What’s Greek for women athletes?
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Coral Wilson
Male Greek athletes have been idolized since their days of glory in
ancient Greece. But Greek women athletes, or Athletries, were reduced
to a mere myth in the modern world.
For two authors, the existence of Athletries became an
irresistible mystery. Playing detectives, they set out to discover
the truth and set the record straight at last.
Anne Reese of Costa Mesa and Orange Coast College professor Irini
Vallera-Rickerson, giggled with delight as they described the series
of adventures that led them to write the first book of its kind,
“Athletries: The Untold History of Ancient Greek Women Athletes.”
“Oh no, there’s no women,” Vallera-Rickerson said she was told
repeatedly in Greece and in America. “When it came to athletics, it
was absolutely unheard of that women would be a part of sports.”
But the names of women recorded in ancient sources proved
otherwise.
“We found inscriptions together with the inscriptions of male
winners, so there was no way they didn’t see the name of a woman,”
Vallera-Rickerson said. “But I think purposely they would ignore it
because it was not important, it was a woman.”
While Greek men are well-known for their athletic endeavors,
through the selective recording of history, the names of women were
ignored and eventually forgotten. In the Victorian era, the only part
women played in athletics was to clap their hands, the women said.
Even today, people initially laughed at the thought of ancient
Greek women athletes. But as more evidence was collected,
intellectuals started to believe.
“Sometimes, [scholars] are so busy in their academic ideas that
they are not willing to hear new ideas,” Vallera-Rickerson said. “And
this happens quite often in the academic world.”
Over the course of seven years, people from universities,
libraries, museums and newspapers joined in on the search. They
played a crucial role in collecting, translating and interpreting
information.
“You couldn’t write a book like this without the support from a
lot of other people,” Reese said.
Recalling countless stories of Greek hospitality, Reese and
Vallera-Rickerson said that while conducting research in Greece, they
were taken out to lunch, invited inside homes and escorted around the
city by taxi drivers and local people. They never paid to enter
museums. One day, when they were out of cash and couldn’t find an
ATM, the taxi driver even offered to lend them the money.
“It was the craziest thing I have ever heard,” Reese said. “I have
never been anywhere where anyone said, ‘I’ll lend you the money. Just
send it back.’”
The Greek people take their heritage seriously and are
enthusiastic about academic research, Reese said.
“They wanted to show us everything they could possibly think of
because they wanted it to be documented for people to know and
learn,” she said. “They were all into the academics, even the cab
drivers. They were all into promoting the heritage.”
The authors found that women competed in bull-jumping, wrestled in
the nude alongside men and competed in full armor in chariot races.
In Sparta, the women were expected to have fit bodies and excel in
athletics, with the idea that they would raise healthy babies, Reese
said.
With the upcoming 2004 Olympics to be hosted in Greece, the
discoveries may have redefined the history of the games. But Reese
and Vallera-Rickerson, friends for 24 years, said most of the time
they were just having a lot of fun.
“Every time we found one name, we got so excited and we were
jumping up and down,” Vallera-Rickerson said. “I think if you want to
do something that becomes successful, you need to have fun with it,
too.”
The women said they documented and double-checked every fact in
the book. Fluent in Greek and English and a native of Athens,
Vallera-Rickerson said that since information is often lost and
misinterpreted in translations, it is essential to consult with
original sources.
Mission accomplished -- the book was published in Greece in 2001
and was just released in America. It received high reviews in both
countries.
Reese and Vallera-Rickerson have reveled in personal satisfaction
after solving the mystery that consumed them for years. Expecting
that many more names of women athletes will be revealed with time,
they said their research will begin the process of redefining history
and revolutionizing a worldwide misconception.
Recalling a previous comment made on a TV appearance in Greece,
Vallera-Rickerson said the same double standard of the past is still
prevalent today.
“When a man does something extraordinary, they call him a hero,”
she said. “And when a woman does something extraordinary, they call
her a goddess -- she couldn’t be a human.”
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