AUC KINANTHROPOLOGICA
AUC KINANTHROPOLOGICA

Acta Universitatis Carolinae Kinanthropologica (AUC Kinanthropologica) is an international peer reviewed journal for the publication of research outcomes in the humanities, the social sciences and the natural sciences, as applied to kinathropology. It is a multidisciplinary journal accepting only original unpublished articles in English in the various sub-disciplines and related fields of kinanthropology, such as Anthropology, Anthropomotorics, Sports Pedagogy, Sociology of Sport, Philosophy of Sport, History of Sport, Physiology of Sport And Exercise, Physical Education, Applied Physical Education, Physiotherapy, Human Biomechanics, Psychology of Sport, Sports Training and Coaching, Sport Management, etc. The journal also welcomes interdisciplinary articles. The journal also includes reports of relevant activities and reviews of relevant publications.

The journal is abstracted and indexed by CNKI, DOAJ, EBSCO, ERIH PLUS, SPOLIT, SPORTDiscus, and Ulrichsweb.

AUC KINANTHROPOLOGICA, Vol 61 No 2 (2025), 85–95

Article

Citizenship and the ancient Olympic Games

Jiří Kouřil

DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23366052.2026.3
zveřejněno: 16. 03. 2026

Abstract

For people in antiquity, citizenship was crucial, since only citizens enjoyed full rights. Citizenship encompassed not only rights but also responsibilities, including the duty to train and be physically prepared to defend their polis. Citizens who neglected this duty were often labeled idiotai, or “untrained”. Citizenship granted access to active participation in Olympic events in the stadium, and only citizen-aristocrats could compete as horse and chariot owners in the hippodrome. This structure changed with the rise of Macedonian kings like Alexander I, Archelaus, Philip II, and significantly with Alexander the Great and his successors, who divided and ruled the vast empire he had established. This shift also transformed public perceptions of citizenship and fandom, as exemplified by the Olympic boxing match between Cleitomachus of Thebes and Aristonicus of Alexandria. With the expansion of the Roman Empire, the Games opened to other nations, and in 212 AD, Emperor Caracalla’s Constitutio Antoniniana (Antonine Edict) extended Roman citizenship to all free individuals across the empire. This development enabled athletes from across the Roman Empire to participate in the Olympic Games, broadening the event’s inclusivity beyond its traditional Greek confines.

klíčová slova: ancient Greece; ancient Macedonia; ancient Olympic athletes; ancient Rome; athletic identity

reference (37)

1. Ael., VH = Aelian, Claudii Aeliani de natura animalium libri xvii, varia historia, epistolae, fragmenta, Vol 2. Ed. by R. Hercher (1866). Lipsiae: B. G. Teubneri.

2. Ar., Lys. = Aristofanes, Lysistrate: Komedie o čtyřech jednáních. Transl. by F. Stiebitz (1960). Praha: Orbis.

3. Arr., An. = Arrian, Flavii Arriani Anabasis Alexandri. Ed. by A. G. Roos (1907). Leipzig: B. G. Teubneri.

4. Aristot., Pol. = Aristoteles, Politika. Transl. by A. Kříž (1998). Praha: Petr Rezek.

5. D. C. = Dion Cassius, Roman History, Vol. IX. Ed. by E. Cary (1955). London: William Heinemann & Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

6. Diod. = Diodorus Siculus, Diodorus of Sicily in Twelve Volumes, Vol. 4-8. Transl. by C. H. Oldfather (1989). Cambridge: Harvard University Press & London: William Heinemann.

7. Hdt. = Herodotos, Historia. Ed. by A. D. Godley (1920). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

8. Hom., Od. = Homer, The Odyssey. Trans. by A. T. Murray (1919). Cambridge: Harvard University Press & London: William Heinemann.

9. Ibyc. = Ibycus, Fragments. In: Lyra Graeca, Vol. II. Ed. & Transl. by J. M. Edmonds (1924). London: William Heinemann & New York: G. P. Putnamʼs Sons.

10. Paus. = Pausanias, Pausanias Description of Greece, Vol. 4. Ed. & Transl. by W. H. S. Jones & H. A. Ormerod (1918). Cambridge: Harvard University Press & London: William Heinemann. CrossRef

11. Philostr., Gym. = Philostratus, Gymnasticus. In: Philostratus, Heroicus; Gymnasticus; Discourses 1 and 2. Ed. & Transl. by J. Rusten & J. König (2014). London: Harvard University Press.

12. Plat., Law = Platón, Zákony. Transl. by F. Novotný (2016). Praha: Oikoymenh.

13. Plu., Ages. = Plútarchos, Agésilaos. In: Plútarchos, Životopisy slavných Řeků a Římanů II. Transl. by V. Bahník, A. Hartmann, R. Mertlík, E. Svobodová & F. Stiebitz (2007). Praha: Arista, Baset & Maitrea.

14. Plut., Lyc. = Plutarchos, Lykúrgos a Numa. In: Životopisy slavných Řeků a Římanů I. Transl. by V. Bahník et al. (2006). Praha: Svoboda.

15. Plu., Mor. = Plutarch, Sayings of Spartans. In: Plutarch, Moralia, Volume III. Ed. & Transl. by F. C. Babbitt (1961). Cambridge: Harvard University Press & London: William Heinemann.

16. Plb. = Polybios, Historiai. Ed. by W. R. Paton (1979). Cambridge: Loeb Classical Library.

17. Poll. = Pollux, Pollucis Onomasticon, fasciculus I. Ed. by E. Bethe (1900). Leipsiae: B. G. Teubner.

18. Xen., Ages. = Xenofón, Agésiláos. Transl. by V. Bahník (1972). In: Xenofon, Vzpomínky na Sokrata. Hostina. Sokratova obhajoba. O hospodaření. Hierón neboli Kniha o tyranidě. Agésiláos. Praha: Svoboda.

19. Xen., Ways = Xenophon, Ways and Means In: Xenophon, Xenophon in Seven Volumes, 7. Ed. & Transl. by E. C. Marchant & G. W. Bowersock (1925). Cambridge: Harvard University Press & London: William Heinemann.

20. Blundell, S. (1995). Women in ancient Greece. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

21. Christesen, P. (2012). Olympic Victor Lists and Ancient Greek History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 580 p.

22. Christesen, P. (2013). Ladas: A Laconian Perioikic Olympic Victor? In: P. Mauritsch & C. Ulf (Eds.), Kultur(en): Formen des Alltäglichen in der Antike. Festschrift für Ingomar Weiler zum 75. Geburtstag, pp. 41-50.

23. Crowther, N. B. (2007). Sport in Ancient Times. Westport & London: Praeger. 184 p. CrossRef

24. Drees, L. (1968). Olympia: Gods, Artists and Athletes. London: Pall Mall Press. 194 p.

25. Golden, M. (2005). Sport in the Ancient World from A to Z. London: Taylor & Francis e-Library. 185 p. CrossRef

26. Kössl, J., Štumbauer, J., & Waic, M. (2018). Kapitoly z dějin tělesné kultury. Praha: Karolinum. 174 p.

27. Kouřil, J. (2016). Athlétai a sportovní tituly antického světa. Tělesná kultura, 39(1), 15-26. CrossRef

28. Kouřil, J. (2019). "Olympism" and Olympic Education in Greek Antiquity. Studia sportiva, 13(1), 74-84. CrossRef

29. Kyle, D. G. (2006). Sport and Spectacle in Ancient World. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell. 424 p.

30. Kyle, D. G. (2014). Greek Female Sport: Rites, Running, and Racing. In: P. Christesen & D. K. Kyle (Eds.), A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell, pp. 258-275. CrossRef

31. Miller, S. G. (2004). Ancient Greek Athletics. New Haven & London: Yale University. 288 p.

32. Pomeroy, S. (2002). Spartan Women. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 198 p. CrossRef

33. Remijsen, S. (2009). Challenged by Egyptians: Greek Sports in the Third Century BC. The International Journal of the History of Sport, 26(2), 246-271. CrossRef

34. Scanlon, T. F. (2002). Eros and Greek Athletics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 468 p. CrossRef

35. Scanlon, T. F. (2008). The heraia at Olympia revisited. Nikephoros: Zeitschrift für Sport und Kultur im Altertum, 21, pp. 159-196.

36. Schöbel, H. (1965). Olympia und seine Spiele. Leipzig: Sportverlag Berlin. 190 p.

37. Sweet, W. E. (1987). Sport and Recreation in Ancient Greec. New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press. 282 p.

Creative Commons License
Citizenship and the ancient Olympic Games is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

157 x 230 mm
vychází: 2 x ročně
cena tištěného čísla: 190 Kč
ISSN: 1212-1428
E-ISSN: 2336-6052

Ke stažení