Olympic Oath

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The Olympic Oath is taken by one athlete and one judge at the opening ceremonies of each Olympic Games. It was spoken in Greek at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens and in Italian at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin.

The athlete, from the team of the organizing country, holds a corner of the Olympic Flag while reciting the oath:

In the name of all the competitors I promise that we shall take part in these Olympic Games, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them, committing ourselves to a sport without doping and without drugs, in the true spirit of sportsmanship, for the glory of sport and the honour of our teams.

The judge, also from the host nation, likewise holds a corner of the flag but takes a slightly different oath:

In the name of all the judges and officials, I promise that we shall officiate in these Olympic Games with complete impartiality, respecting and abiding by the rules which govern them in the true spirit of sportsmanship.

[edit] History

The Olympic Oath, most commonly attributed to David O'Connor but written by Ethelbert Talbot, was first taken by a decathlete at the 1920 Summer Olympics in Antwerp. The first judge's oath was taken at the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo.

The text of the oath has slightly changed over the years. The oath read by Victor Boin in 1920 was

We swear. We will take part in the Olympic Games in a spirit of chivalry, for the honor of our country and for the glory of sport.

Later, "swear" was replaced by "promise" and "country" by "team." The part concerning doping was added at the 2000 Summer Olympics.

[edit] Speakers

The athletes and judges that have delivered the Olympic Oath are listed below.

Olympic Oath
Olympics Athlete Judge (Official)
1920 Summer Olympics Victor Boin[1] -
1924 Winter Olympics Camille Mandrillon[2] -
1924 Summer Olympics Georges André[3] -
1928 Winter Olympics Hans Eidenbenz[4] -
1928 Summer Olympics Harry Dénis[5] -
1932 Winter Olympics Jack Shea[6] -
1932 Summer Olympics George Calnan[7] -
1936 Winter Olympics Wilhelm Bogner[8] -
1936 Summer Olympics Rudolf Ismayr[9] -
1948 Winter Olympics Bibi Torriani[10] -
1948 Summer Olympics Donald Finlay[11] -
1952 Winter Olympics Torbjørn Falkanger[12] -
1952 Summer Olympics Heikki Savolainen[13] -
1956 Winter Olympics Giuliana Chenal-Minuzzo[14] -
1956 Summer Olympics John Landy (Melbourne)
Henri Saint Cyr (Stockholm)[15]
-
1960 Winter Olympics Carol Heiss[16] -
1960 Summer Olympics Adolfo Consolini[17] -
1964 Winter Olympics Paul Aste[18] -
1964 Summer Olympics Takashi Ono[19] -
1968 Winter Olympics Léo Lacroix[20] -
1968 Summer Olympics Pablo Garrido[21] -
1972 Winter Olympics Keiichi Suzuki[22] Fumio Asaki[22]
1972 Summer Olympics Heidi Schüller[23] Heinz Pollay[23]
1976 Winter Olympics Werner Delle-Karth[24] Willy Köstinger[24]
1976 Summer Olympics Pierre St.-Jean[25] Maurice Fauget[25]
1980 Winter Olympics Eric Heiden[26] Terry McDermott[26]
1980 Summer Olympics Nikolay Andrianov[27] Aleksandr Medved[27]
1984 Winter Olympics Bojan Krizaj[28] Dragan Perovic[28]
1984 Summer Olympics Edwin Moses[29] Sharon Weber[29]
1988 Winter Olympics Pierre Harvey[30] Suzanna Morrow-Francis[30]
1988 Summer Olympics Hur Jae
Shon Mi-Na[31]
Lee Hak-Rae[31]
1992 Winter Olympics Surya Bonaly[32] Pierre Bornat[32]
1992 Summer Olympics Luis Doreste Blanco[33] Eugeni Asensio[33]
1994 Winter Olympics Vegard Ulvang[34] Kari Karing[34]
1996 Summer Olympics Teresa Edwards[35] Hobie Billingsly[35]
1998 Winter Olympics Kenji Ogiwara[36] Junko Hiramatsu[36]
2000 Summer Olympics Rechelle Hawkes[37] Peter Kerr[37]
2002 Winter Olympics Jimmy Shea[38] Allen Church[38]
2004 Summer Olympics Zoe Dimoschaki[39] Lazaros Voreadis[39]
2006 Winter Olympics Giorgio Rocca[40] Fabio Bianchetti[40]

[edit] References