As the Olympics begin, Berkeley marks 50 years of excavating the Games’ origins in Greece

July 23, 2024

In Greece, and about 2,000 miles from the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, UC Berkeley is celebrating 100 years of archaeological excavation at a site of the ancient Panhellenic Games, a religious and athletic event that inspired the modern Olympics.

Berkeley’s Nemea Center for Classical Archaeology in Ancient Nemea, Greece, also is marking the campus’s 50th year there. The 45-acre site opened in 1924, but Berkeley arrived in the early 1970s. Its first full season of excavation was in 1974, with Stephen Miller, a Berkeley classics professor, as director.

Since then, faculty, students and local residents have unearthed important and headline-grabbing antiquities that include a stadium and track, an entrance tunnel lined with ancient runners’ graffiti; the 4th century Temple of Zeus, where athletes made sacrifices before competing; an early Christian basilica; a hero’s shrine; a bathhouse; and what’s considered the world’s oldest remaining athletic locker room.

Last April, as a nod to the historical importance of the site and the excavation, research and conservation done there, the Olympic torch passed through Ancient Nemea on its way to Paris.

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