Wednesday 6 May 2015

Australian Rowing at the Olympic Games 1896-2004

"In the name of all competitors I promise that we will take part in these Olympic Games, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them, in the true spirit and honour of our team."
—Olympic Oath taken by an athlete of the host country on behalf of all assembled Olympians.

Baron Pierre de Coubertin.

French educationist Baron Pierre de Coubertin (1863-1937) is credited with the revival of the Modern Olympic Games. He thought that at least one reason for the flowering of Greece during it's "Golden Age" was sport and the ideals behind the Olympic Games.

He wanted to bring the youth of the world together in friendly competition where differences of status, religion, politics and race could be forgotten.

"The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part. Just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well."
—Baron Pierre de Coubertin, 1908. These words now appear on the scoreboard at every Opening Ceremony.

It is a clear that not all differences were to be ignored by him: he followed the Ancient Greek example of male only competition. Much to his chagrin, two women's swimming events were introduced in 1912 and, gradually ever since, women's events have continued to increase in number.

Between 1892 and 1894 he sought support for the modern Olympic Games from both within France and throughout the world. He convened the Congress Internationale Athletique de Paris (Paris International Athletic Congress) which decided on 16th June 1894 to "revive the Olympic Games on principles and in the conditions to the requirements of modern life". 

"The Olympic Games are not merely world championships, but the celebration of impassioned effort, of multiple ambitions and of every form of youth activities as each generation appears at the threshold of life."
—Baron Pierre de Coubertin

Baron de Coubertin was a keen sculler who rowed well into his later life. He was a member of Societe d'Encouragement du Sport Nautique, the oldest rowing club on the Marne River in France. 

He described rowing as the most beautiful of sports. The Baron thought so much of the sport that he sought to include sculling as one of the disciplines in the modern pentathlon in place of shooting. It was only the question of the additional administrative burden imposed on Olympic officials that dissuaded him.

Baron Pierre de Coubertin sculling on Lac Leman
Picture from 'The Story of World Rowing' — Christopher Dodd 1992

Speaking for ourselves, we see clearly as the Baron Pierre de Coubertin promoted our sport and all others by the Olympic Games. An example for everyone, who fought in favor of an egalitarian sport.

by Guerin-Foster in History of Australian Rowing.

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