Pierre de Coubertin on the chivalric beginning of the Olympics: a code of honor for the modern world
Introduction: sport as secular chivalry
For Baron Pierre de Coubertin, the revival of the Olympic Games was not just the restoration of a sporting competition, but a grand educational and moral project. The key concept around which he constructed the ethical system of olympism was the "chivalric spirit" (fr. l'esprit chevaleresque). Coubertin saw the danger in modern sport at the end of the 19th century of slipping into crude professionalism, nationalistic fervor, and the thirst for profit. As an antidote, he proposed appealing not to antiquity, but to a more recent ideal — the medieval knight, transforming the Olympic athlete into a new warrior-aristocrat of spirit, following a strict code of honor.
Genesis of the idea: crisis of civilization and search for an ideal
The French aristocrat, Coubertin, deeply grieved over the defeat of France in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71, which he associated not with military weakness, but with a moral decline, the loss of "male virtues," and the cult of materialism. Studying physical education systems in England (where the ideal of "muscular Christianity" was developed) and ancient Greece, he concluded that sport should be a school of character. However, in his opinion, the Greek athlete was too focused on personal glory and physical perfection, lacking a higher moral goal. This missing element became the chivalric ideal, which synthesized physical bravery, impeccable ethics, service to a higher good (Lady, Church, suzerain), and the aesthetics of behavior.
pillars of olympic chivalry according to cubertin
The Coubertin chivalric code for the athlete was based on several immutable principles:
Fair Play: This was the cornerstone. The knight does not take advantage of dishonorable advantages, respects the opponent as an equal in combat, even if he is an enemy. Victory gained by deceit or dishonest means is not considered victor ...
Read more