Athena and Phevos

Athena and Phevos

Infobox
caption = Soft toys were among the many items of mascot-themed merchandising available at the 2004 Summer Olympics.
above = Athena and Phevos
" _el. Φοίβος και Αθηνά" languageicon|el|el


headerstyle = background:#dde8ff;
labelstyle = background:#fed;

header1 = Mascots of the 2004 Summer Olympics (Athens)
label2 = Creator
data2 = Spyros Gogos
label3 = Significance
data3 = Two modern children resembling ancient Greek dolls

"Athena" and "Phevos" (Greek: Αθηνά, Φοίβος; pronounced|aθiˈna and IPA| [ˈfivos] ) were the Olympic mascots of the 2004 Summer Olympics, held in Athens. The pair are one of the few examples of anthropomorphic mascots in the history of the Olympics. According to the official mascot webpage, “their creation was inspired by an ancient Greek doll and their names are linked to ancient Greece, yet the two siblings are children of modern times - Phevos and Athena represent the link between Greek history and the modern Olympic Games.” [cite web |url=http://www.athens2004.com/en/OlympicMascots |archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20060208221636/http://www.athens2004.com/en/OlympicMascots |archivedate=2006-02-08 |title=Phevos and Athena |accessdate=2008-09-08 The original website is now closed.]

The mascots ("right") were named after the Greek gods (Athena) and (Apollo). "Phevos" is a transcription of the modern Greek pronunciation of "Phoebus", an epithet of Apollo. They were loosely modeled after an archaic Greek terra cotta "daidala" from the 7th century BC ("below left"), which was recommended by curators at the National Archaeological Museum.

The pairing of Athena and Phevos was unexpected, as in Greek mythology the twin of Phoebus Apollo is actually Artemis, not Athena. The Athens 2004 Olympic Organizing Committee claimed that the mascots represented "participation, brotherhood, equality, cooperation, fair play [and] the everlasting Greek value of human scale."

The mascots have been emblazoned on a variety of items for sale, including pins, clothing and other memorabilia.

Controversy

Prior to the Games, a group affiliated with the "Societas Hellenica Antiquariorum" called the Greek Society of the Friends of the Ancients and a Hellenic polytheistic group called the "Committee for the Greek Religion Dodecatheon" devoted to the preservation of Ancient Greek culture sued over the mascots, claiming that they "savagely insult" Classical Greek culture. [http://users.forthnet.gr/ath/heliodromion/e_nea1.htm] [http://agis10.tripod.com/id8.html] In a BBC Radio interview on June 26, 2004, Dr. Pan. Marinis President of the Societas Hellenica Antiquariorum said that the mascots:

"mock the spiritual values of the Hellenic Civilization by degrading these same holy personalities that were revered during the ancient Olympic Games.For these reasons we have proceeded to legal action demanding the punishment of those responsible."

The fact that the organizing committee referred to the "daidala" as dolls has been the cause of some controversy among scholars of Ancient Greek culture, as the "daidala" were religious artifacts.

ee also

* National Archaeological Museum of Athens

Notes

References

*The Beijing 2008 Olympics site notes their "their whacking feet, longish necks and puny heads" and reports the garbled mythology as issued by the 2004 Olympics Committee.


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