Efforts for the revival of the Olympic Games
in modern times reached a peak at the end of the 19th century with the instrumental
contribution of the French Baron Pierre De Coubertin and the Greek Dimitrios
Vikelas. The first contemporary Olympic Games took place with great glamour
in 1896 in Athens, in the Panathenaic Stadium. The head quarters of the International
Olympic Academy are in Olympia now.
Also in Olympia is the altar of the Olympic flame, which is transferred every
four years to the city that hosts the Olympic Games. The lighting of the flame
takes place at the altar of the Temple of Hera and it is done with the convergence
of sunlight onto a metal reflector. This process is part of a ritual combination
that includes the prayer and the hymn to Apollo. The high priestess enters the
stadium holding the lit torch which she then hands over to the first runner
in order for it to start its long journey to the ends of the earth.