provided large rewards for such Athenians as gained
victories in the Olympic and Isthmian games, thereby
indicating his sense of the great value of the national
games as a means of promoting Hellenic intercommunion.
It was the same feeling which instigated the foundation
of the new games on the Cirrhaean plain, in commemoration
of the vindicated honor of Apollo, and in the territory
newly made over to him. They were celebrated
in the autumn, or first half of every third Olympic
year; the Amphictyons being the ostensible
Agonothets
or administrators, and appointing persons to discharge
the duty in their names. At the first Pythian
ceremony (in B.C. 586), valuable rewards were given
to the different victors; at the second (B.C. 582),
nothing was conferred but wreaths of laurel—the
rapidly attained celebrity of the games being such
as to render any further recompense superfluous.
The Sicyonian despot, Clisthenes himself, once the
leader in the conquest of Cirrha, gained the prize
at the chariot-race of the second Pythia. We
find other great personages in Greece frequently mentioned
as competitors, and the games long maintained a dignity
second only to the Olympic, over which indeed they
had some advantages; first, that they were not abused
for the purpose of promoting petty jealousies and
antipathies of any administering state, as the Olympic
games were perverted by the Eleans on more than one
occasion; next, that they comprised music and poetry
as well as bodily display. From the circumstances
attending their foundation, the Pythian games deserved,
even more than the Olympic, the title bestowed on them
by Demosthenes—“the common
Agon
of the Greeks.”
The Olympic and Pythian games continued always to
be the most venerated solemnities in Greece.
Yet the Nemea and Isthmia acquired a celebrity not
much inferior; the Olympic prize counting for the highest
of all. Both the Nemea and Isthmia were distinguished
from the other two festivals by occurring not once
in four years, but once in two years; the former in
the second and fourth years of each Olympiad, the latter
in the first and third years. To both is assigned,
according to Greek custom, an origin connected with
the interesting persons and circumstances of legendary
antiquity; but our historical knowledge of both begins
with the sixth century B.C. The first historical
Nemead is presented as belonging to Olympiad B.C.
52 or 53 (572-568), a few years subsequent to the
Sacred War above mentioned and to the origin of the
Pythia. The festival was celebrated in honor of
the Nemean Zeus, in the valley of Nemea between Philus
and Cleonae. The Cleonaeans themselves were originally
its presidents, until, some period after B.C. 460,
the Argians deprived them of that honor and assumed
the honors of administration to themselves. The
Nemean games had their Hellanodicae to superintend,
to keep order, and to distribute the prizes, as well
as the Olympic.