www.Greece-Athens.com - ATHENS CITY GUIDE
HOME | E-CARDS | MAILING LIST | ATHENS PHOTOS  
 

-----------------------------------------------------------------
SEARCH
German translation by Google French Italian Spanish Portuguese Japanese
ATHENS
HOTELS
RESTAURANTS
RENT A CAR
TRAVEL AGENCY
JEWELLERY
ART GALLERIES
TAXI TOURS
INTERNET CAFE
CAFE
REAL ESTATE
CONFERENCES
NIGHTLIFE
EVENTS
WEDDINGS
TOURIST OUTLETS
LIMOUSINE SERVICES
TRADITIONAL PRODUCTS
YACHTING
COSMETICS
LAUNDRY
CRUISES
HOSTELS
GRILL HOUSE

Live Acropolis webcam
ATHENS MAP
METRO MAP
INFORMATION
REGIONS
BEACHES
WORTH SEEING
ATHENS VIDEOS
PHOTO GALLERY
360 PANORAMAS
TOP 10
EMBASSIES
METRO
MAPS
HISTORY
E-CARDS
MAILING LIST
NEWS
SEARCH
ABOUT US
LINKS
ATHENS THE OLYMPIC TRUCE


CLICK TO VIEW ACTUAL PHOTO SIZE
A truce (in Greek, ekecheiria, which literally means "holding of hands") was announced before and during each of the Olympic festivals, to allow visitors to travel safely to Olympia. An inscription describing the truce was written on a bronze discus which was displayed at Olympia. During the truce, wars were suspended, armies were prohibited from entering Elis or threatening the Games, and legal disputes and the carrying out of death penalties were forbidden.

The Olympic truce was faithfully observed, for the most part, although the historian Thucydides recounts that the Lacedaemonians were banned from participating in the Games, after they attacked a fortress in Lepreum, a town in Elis, during the truce. The Lacedaemonians complained that the truce had not yet been announced at the time of their attack. But the Eleans fined them two thousand minae, two for each soldier, as the law required. A mina was equivalent to 100 drachmas, and one drachma was an average worker's daily wage, or the price of a sheep. Thus, the fine was a heavy one, equal to 200,000 drachmas.

Another international truce was enforced during the annual Mysteries, a religious rite held at the major sanctuary site of Eleusis. The truces of Olympia and Eleusis not only allowed worshippers and athletes to travel more safely; they also provided a common basis for peace among the Greeks. Lysistrata, the title character in a comic play by Aristophanes, makes this point when she tries to convince the Athenians and the Spartans to end their war. In no uncertain terms I must reproach you, both sides, and rightly. Don't you share a cup at common altars, for common gods, like brothers, at the Olympic games, Thermophylai and Delphi? I needn't list the many, many others. The world is full of foreigners you could fight, but it's Greek men and cities you destroy! Aristophanes Lysistrata , 1131

Reservation form

RESERVATION REQUEST -- please complete as many fields as possible.
Full Name and E-mail are required.
Full Name: Arrival:
E-mail Address: Departure:
Tel. (include country, city codes): Persons:
Fax: Lodging Type:
City, Zip Code, Country: Additional Info:

BACK TO