil rights in America and worldwide, and caused great controversy. All three athletes were banned from future sporting events. The outstanding achievement of the Games was the performance by Bob Beamon (USA) in the long jump. Helped by the thin air of Mexico City, with one leap of 29 feet, 2½ inches (8.90 metres) he broke the previous world record by 21¾ inches (55 cm) and set a world record that remained for 23 years. It is the longest-standing current Olympic record. Mexico 1968 poster Munich 1972 The Munich Games in West Germany were dominated by one act – the killing of 11 Israelis by Palestinian terrorists. On 5 September, eight Palestinian terrorists belonging to a group called Black September broke into the Olympic Village and took 11 Israeli athletes and officials as hostages. Two hostages were killed immediately. A standoff took place that last 17 hours. The terrorists and hostages were transferred to an airport. The German authorities tried an unsuccessful rescue attempt – all of the remaining hostages were killed. Also most of the terrorists and a policeman were killed. The Munich Massacre shocked the world. The Games were suspended for 34 hours and then restarted. 7,170 athletes (6,075 men, 1,095 women) from 121 countries competed in 23 sports. At the Paralympic Games in Heidelberg, West Germany, 984 athletes from 43 countries competed in 10 sports. The swimmer Mark Spitz (USA) won seven gold medals and broke seven world records. Being Jewish, he had to leave the Games before they finished for his own protection. The gymnast Olga Korbut (Soviet Union) was also a star of the Games, captivating audiences with her performances and emotion. An image from the terrorist event that rocked the Munich Games Munich 1972 Olympic poster USA’s Mark Spitz walks away having won 7 medals and broken 7 world records. ©CIO 1980 and 1984 Games Boycotts became a feature of the Games. 28 countries had boycotted the 1976 Games in Montreal in protest at the participation of New Zealand, whose rugby team had toured South Africa in breach of a ban for its policy of apartheid. At the 1980 Games in Moscow, the Soviet Union, 61 countries boycotted the Games in protest at the recent Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The USA led the boycott and organised the Olympic Boycott Games. Great Britain did not participate in the boycott. 5,179 athletes (4,064 men, 1,115 women) from 80 countries competed in 23 sports. The Paralympic Games took place in Arnhem, Holland: 1,973 athletes from 42 countries competed in 12 sports. At the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, USA, 14 countries including the Soviet Union and other Communist countries boycotted the Games in retaliation for the American-led boycott of the Moscow Games. They held a rival event, called The Friendship Games. However, a record 140 countries participated in the Los Angeles Games, with 6,829 athletes (5,263 men, 1,566 women) competing in 23 sports. The Paralympic Games took place in New York and in Stoke Mandeville, England: 2,900 athletes from 45 countries competed in 15 sports. Los Angeles had been the only city to bid for these Games as other cities had been put off by the excessive cost of the 1976 Games. The boycotts depleted the quality of the Games in many sports. However, some athletes won at both Games, including British athletes Seb Coe in the men’s 1500 metres and Daley Thompson in the decathlon. At the 1984 Games Carl Lewis (USA) equalled the performance of Jesse Owens in 1936 by winning the same four gold medals. Los Angeles 1984 Great Britain’s Seb Coe and Steve Ovett. ©CIO_Jean-François Pahud Moscow 1980 Opening ceremony featuring children dressed as the Moscow Olympic bear “Misha” ©CIO Barcelona 1992 The 1992 Games in Barcelona, Spain, were the first Games since 1972 to be free of boycotts. The participating countries reflected recent political changes. The end of the Cold War meant that the former Soviet Union was split into four teams, which included a unified team. East and West Germany competed as one team. South Africa competed for the first time since 1960 due to the end of apartheid. In total 9,356 athletes (6,652 men, 2,704 women) from a record 169 countries competed in 25 sports. In the women’s 10,000 metres, the black Ethiopian winner Derartu Tulu ran her victory lap hand in hand with second-placed white South African Elana Meyer. Elsewhere gymnast Vitaly Scherbo (Unified Team) won six gold medals. British rower Steve Redgrave won his third gold medal on the way to his final tally of five. Drugs tests were now a common feature of the Games. Introduced at the 1968 Games, the most high profile competitor caught taking drugs is the Canadian Ben Johnson, winner of the men’s 100 metres in Seoul in 1988. Since the Seoul Games in 1988, the Paralympic Games have taken place in the same city as the Olympic Games. 3,001 athletes (2,301 men, 700 women) from 83 countries competed in 15 sports. The flame at the Olympic Games was lit by an arrow fired by Antonio Rebello, a Paralympic archer. The Games accelerated the regeneration of Barcelona. Improvements in transport and facilities have resulted in long-term benefits to the city. Performers at the opening ceremony. ©CIO_Jean-Jacques Strahm Carl Lewis training for the relay race. ©CIO_Jean-Jacques Strahm Beijing 2008 The Beijing Games, in China, started at 8:08:08pm on 08.08.08 (8 August 2008) – the number eight is associated with good fortune in China. The opening ceremony that followed is considered one of the best to have taken place. Spectators and viewers were similarly impressed by the venues that included the National Stadium (The Bird’s Nest) and the National Swimming Centre (The Water Cube). The build up to these Games had been different. There had been concerns about air quality and human rights. The torch relay had been a target for protests about the Chinese occupation of Tibet. 11,028 athletes from a record 204 countries competed in 28 sports. An unprecedented 87 countries won at least one medal. The Paralympic Games had now expanded to 20 sports, in which 3,951 athletes competed from 146 countries. China topped the medal table at both Games. Estimates of the cost of the Games vary between £9 billion and £24 billion. The Games were watched by 4.7 billion people on television. Great Britain came fourth at the Olympic Games and second at the Paralympic Games. Outstanding performers were Chris Hoy (cycling), Rebecca Adlington (swimming) and Ben Ainslie (sailing). Other outstanding performers were the swimmer Michael Phelps (USA), who won eight gold medals to add to the six he had already won to make him the most successful Olympian ever, and Usain Bolt (Jamaica), who broke the world record in the men’s 100 metres and 200 metres, and also won a relay gold medal. Great Britain’s Chris Hoy pedals to Olympic victory Olympic mascots at the Beijing Games. ©CIO_John Huet The famous Bird’s Nest Stadium London 2012 In July 2005 London won its bid to for the 2012 Games, making it the first city to host the Games three times. The aims of the Games include promoting sport, inspiring young people, and helping regenerate east London where most of the events will be held. Five venues will remain afterwards: the Olympic Stadium, the Aquatics Centre, the VeloPark and two multi-sports venues. Other venues will include Wembley Stadium, Wimbledon and Weymouth. St Pancras will be used for a high speed rail link to the Olympic Park. More than 15,000 athletes from over 200 countries are expected, 70,000 volunteers will be needed, 9 million tickets will be available and a television audience of billions is anticipated. The athletes will compete in 26 Olympic sports and 20 Paralympic sports. The Olympic sports are: athletics, aquatics, archery, badminton, basketball, boxing, canoeing, cycling, equestrian, fencing, football, gymnastics, handball, hockey, judo, modern pentathlon, rowing, sailing, shooting, table tennis, tennis, taekwondo, triathlon, volleyball, weightlifting and wrestling. The Paralympic sports will be: archery, athletics, basketball, boccia, cycling, equestrian, fencing, football 5-a-side, football 7-a-side, goalball, judo, powerlifting, rugby, rowing, sailing, shooting, standing volleyball, swimming, table tennis and tennis. The budget for construction is £9.3 billion, to be funded by central and London government, the National Lottery and the London council taxpayer. The budget for hosting the Games is £2 billion, to be paid by sponsorship, marketing, ticket sales and the International Olympic Committee. The 2012 Olympic Games will take place between 27 July and 12 August. The Paralympic Games will be held from 29 August to 9 September. London 2012 Olympic Stadium ©CIO London 2012