Main content

The Rise of Olympism

Episode 1 of 30

Clare Balding visits Rugby School, which can claim to be the birth place of the modern Olympic games.

CLARE BALDING charts how Britain has shaped sport and sport has shaped the British.Apart from the English language itself, the invention of modern sport has been our major cultural legacy to the rest of the world.In this thirty part narrative history series with the help of the academic team from the International Centre for Sport History and Culture at De Montfort University, Clare looks at the unique and vital role sport has played, and continues to play, in our national life. As we gear up for the 2012 games, in this first programme she looks at the birth of the modern olympics movement. While it was inspired by the Greeks and revived by the French nobleman, Pierre de Coubertin, his motivation came from a provincial English public school. It was while visiting Rugby and contemplating the work of its visionary headmaster, Thomas Arnold, that de Coubertin came to the conclusion that inferior physical fitness in young Frenchmen had played a part in their defeat by the Germans in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870. If they played more sport at school, he thought, the outcome might have been different. With Richard Holt and Tony Collins, Professors at the International Centre for Sport History and Culture at De Montfort University, Clare discusses what lessons can be drawn from the games since 1896, in order to achieve success when they return to us this year.
The reader is Stuart McLoughlin.
Producer: Lucy Lunt.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Tue 12 Jun 201802:15

More episodes

Previous

You are at the first episode

See all episodes from Sport and the British

Clip

Credits

RoleContributor
ProducerLucy Lunt
ProducerSara Conkey
ProducerGarth Brameld

Broadcasts

  • Mon 30 Jan 201213:45
  • Mon 30 Jun 201414:15
  • Tue 1 Jul 201400:15
  • Mon 25 Jul 201614:15
  • Tue 26 Jul 201602:15
  • Mon 11 Jun 201814:15
  • Tue 12 Jun 201802:15

Featured in...