About
If the Olympic Games are a history of mankind, wrestling is
the prologue. When the ancient Games of the Olympiad were born, wrestling
already was an ancient game. Widely recognised as the world's oldest competitive
sport, wrestling appeared in a series of Egyptian wall paintings as many as 5000
years ago. When the Games began in 776 BC, more than two millenniums later, it
included wrestling, and, in the years that followed, wrestling featured as the
main event.
The sport would return in a similar role when the Olympic
Games returned after a 1500-year absence in 1896. Organisers, seeking direct
links to ancient times, found a natural in the sport that had enjoyed popularity
across much of the ancient world, from Greece, Assyria and Babylon to India,
China and Japan. They resurrected Greco-Roman wrestling, a style they believed
to be an exact carryover from the Greek and Roman wrestlers of old.
In Greco-Roman wrestling, the wrestlers used only their
arms and upper bodies to attack. They could hold only those same parts of their
opponents. It worked nicely from a historical perspective, but another breezier
style was sweeping across Great Britain and the United States by then. Known as
"catch as catch can", it had become standard fare - and popular professional
entertainment - at fairs and festivals in both countries.
In 1904, the Olympic Games added the second wrestling event
and called it "freestyle". Now, wrestlers could use their legs for pushing,
lifting and tripping, and they could hold opponents above or below the
waist.
Credit: IOC
For further info., please visit http://www.olympic.org/uk/sports/programme/index_uk.asp?SportCode=WR.
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