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Nemea Stadium: One of the most celebrated sporting arenas of the ancient world

Monument

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Ancient Nemea, GR Get Directions

According to legend, the Nemean Games were were instituted in honor of the dead Opheltes, the infant son of Lycurgus, king of Nemea, by the seven generals who marched against Thebes.

A bronze figurine of the infant Opheltes is displayed in the Archaeological Museum of Nemea, while the principal version of the myth is illustrated by a Roman-period sarcophagus exhibited in the Archaeological Museum of Ancient Corinth. According to another version of the myth, the games were established by Hercules himself after slaying the lion that was terrorizing the area, thus completing the first of the twelve labours assigned to him by Eurystheus, king of Mycenae.

First held in 573 BC, the Nemean Games were among the four most important sporting events of antiquity, after the Olympic, the Pythian and the Isthmian Games. The stadium of Nemea was built in 330 BC and had a capacity of 40,000 people. Excavations for the discovery of the stadium began in 1974, when the stone section of the starting line that divided the track into twelve lanes was uncovered. 

Looking at the stadium today, one can easily envisage the athletes entering through the surviving vaulted entrance, one of the oldest semi-circular domes in the Mediterranean. Its walls, as a matter of fact, bear inscriptions that the ancient athletes had engraved, as they waited for their turn to compete.

Directions

Ancient Nemea, 20500

Get directions

On foot

5 minutes from the settlement of Ancient Nemea

By bus

By intercity (KTEL) bus, 40 minutes from Corinth

By car

10 minutes from Nemea
20 minutes from Corinth

Opening hours

Summer hours

1 – 15 April
Daily: 08:00 – 18:00

16 – 30 April
Daily: 08:00 – 18:30

1 May – 15 September
Daily: 08:00 – 20:00

16 – 30 September
Daily: 08:00 – 19:30

1 – 15 October
Daily: 08:00 – 19:00

16 – 31 October
Daily: 08:00 – 18:30

Winter hours

1 November – 31 March

Mon: 08:30 – 15:30
Tue: closed
Wed: 08:30 – 15:30
Thu: 08:30 – 15:30
Fri: 08:30 – 15:30
Sat: 08:30 – 15:30
Sun: 08:30 – 15:30

Last admission: 20 minutes before closing time



The site remains closed on the following dates and public holidays:
January 1, March 25, May 1, Easter Sunday, December 25 & 26.

Tickets

Full: €10.00
Reduced: €5.00

Access to: the Sanctuary of Zeus at Nemea, the Nemea Stadium and the Nemea Archaeological Museum

Admission is free on March 6, April 18, May 18, the last weekend of September, on October 28, as well as on the first and third Sunday of each month between November 1 and March 31.

Amenities

WC
WiFi
Parking
Accessibility

Contact

Guardhouse of the Nemea Archaeological Site
Τ: +30 27460 22739

Ephorate of Antiquities of Corinthia
Τ: +30 27410 31443
E: efakor@culture.gr

See also

Sanctuary of Zeus in Nemea: Patron god of shepherds and animal husbandry

Sanctuary of Zeus in Nemea
Archaeological Site

Mycenae: Inside the Cyclopean Walls

Archaeological Site of Mycenae
Monument

Ancient Corinth: A hub of arts and commerce

Ancient Corinth
Archaeological Site

Ancient Sicyon: The hidden gem of Corinthia

The atrium of the Archaeological Museum of Sicyon
Archaeological Site
Hellenic Heritage
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