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Further Notes on the Greek Jump

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

In my last article I tried to show that there is no adequate evidence for the statement that the Greek frequently jumped fifty feet or more, and still less for the theories of a ‘triple jump’ or a ‘hop, skip, and jump,’ which have been suggested simply to explain such a record. Other misconceptions are due to the same cause. The old idea, that the rods which so frequently occur in vase-paintings of the palaestra are jumping-poles, has been long since abandoned, and they are now recognised as akontia, or possibly measuring rods (κανόνες).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1904

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References

1 B. M. Vases, B. 361.

2 V. Krause, , Gymnastik der Hell. p. 325, n. 3Google Scholar. For a representation of the springboard v. Inghirami, Mus. Chivs. cxxxii. from a Chiusi wall-painting.

3 Op. cit. 385.

4 Sen. ep. xv.

5 Anacharsis, 4 ἀναπηδῶσιν ὤσπερ θέοντες ἐπὶ τοῦ αὐτοῦ μένοντες καὶ ἐς τὸ ἄνω συναλλόμενοι λακτίζουσιν τὸν ἀέρα. Perhaps the ball-exercise represented on an Attic sepulchral vase, published in B.C.H. vii. Pl. 19, is of this character. The treading of the clothes i represented on the wall paintings of the Fullonica at Pompeii and on a relief in the, museum at Sens, v. Schreiber, , Atlas, lxxv. 7 13Google Scholar.

6 Dar. Sagl. s.v. Halter.

7 § v.

8 Cp. Lucian, , Anach. 27Google Scholarἀλλὰ καὶ ὑπεράλ

9 Antike Turngeräthe, pp. 3–13.

10 Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1883, p. 190.

11 Jüthner, op. cit. Fig. 2.

12 Ἐφ. Ἀρχ. 1883, p. 103.

13 Furtwängler, , Bronzen v. Ol. iv. p. 180Google Scholar.

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15 id. v. 27. 12, vi. 3. 10.

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17 Mart. vii. 67, 5, xiv. 49; Seneca, ep. xv. and lvii.; Antyll, apud Oribas. vi. 14; Galen, , De San. Tu. ii. 9Google Scholar, etc.

18 P. 193.

19 Arch. Zeit. 1884. xvi. 2b.

20 J.H.S. ii. p. 219. The same moment is represented in a Chiusi wall painting, Inghirami, Google Scholar, Mus. Chius. cxxv. = Krause, op. cit. ix. c. 25 f.

21 P. 76 of the present volume.

22 Tassie, , Pierres Gravées, ii. 46Google Scholar = Furtwängler, , Ant. Gem. xvii. 42Google Scholar = Krause, op. cit. ix. 24, p. 953.

23 Jüthner, op. cit. Fig. 20, 21. Baumeister, , Fig. 612. Gaz. Arch. 1875Google Scholar, Pl. 35.

24 Id. pp. 16, 17.

25 Gymn. 55, cp. Paus. v. 7, 4; 17, 4; vi. 14, 5.

26 Hancarville, Ant. étr. gr. ct rom. cxxiv. = Krause, op. cit. ix. 22.

27 Cp. the following r. f. kylikes: Arch. Zeit. 1878, xi. = Munich, , 795; Bull. d. I. 1856, xx.Google Scholar: Bull. nap. nouv. sér. v. 12.

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29 Cp. krater Vienna, 173 = Laborde i. 7 = Krause, op. cit. xiii. 19, r.f. kylix Gerh., A. V. 294Google Scholar, B. M. Vases, E 499 = Hancarville, op. cit. II. 38 = Krause, ix. 20, B. M. Vases, E 96.

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44 So too on a vase in the British Museum depicting Hoplitodromoi, the device on one of the shields is an athlete running with halteres, J.H.S. 1903, 288, Fig. 15.

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65 Scavi di Bologna, xxii.

66 The following records may be of interest. Running long jump without weights, 24 ft. 11¾ in. Running long jump with weights, and off a board, 29 ft. 7 in. Mr. Rowden considers that Howard who did this performance would not have jumped more than 21 ft. without assistance. High jump without weights, 6 ft. 5⅝ in.; with weights, 6 ft. 8¼ in. Mr. Rowden estimates that the weights were worth an extra foot.