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  1. The modern Olympic Games or Olympics (French: Jeux olympiques) are the leading international sporting events featuring summer and winter sports competitions in which thousands of athletes from around the world participate in a variety of competitions.

    • April 6-15, 1896: Athens
    • May 20-October 28, 1900: Paris
    • July 1-November 23, 1904: St. Louis
    • April 27-October 31, 1908: London
    • May 5-July 22, 1912: Stockholm
    • April 20-September 12, 1920: Antwerp
    • May 4-July 27, 1924: Paris
    • May 17-August 12, 1928: Amsterdam
    • July 30-August 14, 1932: Los Angeles
    • August 1-16, 1936: Berlin

    After a 1,500-year hiatus, the Games return to Athens, the ancient birthplace of the Olympic Games, where 14 nations are represented by all-male athletes. The highlight of the first modern Olympics is the marathon, won by Greece's Spyridon Louis. With 43 events, including track and field, gymnastics, swimming, cycling, weightlifting, wrestling, ten...

    Held as part of the Paris World’s Fair, the 1900 Games span five months, with 20 events and 24 countries represented. Because events are so spread out, many athletes and officials don't even realize they are competing in the Olympics. But the 1900 Games introduce several new sports, including rugby, golf, cricket and croquet (the only year croquet ...

    Also tied to the World’s Fair, the 1904 Games are held in St. Louis over several months, with just 12 countries represented and U.S. athletes accounting for almost 85 percent of participants. Of the approximately 100 sports offered, women are only allowed to compete in archery and it’s the first time freestyle wrestling, the decathlon, boxing and d...

    Relocated to London with little notice after Rome is forced to cancel, following the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, the 1908 Olympics marks the longest Games in history. Twenty-two nations compete in events over a six-month period. For the first time, swimming and diving competitions are held in a pool. The Games also see the introduction of field hoc...

    The first Asian country to participate, Japan joins the 1912 Olympic Games in Stockholm, Sweden, which includes athletes from 28 nations representing all five continents and features the debut of women's swimming and diving and the modern pentathlon. Finnish long-distance star Hannes Kolehmainen, one of the "Flying Finns," wins three golds in the 5...

    Following the devastation from World War I, Antwerp, Belgiumis awarded the Games, and Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey are not invited. The newly-formed Soviet Union does not attend. With some 2,600 athletes (about 60 of whom are women) from 29 countries competing in 156 events, the five-ring Olympic flag debuts during the Opening Cer...

    During the Paris Games, some 3,000 athletes (135 women) from 44 nations participate in 126 events with 1,000-plus reporters on site. Olympic firsts include the first standard 50-meter pool with marked lanes, the first formal closing ceremony and the first time athletes are housed in an Olympic village. It also marks the last time tennis is played f...

    The 1928 Amsterdam Olympicsfeature 2,883 athletes from 46 nations (Panama, Malta and Rhodesia join) competing in 109 events. It's the first time the Olympic Flame is lit in a cauldron and the start of the tradition of Greece leading the Parade of Nations during the Opening Ceremony, with the host team closing the procession. Germany returns to the ...

    In the midst of the Great Depression, the 1932 Los Angeles Gamesincludes teams from 37 nations with just 1,334 athletes taking part in 117 events. Despite the timing, 100,000 spectators attend the Opening Ceremony at the Coliseum stadium, the size and quality of which would become the new standard in Olympic Games. The 1932 Games also begin the tra...

    With the Nazi Party in power since 1933, controversy swirls around the 1936 summer Games held in Berlin, with Adolf Hiltler providing the official opening. Although several countries, including the United States, threaten to boycott the Games, none officially do so, although many Jewish athletes choose to boycott as individuals. During the Games, a...

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  3. The Summer Olympic Games, also known as the Games of the Olympiad, and often referred to as the Summer Olympics, is a major international multi-sport event normally held once every four years on leap years (except 1900 and 2021).

  4. The inaugural Games of the modern Olympics were attended by as many as 280 athletes, all male, coming from 12 countries. The athletes competed in 43 events covering athletics (track and field), cycling, swimming, gymnastics, weightlifting, wrestling, fencing, shooting, and tennis.

  5. 09. Min. : 33. Sec. Rafael NADAL. Rafael Nadal says he is likely to play at Roland Garros after Rome exit. Paris 2024 | Olympic Games. Sport Climbing. 03:23. Erik Noya and Olympic champion Alberto Gines: Why we are stronger together. Sport Climbing | World Cup Lead & Speed 2022 | Villars. Modern Pentathlon. Originals 09:26.

  6. 3 days ago · 2024 Paris Olympics: Athletes to watch. list of Summer Olympic athletes. How have the Olympics changed? Summer Olympic Games. list of athletes with the most Olympic medals. (Show more) Notable Honorees: Lisa Carrington. Butch Reynolds. Carissa Moore. Megan Rapinoe. Related Facts And Data:

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