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Born Out of Wenlock - William Penny Brookes and the British Origins of the Modern Olympics (Paperback)
Loot Price: R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
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Born Out of Wenlock - William Penny Brookes and the British Origins of the Modern Olympics (Paperback)
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Loot Price R429
Discovery Miles 4 290
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This title presents gripping story chronicling the history of the
Wenlock Olympian Games, the pre-cursor to the modern Olympics. It
includes a detailed Athletes Biographies section, listing every
competitor that took part between 1850-95. It also includes a
fascinating captioned picture section of vintage photographs. At
the 2008 Beijing Olympics, London Mayor Boris Johnson memorably
said of London 2012 that 'Ping-Pong is coming home'. In fact, he
might justifiably have said that 'the modern Olympic movement is
coming home'. In 1850, Shropshire doctor William Penny Brookes
began Olympian Games for the 'moral, physical and intellectual
improvement' of the local population of Wenlock Borough. Within a
decade he had donated a prize for athletics in Athens and was
urging the Greeks to revive their ancient Games. He had also begun
agitating for physical education to be compulsory at primary
schools in England, an effort he sustained until the measure was
finally passed in 1894. Brookes, with help from John Hulley of
Liverpool and Ernst Ravenstein of London, staged Britain's first
National Olympian Games at the Crystal Palace in 1866. W.G. Grace
won the 440yd hurdles while simultaneously playing cricket for
England at the Oval. Wenlock's annual games became an important
focus for the growing band of men developing sport in Britain, but
Brookes's egalitarian views on sport - that it should embrace all
classes - temporarily fell foul of amateur exclusivity. In 1890,
Baron Pierre de Coubertin travelled to Much Wenlock, met Brookes
and watched the Wenlock Olympian Games. Within two years, Coubertin
had decided to revive Olympic Games as an international sporting
championship, and in 1896, the first of the IOC's Olympic Games
were held in Athens. Brookes died just 17 weeks short of seeing
international Olympic Games become a reality. In this engaging and
lively account, Catherine Beale tells the story of the Wenlock
Olympian Games, considers their influence on the modern Olympics,
and shows why Coubertin, though he failed fully to credit Brookes's
contribution to the movement, concluded that 'The Wenlock people
alone have preserved and followed the true Olympian traditions'.
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