10 Weird Traditions from Spectacular Ancient Olympic Games

by Brian Sepp

When you think of the modern Olympics, you picture glittering stadiums and flawless opening ceremonies. Yet the ancient Games were a wild tapestry of 10 weird traditions that would make today’s organizers blush. Let’s travel back to 776 BC and uncover the bizarre customs that defined the original Olympic spectacle.

10 Weird Traditions That Shaped the Ancient Games

10 The Ritual Sacrifice Of Animals

10 weird traditions: animal sacrifice ceremony at ancient Olympics

The ancient Olympic opening ceremony began with athletes stepping into a grand temple and facing a massive statue of Zeus, thunderbolts in hand. A slice of boar meat was placed before them, and they swore an oath over the flesh, pledging to respect the games’ laws.

That was merely the prelude. On day three, a parade of a hundred bulls marched to Zeus’s Great Altar, where priests slaughtered the beasts. While some meat was shared among the crowd, the thighs were set alight as a sizzling tribute to the god.

9 Enhancer

10 weird traditions: athletes eating sheep testicles for strength

The Greeks believed that testicles acted like a natural steroid, boosting vigor and masculinity. Watching eunuchs and castrated animals convinced them that consuming testicles could transfer manly strength, even if they didn’t grasp the biology.

Athletes also tried odd concoctions—ground donkey hooves mixed with rose petals, or even live bees—to prime themselves. Some resorted to darker tactics, laying curses on rivals; mishaps on the track were frequently blamed on such magical hexes.

8 Athletes Competing In The Nude

10 weird traditions: competitors performing naked in the stadium

Why did the Greeks strip down for competition? Legend says a runner tripped on his loincloth and declared, “to hell with clothing.” Others argue that nakedness was a badge of pride, a way to show that only a barbarian would hide his body.

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Competitors didn’t just run bare; they slicked themselves with olive oil and paraded, turning the stadium into a living sculpture gallery. Poets like Bacchylides even praised the sight, writing verses that celebrated the athletes’ gleaming, exposed forms.

7 The Thong That Just Covers The Tip

10 weird traditions: kynodesme thong covering only the tip

Even in near‑naked contests, athletes were allowed a tiny garment called a kynodesme—a strip that barely covered the tip of the penis. It was tied around the waist with a modest bow, serving more as a decorative flourish than modesty.

The Greeks prized the foreskin, seeing long, draped foreskins as the pinnacle of male beauty. Art from the era often shows men with exaggerated foreskins, and some wore elongated kynodesmes to make theirs appear larger. The accessory even became a fashion statement beyond the arena.

6 Mass Prostitution

10 weird traditions: mass prostitution during ancient Games

Prostitutes and raucous parties were integral to the ancient Games. Women from across the Mediterranean converged on the Olympic city, earning in five days as much as they would in an entire year.

Many of these women also worked as weavers by day, strolling through streets half‑naked, skillfully crafting garments to entice clients. Nightly revelries turned into orgies that lasted until dawn, leaving the city smelling like a mingling of sweaty gym and bustling brothel.

5 Martial Arts Sport With No Rules

10 weird traditions: pankration mixed martial arts with few rules

Pankration was the Greeks’ answer to modern mixed‑martial arts, a brutal contest where two fighters could employ any technique except biting, eye‑gouging, and genital attacks.

The sport produced savage spectacles: Sostratos of Sikyon earned the nickname “Mr. Fingertips” for snapping opponents’ fingers, while Arrhachion died mid‑match, strangling his foe with his thighs only to dislocate the opponent’s toe, forcing surrender and becoming the first Olympian to win while dead.

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4 Chariot Races That Killed People

10 weird traditions: deadly chariot races at ancient Olympics

Chariot racing was a death‑defying spectacle, often featuring around forty chariots that could lock wheels in tight turns, sending some careening off the track or even into the crowd.

One notorious race began with twenty‑one chariots and ended with a single survivor. Wealthy owners usually stayed off the reins, hiring professional drivers to risk life and limb while still claiming the victor’s wreath.

3 The Race In 70 Pounds Of Armor

10 weird traditions: hoplitodromos race in heavy armor

The Hoplitodromos was the final foot race, demanding athletes sprint 400 meters while encumbered by a helmet, greaves, and a shield—totaling fifty to seventy pounds of metal armor.

Competing naked save for the gear, runners struggled to keep their shields aloft after merely seventy meters, and most collapsed well before the finish line. Modern recreations confirm how disastrous the weight proved for even the fittest soldiers.

2 Not Letting Women Enter, Even If They’re Competing

10 weird traditions: women barred from attending Olympic events

Virgin girls were encouraged to attend the Games, hoping to flirt with athletes, but adult women were barred entirely—except for the priestess of Demeter, Chamyne, who oversaw rituals from an ivory altar.

Even female competitors faced exclusion. Spartan heroine Cynisca funded and trained a chariot team, yet she could not ride or watch her own horses; men had to pilot them, and she was forbidden from seeing her own victory ceremony, despite winning twice.

1 Demolishing The Winner’s City Walls

10 weird traditions: winners' city walls demolished in celebration

Victorious Olympians were treated like demigods, receiving olive‑leaf wreaths, statues, poems, and lavish parades, plus lifelong tax exemption and generous monetary gifts.

Some city‑states went further: believing that strong men needed no fortifications, they would raze a segment of the city wall upon an athlete’s return, allowing the champion to stride triumphantly over the broken barrier.

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