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Evangelos Zappas

Evangelos or Evangelis Zappas (Greek: Ευάγγελος or Ευαγγέλης Ζάππας; Romanian: Evanghelie Zappa; Albanian: Vangjel Zhapa) 23 August 1800 – 19 June 1865) was a Greek patriot, philanthropist and businessman who spent most of his life in Romania.[2][3] He is recognized today as one of the founders of the modern Olympic Games, which were held in 1859, 1870, 1875, and 1888 and preceded the Olympic Games that came under the auspices of the International Olympic Committee.[1][4] These Games, known at the time simply as Olympics (Greek: Ολύμπια), came before the founding of the International Olympic Committee itself. The legacy of Zappas, as well as the legacy of his cousin Konstantinos, was also used to fund the Olympic Games of 1896.[5]

Evangelos Zappas
An 1860 portrait of Zappas
Native name
Ευάγγελος Ζάππας
Nickname(s)Evangelis (Ευαγγέλης)
Born(1800-08-23)23 August 1800
Labovo, Pashalik of Yanina, Ottoman Empire[1] in present-day Albania
Died19 June 1865(1865-06-19) (aged 64)
Broșteni, United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in present-day Romania
Buried
  • Romania (initially)
  • Labovo (body)
  • Zappeion (skull)
AllegianceFirst Hellenic Republic
Service/branchHellenic Army
Known for
Battles/wars
RelationsKonstantinos Zappas (cousin)
Other work

During his youth, Zappas joined the Greek War of Independence (1821–1832), achieving the rank of Major and fighting in several significant battles. Following Greek independence, he moved to Wallachia where he had a successful career as a businessman, becoming one of the richest men of that time in Eastern Europe. Aside from being the only major sponsor of the Olympic revival at that time, Zappas's philanthropy also included contributions toward the foundation of several Greek institutions and schools as well as sports and exhibition facilities.

Biography edit

Early life, military career, and later career in Wallachia edit

Evangelis Zappas was one of three children born to Vasileios Zappas and Sotira Meksi,[6][7] of Greek[1][3][8][9][10][11][12] or Aromanian[13][14][15][16][17][18][19] ancestry, on 23 August 1800 in the village of Labovo located near Tepelenë (modern Gjirokastër County, Albania) when the region was still under Ottoman rule.[20] Zappas did not receive any education during his childhood.[3] He left his village at the age of 13 and enrolled as a mercenary in the Ottoman militia of the local ruler Ali Pasha.[21][22]

Zappas became a member of the Greek patriotic organization Filiki Eteria and joined his compatriots when the Greek War of Independence broke out in 1821.[22] During this period, Zappas reached the rank of Major in the revolutionary army and became a personal friend of the Souliot captain, Markos Botsaris.[22][23] After Botsaris's death in 1823, Zappas served under various military commanders of the independence struggle, such as Dimitrios Panourgias, Kitsos Tzavelas, and Michail Spyromilios. He participated in several major conflicts, such as the siege of Souli, the first siege of Missolonghi and the Battle of Peta. In his later correspondence with a Greek official, he claimed that he was wounded five times during the war.[21][24]

In 1831, Zappas emigrated to Wallachia and made a fortune in land and agriculture.[22] In the 1850s, Zappas was considered one of the wealthiest entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe.[25] At the time of his death in 1865, his total wealth was estimated at six million gold drachmas.[26]

Revival of the Olympic Games edit

The idea of reviving the ancient Olympic Games had been raised from time to time during the early and mid 19th century, inspired to a certain degree by romanticism and patriotism.[27] In 1833, the romantic poet Panagiotis Soutsos, in his work Dialogue of the Dead, proposed the revival of the Games in the newly formed Greek state, as part of the revival of ancient Greek tradition.[28] In 1852, archaeologist Ernst Curtius stated during a lecture that the Olympic events would be revived.[23]

 
Panoramic view of the Panathenaic Stadium (1906).

Zappas was notably inspired by Panagiotis Soutsos and resolved to revive this ancient tradition through his own efforts and resources.[29] In early 1856, he sent a letter through diplomatic channels to King Otto of Greece, offering to fund the revival of the Olympic Games, and to provide cash prizes to the victors.[8] However, this initiative was not without opposition. There was wide belief among some Greek politicians that athletic games were a throwback to ancient times, unsuited to the modern era. Alexandros Rizos Rangavis, the Greek foreign minister and head of the conservative anti-athletics lobby in Athens, suggested an industrial and agricultural exposition instead of an athletics event.[30] For months there was no official answer from the Greek state. In July 1856, an article in the Greek press by Panagiotis Soutsos made Zappas's proposal widely known to the public and triggered a series of events.[3] King Otto agreed to the organization of athletics competitions at four-year intervals, with Zappa's full sponsorship, to coincide with industrial and agricultural expositions. As a result, Zappas provided the Greek government with the necessary financial resources to establish an Olympic Trust Fund.[23]

On 15 November 1859, the first Olympic Games was held in a city square in central Athens. These athletic contests were the first Olympic Games of modern times with the provenance of ancient Greek roots and the intention of using an, as yet unready, ancient Greek stadium. That stadium, the Panathenaic Stadium, was first used for a modern Olympic Games in 1870 and for the first time since the ancient Panathenaic and Olympic Games. The athletes competed in a variety of disciplines, similar to that of the ancient Olympic Games: running, discus, javelin throwing, wrestling, jumping, and pole climbing.[3]

Zappas left a fortune for the funding of future Olympiads to be held at the Panathenaic stadium. He died in 1865. His immense fortune was used for the construction of permanent sporting facilities in Athens, as well as for the continuation of the Olympiad.[31] He also instructed on the building of the Zappeion exhibition and conference center, which is named in his honour and that of his cousin Konstantinos Zappas.[5]

Legacy edit

Establishment of the modern Olympic Games edit

 
Zappeion exhibition center.

After Zappas's death, and wholly due to the Greek government ignoring Zappas's instructions to refurbish the stadium in marble, it was necessary to refurbish the Panathenaic stadium a second time, replacing wood for marble, in readiness for the Athens 1896 Olympic Games. After a period of litigation over Zappas's bequests, his cousin Konstantinos Zappas continued and expanded his endowment of the Games and maintained efforts for the continuation of the Olympic concept.[32][33] In 1870, the new stadium, with a spectator capacity of 30,000, was ready to host the second Olympiad.[34] The Olympic Games of 1870, apart from being the first modern international Olympic Games to be hosted in a stadium, were better attended and hosted more events and athletes, and were much better organized in general.[34] Additionally, the first modern Olympic building was built to support the contests (and hosted the fencing events of 1896), as well as an industrial exhibition that anti-athletic members of the Greek government had forced upon the concept of the Games. This building, located near the city's National Garden, was entirely funded by Zappas's legacy and was named Zappeion after him.[35] The Zappeion officially opened on 20 October 1888.[32]

 
Statue of Zappas in front of the Zappeion (made by Ioannis Kossos).

Dr. William Penny Brookes, from the United Kingdom, further developed his Olympian Class sports events held in Much Wenlock in the 1850s, by adopting some events from the 1859 Athens Olympic Games into the programme of future Wenlock Olympian Games. Baron Pierre de Coubertin from Paris, France, was, in part, inspired by Dr. Brookes, and went on to found the International Olympic Committee in 1894.[36]

Professor David C. Young, of the University of Florida (Gainesville), noted:

Had it not been for Zappas, the Athens Games of 1896 surely would not have taken place. Zappas's actions, his will and the previous tradition of Zappas Olympic Games had made [Crown Prince] Constantine [of Greece] an advocate of Olympic Games before the formation of the IOC in 1894.[37]

Philanthropy edit

Through his philanthropic activity, Zappas contributed to the national awakening of the Greeks, Romanians and Albanians.[38] Apart from his efforts to revive the Olympics, Evangelos Zappas made several philanthropic donations towards the foundation of schools, libraries and other similar institutions all over the Ottoman-occupied world, and notably their birthplace, Epirus. Greek schools were founded and expanded in several Greek-populated villages and towns, such as Labovo, Lekli, Nivani, Dhroviani, Filiates, Delvina, Përmet. In Constantinople, education facilities were also founded that included nurseries, primary and secondary schools, which were collectively known as the Zappeion Institute.[39] Moreover, a large amount of money was deposited in the National Bank of Greece to provide scholarships for Greek agricultural students in order to conduct postgraduate studies in Western Europe.[26]

During the anti-Greek Istanbul Pogrom in 1955, the facilities of the Zappeion female college in the Turkish capital were vandalized by the fanatical mob and a statue of him was broken into pieces.[40]

In addition to donations to the Greek state, Zappas was also a financier of the Romanian Academy where he has a statue there today.[41][42][43] Zappas was an ardent Greek nationalist influenced by the writings of Panagiotis Soutsos, a 19th-century Greek poet.[44] Among academic projects funded by him were a new synthesis on the history of the Romanians and a Romanian dictionary.[38] He also funded a newspaper and books in the Albanian language in Romania.[38] In this context, Zappas adopted multiple identities related to his birthplace (Albania), ethnic origin (Greek), and his adopted country (Romania).[38]

Personality and resting place edit

 
Crypt of Evangelos Zappas at the Zappeion.

Evangelis Zappas was often described as a solitary and eccentric personality, who had no children. On the other hand, he was a man of vision, determination and a patriot, who was well aware of the magnitude of his acts.[5] His cousin, Konstantinos Zappas, was the executor of his will and he continued Evangelis Zappas' philanthropic works through his legacy. Zappas's wish was to be initially buried in Romania, where he lived most of his life. But after four years his bones were exhumed and reinterred at the school's courtyard in Labovo where he was born, and his skull was enshrined beneath his memorial statue outside the Zappeion in Athens, Greece. A ceremony for the interment was held at 10am on 20 October 1888 at the Zappeion.[33] Baron Pierre de Coubertin made a similar gesture by having his heart buried at Olympia.[35] In the virtually unpopulated Labovo, there is an old, yet legible, tombstone that states in Albanian: "Here lie the bones of the philanthropist Evangelis Zappas".[45]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Decker 2005, p. 273: "E. Zappas, a Greek born in Albania (Ottoman Empire) but living in Romania, founded modern Olympic Games that were held in 1859, 1870, 1875 and 1888."
  2. ^ Golden 2009, p. 129; Trager 1979, p. 654.
  3. ^ a b c d e Young 1991, p. 103.
  4. ^ Young 1991, p. 108: "Zappas the real founder of the modern Games was aging and ailing, ready to pass the torch to a successor."
  5. ^ a b c . 2007. Archived from the original on 27 March 2009. Retrieved 3 November 2010.
  6. ^ Meksi, Fedhon (2010). Labova dhe Madhe dhe Labovitët: gjurmime në vite. Migjeni. p. 115. ISBN 9789995671891. Vangjel Zhapa lindi më 23 gusht 1800. I ati quhej Vasil Zhapa, kurse e ëma Sotira Meksi, të dy nga Labova e Madhe.
  7. ^ Young 2005, p. 276.
  8. ^ a b Gerlach 2004, p. 25.
  9. ^ Hill 1992, p. 15.
  10. ^ Gerlach 2004, p. 37: "Zappas born to a Greek family in 1800 [...]"
  11. ^ Chatziefstathiou, D.; Henry, I. (30 July 2012). Discourses of Olympism: From the Sorbonne 1894 to London 2012. Springer. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-137-03556-1. Evangelios Zappas, a rich merchant of Greek origin
  12. ^ Entangled Histories of the Balkans - Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies. BRILL. 15 July 2013. p. 148. ISBN 978-90-04-25076-5. his ethnic origin (Greek)
  13. ^ Elaine Thomopoulos (2012). The History of Greece. Abc-Clio. p. 85. ISBN 9780313375118. Finally, Evangelis Zappas, a Vlach by descent, took the idea and ran with it, paving the way for the modern Olympics.
  14. ^ Pericles Smerlas (1999). About Greece. Some of the biggest national benefactors and personalities of the Greek history belong to Vlach families, like Pavlos Melas, Evangelos and Konstantinos Zappas, Stefanos and Ion.
  15. ^ Ioannis Kaphetzopoulos (2000). The struggle for Northern Epirus. Hellenic Army General Staff, Army History Directorate. p. 21. ISBN 9789607897404. It is an undisputed fact that the Vlachs joined their fate with that of Greece, and demonstrated their identity by their struggles and sacrifices, as well as in other ways... Kolletes and Spyridon Lampros were Vlachs. So were the great national benefactors George Averoff, Nicolaos Stournares, Tositsas, Sinas, Evangelos and Konstantinos Zappas...
  16. ^ Tomara-Sideris, Matoula. "The contribution of Vlach benefactors in the shaping of modern Greece" – via Academia.edu.
  17. ^ Οι Βλάχοι της Ελλάδος: η αυτονομιστική κίνηση του πρίγκιπα Διαμάντη, επεμβάσεις της Ρουμανίας και της Ιταλίας στα χρόνια 1860-1994, η εθνική αντίσταση των Ελληνών και οι Ελληνοβλάχοι στα χρόνια 1941-1945 (in Greek). Malliarēs paideia. 1998. p. 28. ISBN 9789602393581. Ο Ευάγγελος Ζάππας Βλάχος στην καταγωγή γεννήθηκε στο Λάμποβο της Νότιας Αλβανίας (Β. Ηπείρου) το 1804 όπου και σήμερα ακόμη ζουν 200.000 βλάχοι.
  18. ^ Chatzēphōtēs, Iōannēs M. (2002). Hē kathēmerinē zōē tōn Hellēnōn stēn Tourkokratia (in Greek). p. 167. Από τους Βλάχους αναδείχθηκαν επιφανείς μορφές του Ελληνισμού όπως: [...] Γ. Αβέρωφ Γ. Αρσάκης, Στέργιος Δούμπας, Ευάγγελος και Κων. Ζάππας, Χρ. Ζαλοκώστας, Γεώργιος και Χρηστάκης.
  19. ^ Liușnea, Cristian Ștefan (2020). "Evanghelie Zappa–un filantrop și un precursor al Jocurilor Olimpice moderne". Teologie și educație la Dunărea de Jos (in Romanian). 18 (18): 235. doi:10.35219/teologie.2020.13. S2CID 235033121. S‑a vorbit despre Evanghelie Zappa ca despre un aromân din Epir, care vorbește și albaneza.
  20. ^ Brownell 2008, Susan Brownell, "Introduction: Bodies before Boas, Sport before the Launcher Left", pp. 1–58: [p. 36] "The wealthy Greek merchant who founded the Olympiad, Evangelis Zappas, had intended to revive the ancient Olympic Games."; Alexander Kitroeff, "Chapter 8: Greece and the 1904 "American Olympics", pp. 301–323: [p. 303] "Greece's own revival of the ancient Olympics, in the form of the Zappas Olympics, named after Evangelis Zappas, a Greek diaspora merchant who provided the funds [...]"
  21. ^ a b Ruches 1967, p. 79.
  22. ^ a b c d Matthews 1904, p. 45.
  23. ^ a b c Hill 1992, p. 16.
  24. ^ Decker 2005, p. 277.
  25. ^ Young 1996, p. 142.
  26. ^ a b Ruches 1967, p. 80.
  27. ^ Golden 2009, p. 133.
  28. ^ Matthews 1904, p. 42; Young 1991, pp. 102, 114.
  29. ^ Matthews 1904, p. 46.
  30. ^ Brownell 2008, p. 36.
  31. ^ Gerlach 2004, p. 29.
  32. ^ a b Rühl 2004, p. 13.
  33. ^ a b Young 1996, p. 201.
  34. ^ a b Young 1996, p. 148.
  35. ^ a b Ruprecht 2002, p. 152.
  36. ^ Young 1991, p. 102.
  37. ^ Young 1996, p. 117.
  38. ^ a b c d Iordachi 2013, p. 148.
  39. ^ Vassiadis 2007, p. 119.
  40. ^ (PDF). Η Καθημερινή: Επτά Ημέρες. 10 September 1995. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2012. Retrieved 25 January 2012.
  41. ^ Constantinoiu, Marina (20 February 2020). "Primul mare donator al Societăţii Literare Române, devenită Academia Română, un Meccena pentru Ţara Românească". Evenimentul Istoric.
  42. ^ Academia Română (6 February 2020). "Comunicate de presa 2020". Academia Română.
  43. ^ Popescu, George (1 November 2016). "Evanghelie Zappa – un Meccena aromân pentru Ţara Românească". Radio România Actualităţi Online.
  44. ^ Reisler 2012, p. 24: "An ardent nationalist, Zappas had been inspired by works in the 1830s of the Greek poet Panayiotis Soutsos."
  45. ^ Young 2008, p. 149.

Sources edit

  • Brownell, Susan (2008). The 1904 Anthropology Days and Olympic Games: Sport, Race, and American Imperialism. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-1098-1.
  • Decker, Wolfgang (2005). Festschrift für Wolfgang Decker zum 65. Geburtstag: dargebracht von Schülern, Freunden und Fachkollegen. Berlin: Weidmann. ISBN 3-615-00326-8.
  • Gerlach, Larry R. (2004). The Winter Olympics: From Chamonix to Salt Lake. Salt Lake City, Utah: University of Utah Press. ISBN 0-87480-778-6.
  • Golden, Mark (2009). Greek Sport and Social Status. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-71869-2.
  • Hill, Christopher R. (1992). Olympic Politics. New York and Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-3792-1.
  • Iordachi, Constantin (2013). "From Imperial Entanglements to National Disentaglement: The "Greek Question" in Moldavia and Wallachia, 1611–1863". In Daskalov, Roumen; Marinov, Tchavdar (eds.). Entangled Histories of the Balkans – Volume One: National Ideologies and Language Policies. Balkan Studies Library. Leiden and Boston: Brill. pp. 67–148. ISBN 9789004250765.
  • Matthews, George R. (1904). America's First Olympics: The St. Louis Games of 1904. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 0-8262-1588-2.
  • Philologikos Syllogos "Parnassos" (1977). Parnassos (in Greek). Athens: Philologikos Syllogos Parnassos.
  • Reisler, Jim (2012). Igniting the Flame: America's First Olympic Team. Guilford, CT: Lyons Press. ISBN 978-0-7627-8660-2.
  • Ruches, Pyrrhus J. (1967). Albanian Historical Folksongs, 1716–1943: A Survey of Oral Epic Poetry from Southern Albania, with Original Texts. Chicago, IL: Argonaut Incorporated.
  • Rühl, Joachim K. (2004). "Olympic Games Before Coubertin". In Findling, John E.; Pelle, Kimberly D. (eds.). Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 3–16. ISBN 978-0-313-32278-5.
  • Ruprecht, Louis A. (2002). Was Greek Thought Religious?: On the Use and Abuse of Hellenism, from Rome to Romanticism. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-312-29563-9.
  • Trager, James (1979). The People's Chronology: A Year-by-year Record of Human Events from Prehistory to the Present. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 9780030178115.
  • Vassiadis, George A. (2007). The Syllogos Movement of Constantinople and Ottoman Greek Education 1861–1923. Athens: Centre for Asia Minor Studies. ISBN 978-960-87610-6-3.
  • Young, David C. (2008). A Brief History of the Olympic Games. Wiley Brief Histories of the Ancient World. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley. ISBN 978-047-07777-5-6.
  • Young, David C. (2005). "Evangelis Zappas: Olympian Sponsor of Modern Olympic Games". Nikephoros: Zeitschrift für Sport und Kultur im Altertum. 18: 273–288. ISSN 0934-8913.
  • Young, David C. (1996). The Modern Olympics – A Struggle for Revival. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5374-5.
  • Young, David C. (1991). "Myths and Mist Surrounding the Olympic Games: the Hidden Story". In Landry, Fernand; Landry, Marc; Yerlès, Magdeleine (eds.). Sport...Le Troisième Millénaire. Quebec City: Presses Université Laval. pp. 99–115. ISBN 2-7637-7267-6.

Further reading edit

  • Mallon, Bill; Heijmans, Jeroen (2011). "ZAPPAS, EVANGELOS (GRE)". Historical Dictionary of the Olympic Movement. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 397. ISBN 978-0-8108-7522-7.

External links edit

  • Testaments of Evangelis and Konstantinos Zappas (in Greek)

evangelos, zappas, evangelos, evangelis, zappas, greek, Ευάγγελος, Ευαγγέλης, Ζάππας, romanian, evanghelie, zappa, albanian, vangjel, zhapa, august, 1800, june, 1865, greek, patriot, philanthropist, businessman, spent, most, life, romania, recognized, today, f. Evangelos or Evangelis Zappas Greek Eyaggelos or Eyaggelhs Zappas Romanian Evanghelie Zappa Albanian Vangjel Zhapa 23 August 1800 19 June 1865 was a Greek patriot philanthropist and businessman who spent most of his life in Romania 2 3 He is recognized today as one of the founders of the modern Olympic Games which were held in 1859 1870 1875 and 1888 and preceded the Olympic Games that came under the auspices of the International Olympic Committee 1 4 These Games known at the time simply as Olympics Greek Olympia came before the founding of the International Olympic Committee itself The legacy of Zappas as well as the legacy of his cousin Konstantinos was also used to fund the Olympic Games of 1896 5 Evangelos ZappasAn 1860 portrait of ZappasNative nameEyaggelos ZappasNickname s Evangelis Eyaggelhs Born 1800 08 23 23 August 1800Labovo Pashalik of Yanina Ottoman Empire 1 in present day AlbaniaDied19 June 1865 1865 06 19 aged 64 Broșteni United Principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia in present day RomaniaBuriedRomania initially Labovo body Zappeion skull AllegianceFirst Hellenic RepublicService wbr branchHellenic ArmyKnown forNamesake and benefactor of the ZappeionOne of the founders of the Modern Olympic GamesBattles warsGreek War of Independence First Siege of Missolonghi Battle of PetaRelationsKonstantinos Zappas cousin Other workMember of the Filiki EtaireiaFinancier of the Romanian Academy During his youth Zappas joined the Greek War of Independence 1821 1832 achieving the rank of Major and fighting in several significant battles Following Greek independence he moved to Wallachia where he had a successful career as a businessman becoming one of the richest men of that time in Eastern Europe Aside from being the only major sponsor of the Olympic revival at that time Zappas s philanthropy also included contributions toward the foundation of several Greek institutions and schools as well as sports and exhibition facilities Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life military career and later career in Wallachia 1 2 Revival of the Olympic Games 2 Legacy 2 1 Establishment of the modern Olympic Games 2 2 Philanthropy 2 3 Personality and resting place 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editEarly life military career and later career in Wallachia edit Evangelis Zappas was one of three children born to Vasileios Zappas and Sotira Meksi 6 7 of Greek 1 3 8 9 10 11 12 or Aromanian 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 ancestry on 23 August 1800 in the village of Labovo located near Tepelene modern Gjirokaster County Albania when the region was still under Ottoman rule 20 Zappas did not receive any education during his childhood 3 He left his village at the age of 13 and enrolled as a mercenary in the Ottoman militia of the local ruler Ali Pasha 21 22 Zappas became a member of the Greek patriotic organization Filiki Eteria and joined his compatriots when the Greek War of Independence broke out in 1821 22 During this period Zappas reached the rank of Major in the revolutionary army and became a personal friend of the Souliot captain Markos Botsaris 22 23 After Botsaris s death in 1823 Zappas served under various military commanders of the independence struggle such as Dimitrios Panourgias Kitsos Tzavelas and Michail Spyromilios He participated in several major conflicts such as the siege of Souli the first siege of Missolonghi and the Battle of Peta In his later correspondence with a Greek official he claimed that he was wounded five times during the war 21 24 In 1831 Zappas emigrated to Wallachia and made a fortune in land and agriculture 22 In the 1850s Zappas was considered one of the wealthiest entrepreneurs in Eastern Europe 25 At the time of his death in 1865 his total wealth was estimated at six million gold drachmas 26 Revival of the Olympic Games edit See also Zappas Olympics The idea of reviving the ancient Olympic Games had been raised from time to time during the early and mid 19th century inspired to a certain degree by romanticism and patriotism 27 In 1833 the romantic poet Panagiotis Soutsos in his work Dialogue of the Dead proposed the revival of the Games in the newly formed Greek state as part of the revival of ancient Greek tradition 28 In 1852 archaeologist Ernst Curtius stated during a lecture that the Olympic events would be revived 23 nbsp Panoramic view of the Panathenaic Stadium 1906 Zappas was notably inspired by Panagiotis Soutsos and resolved to revive this ancient tradition through his own efforts and resources 29 In early 1856 he sent a letter through diplomatic channels to King Otto of Greece offering to fund the revival of the Olympic Games and to provide cash prizes to the victors 8 However this initiative was not without opposition There was wide belief among some Greek politicians that athletic games were a throwback to ancient times unsuited to the modern era Alexandros Rizos Rangavis the Greek foreign minister and head of the conservative anti athletics lobby in Athens suggested an industrial and agricultural exposition instead of an athletics event 30 For months there was no official answer from the Greek state In July 1856 an article in the Greek press by Panagiotis Soutsos made Zappas s proposal widely known to the public and triggered a series of events 3 King Otto agreed to the organization of athletics competitions at four year intervals with Zappa s full sponsorship to coincide with industrial and agricultural expositions As a result Zappas provided the Greek government with the necessary financial resources to establish an Olympic Trust Fund 23 On 15 November 1859 the first Olympic Games was held in a city square in central Athens These athletic contests were the first Olympic Games of modern times with the provenance of ancient Greek roots and the intention of using an as yet unready ancient Greek stadium That stadium the Panathenaic Stadium was first used for a modern Olympic Games in 1870 and for the first time since the ancient Panathenaic and Olympic Games The athletes competed in a variety of disciplines similar to that of the ancient Olympic Games running discus javelin throwing wrestling jumping and pole climbing 3 Zappas left a fortune for the funding of future Olympiads to be held at the Panathenaic stadium He died in 1865 His immense fortune was used for the construction of permanent sporting facilities in Athens as well as for the continuation of the Olympiad 31 He also instructed on the building of the Zappeion exhibition and conference center which is named in his honour and that of his cousin Konstantinos Zappas 5 Legacy editEstablishment of the modern Olympic Games edit nbsp Zappeion exhibition center After Zappas s death and wholly due to the Greek government ignoring Zappas s instructions to refurbish the stadium in marble it was necessary to refurbish the Panathenaic stadium a second time replacing wood for marble in readiness for the Athens 1896 Olympic Games After a period of litigation over Zappas s bequests his cousin Konstantinos Zappas continued and expanded his endowment of the Games and maintained efforts for the continuation of the Olympic concept 32 33 In 1870 the new stadium with a spectator capacity of 30 000 was ready to host the second Olympiad 34 The Olympic Games of 1870 apart from being the first modern international Olympic Games to be hosted in a stadium were better attended and hosted more events and athletes and were much better organized in general 34 Additionally the first modern Olympic building was built to support the contests and hosted the fencing events of 1896 as well as an industrial exhibition that anti athletic members of the Greek government had forced upon the concept of the Games This building located near the city s National Garden was entirely funded by Zappas s legacy and was named Zappeion after him 35 The Zappeion officially opened on 20 October 1888 32 nbsp Statue of Zappas in front of the Zappeion made by Ioannis Kossos Dr William Penny Brookes from the United Kingdom further developed his Olympian Class sports events held in Much Wenlock in the 1850s by adopting some events from the 1859 Athens Olympic Games into the programme of future Wenlock Olympian Games Baron Pierre de Coubertin from Paris France was in part inspired by Dr Brookes and went on to found the International Olympic Committee in 1894 36 Professor David C Young of the University of Florida Gainesville noted Had it not been for Zappas the Athens Games of 1896 surely would not have taken place Zappas s actions his will and the previous tradition of Zappas Olympic Games had made Crown Prince Constantine of Greece an advocate of Olympic Games before the formation of the IOC in 1894 37 Philanthropy edit Through his philanthropic activity Zappas contributed to the national awakening of the Greeks Romanians and Albanians 38 Apart from his efforts to revive the Olympics Evangelos Zappas made several philanthropic donations towards the foundation of schools libraries and other similar institutions all over the Ottoman occupied world and notably their birthplace Epirus Greek schools were founded and expanded in several Greek populated villages and towns such as Labovo Lekli Nivani Dhroviani Filiates Delvina Permet In Constantinople education facilities were also founded that included nurseries primary and secondary schools which were collectively known as the Zappeion Institute 39 Moreover a large amount of money was deposited in the National Bank of Greece to provide scholarships for Greek agricultural students in order to conduct postgraduate studies in Western Europe 26 During the anti Greek Istanbul Pogrom in 1955 the facilities of the Zappeion female college in the Turkish capital were vandalized by the fanatical mob and a statue of him was broken into pieces 40 In addition to donations to the Greek state Zappas was also a financier of the Romanian Academy where he has a statue there today 41 42 43 Zappas was an ardent Greek nationalist influenced by the writings of Panagiotis Soutsos a 19th century Greek poet 44 Among academic projects funded by him were a new synthesis on the history of the Romanians and a Romanian dictionary 38 He also funded a newspaper and books in the Albanian language in Romania 38 In this context Zappas adopted multiple identities related to his birthplace Albania ethnic origin Greek and his adopted country Romania 38 Personality and resting place edit nbsp Crypt of Evangelos Zappas at the Zappeion Evangelis Zappas was often described as a solitary and eccentric personality who had no children On the other hand he was a man of vision determination and a patriot who was well aware of the magnitude of his acts 5 His cousin Konstantinos Zappas was the executor of his will and he continued Evangelis Zappas philanthropic works through his legacy Zappas s wish was to be initially buried in Romania where he lived most of his life But after four years his bones were exhumed and reinterred at the school s courtyard in Labovo where he was born and his skull was enshrined beneath his memorial statue outside the Zappeion in Athens Greece A ceremony for the interment was held at 10am on 20 October 1888 at the Zappeion 33 Baron Pierre de Coubertin made a similar gesture by having his heart buried at Olympia 35 In the virtually unpopulated Labovo there is an old yet legible tombstone that states in Albanian Here lie the bones of the philanthropist Evangelis Zappas 45 See also editManthos and Georgios Rizaris Georgios Sinas Simon Sinas Petros Zappas ZosimadesReferences editCitations edit a b c Decker 2005 p 273 E Zappas a Greek born in Albania Ottoman Empire but living in Romania founded modern Olympic Games that were held in 1859 1870 1875 and 1888 Golden 2009 p 129 Trager 1979 p 654 a b c d e Young 1991 p 103 Young 1991 p 108 Zappas the real founder of the modern Games was aging and ailing ready to pass the torch to a successor a b c Zappeion Culture and Exhibition Center 2007 Archived from the original on 27 March 2009 Retrieved 3 November 2010 Meksi Fedhon 2010 Labova dhe Madhe dhe Labovitet gjurmime ne vite Migjeni p 115 ISBN 9789995671891 Vangjel Zhapa lindi me 23 gusht 1800 I ati quhej Vasil Zhapa kurse e ema Sotira Meksi te dy nga Labova e Madhe Young 2005 p 276 a b Gerlach 2004 p 25 Hill 1992 p 15 Gerlach 2004 p 37 Zappas born to a Greek family in 1800 Chatziefstathiou D Henry I 30 July 2012 Discourses of Olympism From the Sorbonne 1894 to London 2012 Springer p 23 ISBN 978 1 137 03556 1 Evangelios Zappas a rich merchant of Greek origin Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies BRILL 15 July 2013 p 148 ISBN 978 90 04 25076 5 his ethnic origin Greek Elaine Thomopoulos 2012 The History of Greece Abc Clio p 85 ISBN 9780313375118 Finally Evangelis Zappas a Vlach by descent took the idea and ran with it paving the way for the modern Olympics Pericles Smerlas 1999 About Greece Some of the biggest national benefactors and personalities of the Greek history belong to Vlach families like Pavlos Melas Evangelos and Konstantinos Zappas Stefanos and Ion Ioannis Kaphetzopoulos 2000 The struggle for Northern Epirus Hellenic Army General Staff Army History Directorate p 21 ISBN 9789607897404 It is an undisputed fact that the Vlachs joined their fate with that of Greece and demonstrated their identity by their struggles and sacrifices as well as in other ways Kolletes and Spyridon Lampros were Vlachs So were the great national benefactors George Averoff Nicolaos Stournares Tositsas Sinas Evangelos and Konstantinos Zappas Tomara Sideris Matoula The contribution of Vlach benefactors in the shaping of modern Greece via Academia edu Oi Blaxoi ths Ellados h aytonomistikh kinhsh toy prigkipa Diamanth epembaseis ths Roymanias kai ths Italias sta xronia 1860 1994 h e8nikh antistash twn Ellhnwn kai oi Ellhnoblaxoi sta xronia 1941 1945 in Greek Malliares paideia 1998 p 28 ISBN 9789602393581 O Eyaggelos Zappas Blaxos sthn katagwgh gennh8hke sto Lampobo ths Notias Albanias B Hpeiroy to 1804 opoy kai shmera akomh zoyn 200 000 blaxoi Chatzephōtes Iōannes M 2002 He kathemerine zōe tōn Hellenōn sten Tourkokratia in Greek p 167 Apo toys Blaxoys anadeix8hkan epifaneis morfes toy Ellhnismoy opws G Aberwf G Arsakhs Stergios Doympas Eyaggelos kai Kwn Zappas Xr Zalokwstas Gewrgios kai Xrhstakhs Liușnea Cristian Ștefan 2020 Evanghelie Zappa un filantrop și un precursor al Jocurilor Olimpice moderne Teologie și educație la Dunărea de Jos in Romanian 18 18 235 doi 10 35219 teologie 2020 13 S2CID 235033121 S a vorbit despre Evanghelie Zappa ca despre un aroman din Epir care vorbește și albaneza Brownell 2008 Susan Brownell Introduction Bodies before Boas Sport before the Launcher Left pp 1 58 p 36 The wealthy Greek merchant who founded the Olympiad Evangelis Zappas had intended to revive the ancient Olympic Games Alexander Kitroeff Chapter 8 Greece and the 1904 American Olympics pp 301 323 p 303 Greece s own revival of the ancient Olympics in the form of the Zappas Olympics named after Evangelis Zappas a Greek diaspora merchant who provided the funds a b Ruches 1967 p 79 a b c d Matthews 1904 p 45 a b c Hill 1992 p 16 Decker 2005 p 277 Young 1996 p 142 a b Ruches 1967 p 80 Golden 2009 p 133 Matthews 1904 p 42 Young 1991 pp 102 114 Matthews 1904 p 46 Brownell 2008 p 36 Gerlach 2004 p 29 a b Ruhl 2004 p 13 a b Young 1996 p 201 a b Young 1996 p 148 a b Ruprecht 2002 p 152 Young 1991 p 102 Young 1996 p 117 a b c d Iordachi 2013 p 148 Vassiadis 2007 p 119 Septembrios 1955 h trith alwsh PDF H Ka8hmerinh Epta Hmeres 10 September 1995 Archived from the original PDF on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 25 January 2012 Constantinoiu Marina 20 February 2020 Primul mare donator al Societăţii Literare Romane devenită Academia Romană un Meccena pentru Ţara Romanească Evenimentul Istoric Academia Romană 6 February 2020 Comunicate de presa 2020 Academia Romană Popescu George 1 November 2016 Evanghelie Zappa un Meccena aroman pentru Ţara Romanească Radio Romania Actualităţi Online Reisler 2012 p 24 An ardent nationalist Zappas had been inspired by works in the 1830s of the Greek poet Panayiotis Soutsos Young 2008 p 149 Sources edit Brownell Susan 2008 The 1904 Anthropology Days and Olympic Games Sport Race and American Imperialism Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 1098 1 Decker Wolfgang 2005 Festschrift fur Wolfgang Decker zum 65 Geburtstag dargebracht von Schulern Freunden und Fachkollegen Berlin Weidmann ISBN 3 615 00326 8 Gerlach Larry R 2004 The Winter Olympics From Chamonix to Salt Lake Salt Lake City Utah University of Utah Press ISBN 0 87480 778 6 Golden Mark 2009 Greek Sport and Social Status Austin TX University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71869 2 Hill Christopher R 1992 Olympic Politics New York and Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 3792 1 Iordachi Constantin 2013 From Imperial Entanglements to National Disentaglement The Greek Question in Moldavia and Wallachia 1611 1863 In Daskalov Roumen Marinov Tchavdar eds Entangled Histories of the Balkans Volume One National Ideologies and Language Policies Balkan Studies Library Leiden and Boston Brill pp 67 148 ISBN 9789004250765 Matthews George R 1904 America s First Olympics The St Louis Games of 1904 Columbia MO University of Missouri Press ISBN 0 8262 1588 2 Philologikos Syllogos Parnassos 1977 Parnassos in Greek Athens Philologikos Syllogos Parnassos Reisler Jim 2012 Igniting the Flame America s First Olympic Team Guilford CT Lyons Press ISBN 978 0 7627 8660 2 Ruches Pyrrhus J 1967 Albanian Historical Folksongs 1716 1943 A Survey of Oral Epic Poetry from Southern Albania with Original Texts Chicago IL Argonaut Incorporated Ruhl Joachim K 2004 Olympic Games Before Coubertin In Findling John E Pelle Kimberly D eds Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group pp 3 16 ISBN 978 0 313 32278 5 Ruprecht Louis A 2002 Was Greek Thought Religious On the Use and Abuse of Hellenism from Rome to Romanticism New York NY Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 312 29563 9 Trager James 1979 The People s Chronology A Year by year Record of Human Events from Prehistory to the Present New York NY Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 9780030178115 Vassiadis George A 2007 The Syllogos Movement of Constantinople and Ottoman Greek Education 1861 1923 Athens Centre for Asia Minor Studies ISBN 978 960 87610 6 3 Young David C 2008 A Brief History of the Olympic Games Wiley Brief Histories of the Ancient World Hoboken NJ Wiley ISBN 978 047 07777 5 6 Young David C 2005 Evangelis Zappas Olympian Sponsor of Modern Olympic Games Nikephoros Zeitschrift fur Sport und Kultur im Altertum 18 273 288 ISSN 0934 8913 Young David C 1996 The Modern Olympics A Struggle for Revival Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 5374 5 Young David C 1991 Myths and Mist Surrounding the Olympic Games the Hidden Story In Landry Fernand Landry Marc Yerles Magdeleine eds Sport Le Troisieme Millenaire Quebec City Presses Universite Laval pp 99 115 ISBN 2 7637 7267 6 Further reading editMallon Bill Heijmans Jeroen 2011 ZAPPAS EVANGELOS GRE Historical Dictionary of the Olympic Movement Lanham MD Scarecrow Press p 397 ISBN 978 0 8108 7522 7 External links editUniversity of Florida Gainesville Professor David C Young Lifetime Achievement Award includes long list of useful source references concerning the revival of the Olympic Games in modern times Testaments of Evangelis and Konstantinos Zappas in Greek Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evangelos Zappas amp oldid 1219763371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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