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Pancratium

παγκράτιον). The combination of boxing and wrestling in Greek gymnastics, getting its name from the fact that it called into play all the powers (πᾶν+κράτος) of the fighter. At Sparta the name was applied to any rough, irregular fighting that was not conducted according to any

Wrestlers in the Pancratium. (Krause,
Gymnastik.

rules, but in which even biting and scratching were not uncommon. The Greeks ascribed the invention of the pancratium to Theseus, who thus fought against the Minotaur. (See the Schol. on Nem. v. 49; and Theseus.) It made its way into the four great games of Greece, and there was a pancratium for boys as well as for men (Pausan. v. 8 fin.). It was fought partly standing and partly on the ground, and the boxing was the chief feature of it ( Nem. iii. 17; Lucian, Anach. 8, 24). The caestus (q. v.) was not used, however, and the blows were given, not with the closed fist, but with the hands curved, as in the second illustration. When two παγκρατιασταί began to fight, they stood with outstretched arms,

Pancratium. (Krause,
Gymnastik.

feeling for an opening, and each tried to get the other into such a position as to have the sun shine in his eyes. With the clinch the real fight began. Biting and butting were against the rules (Lucian, Demon. 47). The victory was not decided until one of the combatants was killed, or held up a finger in token of defeat (Imag. ii. 6).

At Rome the pancratium is first mentioned in the time of Caligula (Dio Cass. lix. 13), and it soon became very popular.

For the training of the fighters, see Athletae. The chief works are those of H. Mercurialis, De Arte Gymnastica, and Krause, Die Gymnastik und Agonistik der Hellenen, i. pp. 534-556.

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  • Cross-references from this page (2):
    • Pindar, Nemean, 3
    • Pindar, Nemean, 5
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