"Fitness
Has Fallen Since The Days of Ancient
Greece"
We may not be as
fit as the people of ancient Athens, despite all that
modern diet and training can provide, according to
research by University of Leeds exercise physiologist, Dr
Harry Rossiter.
Dr Rossiter
measured the metabolic rates of modern athletes rowing a
reconstruction of an Athenian trireme, a 37m long warship
powered by 170 rowers seated in three tiers. Using
portable metabolic analysers, he measured the energy
consumption of a sample of the athletes powering the ship
over a range of different speeds to estimate the
efficiency of the human engine of the warship. The
research is published in
New Scientist today (February
8).
By comparing these
findings to classical texts that record details of their
endurance, he realised that the rowers of ancient Athens
– around 500BC – would had to have been highly elite
athletes, even by modern day
standards.
Says Dr Rossiter:
“Ancient Athens had up to 200 triremes at any one time,
and with 170 rowers in each ship, the rowers were clearly
not a small elite. Yet this large group, it seems, would
match up well with the best of modern
athletes.
Either ancient
Athenians had a more efficient way of rowing the trireme
or they would have to be an extremely fit group. Our data
raise the interesting notion that these ancient athletes
were genetically better adapted to endurance exercise
than we are today.”
Dr Rossiter worked
closely with Professor Boris Rankov, Professor of
Classics at Royal Holloway, University of London to
interpret the details of the endurance of the ancient
rowers from classical texts. Many of these texts were
originally collected and used to estimate sustainable
ship speeds in
The Athenian Trireme (CUP, 2rd edition 2000), which
Professor Rankov co-authored.
For example, one
account talks of the Athenians quelling a revolt in
Mytilene on the island of Lesbos in the eastern Aegean.
The Athenian assembly ordered all Mytiline’s men to
death, and despatched a trireme to carry out this
command. The next day, the assembly relented and sent a
second trireme to halt the
massacre.
According to the
records of Thucydides, this second trireme would have
made the journey in about 24 hours, rowing in shifts and
eating while they rowed, so the ship could travel
non-stop.
Says Dr Rossiter:
“From these details we can estimate the average
sustainable ship speeds. Then, using the reconstruction
we measured the metabolic demands of the human engine
required to sustain these speeds. If the historians are
correct, we would struggle to find enough people at that
level of fitness today to power the ships at those
speeds.”
Triremes were a
huge technological advance, allowing Athens to dominate
the seas. They had a strong keel, taken forward into a
huge spike covered in bronze plates, which meant they
could ram and hole enemy ships – a new technique in naval
warfare. To ensure sufficient impact to cause damage, the
triremes had to reach great speeds – so were designed
with more than three times more rowers than earlier
warships. By placing the rowers on three tiers, the ship
could remain a manoeuvrable length and
weight.
The trireme used
in Dr Rossiter’s research,
Olympias, was built
in the 1980s and was used to carry the Olympic flame to
Piraeus, the port near Athens, at the start of the last Olympic
Games. It is now housed in a museum in
Piraeus.
For more
information,
contact Abigail Chard at campuspr on 0113 258 9880 /
07960 448 532 or email
Abigail@campuspr.co.uk
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