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Rhodes Island - Diagoras |
Introduction
The boxer Diagoras of Rhodes embodied every
quality of the noble ancient athlete. Immortalized in one of
the most famous odes of the poet Pindar, Diagoras of rhodes
was victorious in not only the Olympic games, but in every
other major Greek athlethic festival as well. The extent and
number of his triumphs certainly contributed to his fame, but
the virtuous character of Diagoras of rhodes was as important
to the ancient Greeks as his success as a boxer. We know
that Diagoras' family was of the noble, ruling class on
Rhodes, and the Rhodians claimed that the boxer himself was
the son of the god Hermes. Such legends were a common means of
explaining how mortal men could perform "super-human" athletic
achivements.

In his Ode for Diagoras, Olympian 7, Pindar praises
the boxer as a "fair-fighter" and a "gigantic" man. Diagoras
also "walks a straight course on a road that hates arrogance."
In addition to his Olympic victory, Diagoras won four times at
the Isthmian games, twice at Nemea, and at other games held in
his native Rhodes, Athens, and elsewhere throughout the Greek
world. We have no exact record of his career, but it is clear
that Diagoras was a legend in his own time.

Moreover, Diagoras of rhodes lived to witness the
Olympic victories of his two sons Damagetos and Akousilaos. At
the 83rd Olympiad in 448 BCE, Damagetos won the second of his
two prizes for the pankration, and Akousilaos won the boxing
victory. Then, the sons carried their father on their
shoulders while the adoring crowd showered them with flowers
and congratulated Diagoras on his sons. Another of his sons,
Dorieus, won no less than three successive Olympic titles in
the pankration, along with eight Isthmian victories and seven
at Nemea. Two of the sons of Diagoras' daughters were also
Olympic boxing champions.

Olympia crowned three generations of Diagoras' family,
adding to the fame that the boxer won in his own right and no
doubt fueling other legends of the immortal ancestry of the
Diagoras family. Even baseball's Griffey and Ripken families
fall a generation short of imitating the achievements of
Diagoras, his sons, and grandsons.
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