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“And how long is a marathon, Pheidippides?”
According to the Greek historian Herodotus, an
Athenian soldier and long-distance runner named Pheidippides ran from Athens to
Sparta to ask for assistance. Then he ran back! –bringing back news to the
Athenians that Sparta was in the middle of an important annual religious
festival and they wouldn’t come until it was over. In the end, Athens won
without the aid of the Spartans. (The Spartans eventually came but they were too
late to take part in the battle.) Herodotus was writing about 50
years after these events took place. So it is reasonable and likely that
Pheidippides is a historical figure and that he ran to Sparta for help. The road
from Athens to Sparta was a rough and rocky 125 miles – a distance he supposedly
ran in two days. This feat was indeed worthy of becoming a folk legend – which
it most certainly did. The MythNow, fast forward to 500 years later--- A Roman historian named Plutarch wrote about
Pheidippides, too. But Plutarch’s account is different. Plutarch says
Pheidippides ran from Marathon to Athens. According to this story, Pheidippides,
an Athenian herald, ran 26 miles (not 125) from the battlefield at Marathon to
Athens to announce the Greek victory over the Persians. He arrived in Athens
shouting out “We were victorious!” Then he dropped dead on the spot. Since Plutarch’s account was
written so much later, most historians think it is more likely that Herodutus’
version is the true one. They think Plutarch was recording a popular version of
the story that had been altered through the years as it was told over and over.
Remember, it was already 500 years old in Plutarch’s time. Plutarch was a widely
read Roman historian and thus it is his version that became the most well-known
in the years that followed, even down to our modern times. Thus, his story is
the one that lives on in popular culture today. Going by Plutarch’s account, The International Olympic
Committee established the distance for a modern “marathon” race and set
the distance at 26.2 miles- roughly the distance from Marathon to Athens. Pheidippides and his famous run
are now immortalized forever. And even though the exact truth may not be what is
popularly believed, we know that Pheidippides almost certainly lived and that he
ran either 26 miles or far more! Other examples of how popular Plutarch's version of the story is: Discussion question: Accuracy of a
historical document is measured in part by how much time has elapsed from the
occurrence of an event to the time when it is written down and recorded. How
would the New Testament documents stand up to that criterion? Are they more like
Herodotus account or Plutarch’s?
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