The sacred precinct of Nemea, in a …

Years: 573BCE - 562BCE

The sacred precinct of Nemea, in a valley about twelve miles (nineteen kilometers) from Argos in the Peloponnesus, is famous in Greek myth as the cave-home of the Nemean Lion, which was killed by the hero Heracles and as the place where the infant Opheltes, lying on a bed of wild celery, was killed by a serpent while his nurse fetched water for the Seven on their way from Argos to Thebes.

In his memory, the Seven found the Nemean Panhellenic Games, the fourth of Greece’s great athletic and artistic festivals.

Neméa hosts the games, held in honor of Zeus, establishing the sanctuary of Nemean Zeus to inaugurate them from at least 573 BCE.

The city constructs a palaestra, baths, hotel, and stadium to accommodate the athletic competitions, which include footraces, jumping and throwing events, boxing, wrestling, and chariot races.

The games occur biennially, in the same years as the Isthmian Games, i.e., in the second and fourth years of each Olympiad.

Winners receive crowns of wild celery and the judges wear black robes as a sign of mourning for Opheltes.

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