All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Olympic Torch: A Flame Carried Across the World

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, ethics, citizenship, art, language
Core question How did one borrowed idea from ancient Greece become a powerful modern symbol — and what does the journey of the Olympic flame tell us about how symbols can be used for good and ill?
The Olympic flame being lit at Olympia in Greece, where the ancient games were held. The flame is started using only the sun's rays focused through a curved mirror. It will then be carried by relay to the host city of the modern Olympic Games. Photo: pollobarca2 / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 2.0
Introduction

Every two years, in a small valley in southern Greece called Olympia, a group of people in long white robes gathers among ancient stone ruins. A woman holds up a curved mirror. She catches the sun's rays in the mirror and focuses them on the tip of a torch. The torch lights. The flame is now ready. Over the next weeks, the flame will travel — by runner, by plane, by boat, sometimes by camel or by horse — to wherever the next Olympic Games are being held. Thousands of people will carry the torch. The flame at the end of the journey is the same flame that was lit in Olympia. When the Games begin, the flame is used to light a great cauldron in the host city's stadium, and the cauldron burns through every day of the competition. When the Games end, the flame is put out. The next time, the cycle starts again at Olympia. The Olympic flame is one of the most famous traditions in modern sport. It is also younger than many people think. The relay from Olympia was started in 1936, by Nazi Germany, for the Berlin Olympics. The complicated history of the torch — its ancient inspiration, its modern start, its use for both unity and propaganda — makes it one of the most interesting symbols in the world. This lesson asks where the torch came from, what it has been used to mean, and how a symbol can change as it travels.

The object
Origin
The flame tradition was started for the modern Olympic Games in 1928 (lit only at the host city) and the relay starting from Olympia in Greece was added in 1936.
Period
The modern Olympic flame: from 1928. The relay from Olympia: from 1936. The ancient Greek Olympic Games on which it is based: from about 776 BCE to 393 CE.
Made of
Each Olympic Games designs its own torch. The torches are made of metal, often aluminium or steel, sometimes with wood or other materials. The flame burns olive oil, propane, or another fuel.
Size
A torch is usually about 60 to 80 cm long, designed to be carried in one hand by a runner.
Number of objects
Each Games produces thousands of torches — one for each runner in the relay. The torch a runner carries is usually theirs to keep afterwards.
Where it is now
The original ancient Greek Olympic site is in Olympia, Greece. The Olympic flame is lit there before each Games. Past Olympic torches are in museums, athletic halls of fame, and the homes of former torch-bearers.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Olympic torch was started in its modern form by Nazi Germany. How will you teach this honestly without diminishing the torch's positive meanings today?
  2. Many students may have watched torch relays on television. How will you connect this everyday image to its complicated history?
  3. The torch is a symbol that means different things to different people. How will you keep the lesson balanced?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
In ancient Greece, from about 776 BCE, athletic games were held every four years at a sacred site called Olympia. The games were dedicated to the Greek god Zeus. Athletes from many Greek city-states competed in running, wrestling, throwing, and other events. The games ran for over 1,000 years before they were ended in 393 CE by a Roman emperor who wanted to stop pagan religious festivals. During the ancient games, fires burned at the temple of Zeus and elsewhere on the sacred site. Runners did sometimes carry torches in religious processions. But there was no Olympic torch relay travelling across countries. The modern torch ceremony is a 20th-century invention, inspired by ancient Greece but not directly continuing it. Why might it matter to know that the modern torch is a modern invention?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because traditions are sometimes presented as older than they are. The phrase 'as the ancient Greeks did' is sometimes used to make modern things sound more important. The Olympic torch relay is a fine modern tradition, but it does not have 2,500 years of history behind it. It has less than 100 years. This matters because we should be honest about when traditions actually started, and about what real ancient Greek practice was. The ancient Greeks ran races. They lit fires at Olympia. They valued sport. But they did not run a torch from Olympia to the host city — because there was only one host city, Olympia itself. The modern torch relay was invented for the modern Olympic Games, which started in 1896 and have moved between cities ever since. Knowing the real history makes the modern torch more interesting, not less. It is a recent idea that has become powerful very quickly. Students should see that 'tradition' is sometimes older than we think and sometimes newer. Both kinds are real, but they are different.

2
The modern Olympic torch relay was created for the 1936 Summer Olympic Games in Berlin. Berlin in 1936 was the capital of Nazi Germany. Adolf Hitler had been in power for three years. The Nazis used the Olympics as a major propaganda event — a chance to show the world a strong, modern, organised Germany. The torch relay was the idea of a German organiser named Carl Diem. Three thousand runners carried the torch from Olympia in Greece to Berlin, through seven countries — Greece, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Germany. Three years later, the German army would invade most of these same countries. Some historians have noted that the torch relay route was almost the same as the route Nazi forces would later take. Does this complicate the meaning of the modern torch?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Yes, in important ways. The torch is now a worldwide symbol of unity, sport, and international cooperation. But it was created by a regime that started one of the worst wars in history and committed the Holocaust. The original organisers were not all Nazis — Carl Diem himself was a sports administrator, not a political leader, and the Olympic ideal he promoted came from sources older than the Nazi regime. But the relay was approved, funded, and used by the Nazi government for political purposes. The propaganda film of the Berlin Olympics, made by the director Leni Riefenstahl, opens with images of the torch relay. After the war, the torch relay continued — at the 1948 London Games and every Games since. By then it was a separate tradition, no longer tied to its origin. The complications matter, though. The torch was not invented in pure good faith. Symbols can change meaning over time. They can also carry traces of where they came from. Students should see that even a symbol as positive as the modern Olympic torch has a history that is not simple. Honest teaching includes the complications.

3
Despite its complicated origin, the Olympic torch has become one of the most powerful symbols in modern sport. Each Olympic Games designs a unique torch. The 2012 London torch was perforated with 8,000 holes, one for each torchbearer. The 2020 Tokyo torch was shaped like a cherry blossom. The 2024 Paris torch was symmetrical to allow it to be held by runners with disabilities equally well from either hand. Every torch is designed by an artist or design team chosen by the host country. The relay routes have grown enormous. In 2008, before the Beijing Games, the torch travelled to every continent. In 2004, before the Athens Games, it visited every previous Olympic host city. Some routes have caused controversy — in 2008, protests followed the torch in many cities over China's policies in Tibet. Why might one symbol cause so many different feelings?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because symbols are containers. They hold what people put into them. To one person, the Olympic torch represents international unity, peace through sport, and the achievement of athletes from every country. To another, the same torch passing through their city may represent a host country's politics, a sport that has become commercial, or a tradition with a complicated history. To a child watching it pass, it may represent magic. All of these readings are real. The torch itself is a piece of metal and a flame. The meaning is added by people. This is true of all symbols — flags, songs, monuments, mascots. They carry what we put into them. The Olympic torch is a particularly clear case because so many people watch it and so many countries are involved. Students should see that 'what does this symbol mean' is rarely a simple question. It depends on who is asking, when, and where.

4
When the Olympic flame is lit at Olympia, the lighting follows a specific procedure. A group of women in long robes — actresses playing ancient priestesses — performs a ceremony around the ancient temple of Hera. The high priestess holds a parabolic mirror. The mirror is curved like a small bowl, and it focuses the sun's rays onto a single small point. At that point, a torch is held. The concentrated sunlight is hot enough to ignite the torch. If the day is cloudy, the ceremony cannot light the flame. There is a backup: a flame lit in advance using the same method on a sunny day, kept in a special lantern. Why might the lighting use only the sun?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For two connected reasons. First: tradition. The ancient Greeks had techniques for using mirrors and the sun to start fires. Lighting the flame from sunlight links the modern ceremony to ancient skill, even if the relay itself is modern. Second: meaning. Sunlight is universal — the same sun shines on every country. A flame lit from the sun belongs to all of humanity, not to any one country or fuel source. The choice is symbolic and beautiful. Modern matches or lighters would work much faster and more reliably. The mirror method is slower and depends on weather. But the slowness and the dependence on the sun are part of what makes the flame feel sacred. Students should see that this is one of many places where 'efficiency' is not the only value. Some things are done slowly on purpose. The Japanese kintsugi tradition does this. The Marshallese stick chart tradition does this. The lighting of the Olympic flame does this. The point is not to do the thing fastest. It is to do the thing meaningfully. End the discovery here. The lesson is finished. The flame is lit. The torch is on its way.

What this object teaches

The Olympic torch and flame are central symbols of the modern Olympic Games. The flame is lit in Olympia, Greece — where the ancient Olympics were held — using a parabolic mirror to focus sunlight. It is then carried by relay, often by thousands of runners, to the host city of the next Games. The relay was started by Nazi Germany for the 1936 Berlin Olympics, as part of a propaganda effort. After the war, it continued as a separate tradition, with the political associations gradually fading. Today, each Games designs its own torch, often elaborately. Past relays have visited every continent, and the torch has been carried by everyone from Olympic champions to schoolchildren to people with disabilities. The flame's lighting from sunlight links it to ancient Greek tradition, even though the modern ceremony was invented in the 20th century. Like all powerful symbols, the torch means different things to different people — unity and peace to many, complicated reminders to others. It is a young tradition pretending to be older, a modern invention with ancient inspiration, and one of the most recognised objects in world sport.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
How old is the Olympic torch relay?Thousands of years, from ancient GreeceIt started in 1936, for the Berlin Olympics. Inspired by ancient Greece but not continuing it.
Did the ancient Greeks have a torch relay?YesThey had fires and torch races, but not the modern intercontinental relay. There was only one Olympic site — Olympia.
Who created the modern relay?The International Olympic CommitteeNazi Germany, for the 1936 Berlin Olympics, partly for propaganda
How is the flame lit?With matches or a lighterUsing only the sun, focused through a curved mirror at the ancient site of Olympia
What does the torch mean?International unity, full stopIt means different things to different people — unity and peace to many, complicated reminders to others
Key words
Olympic Games
A major international sporting event held every two years (alternating Summer and Winter Games). The modern Games started in 1896 in Athens, inspired by the ancient Greek Olympic Games which ran from about 776 BCE to 393 CE.
Example: The Summer Olympics include over 30 sports. The Winter Olympics include winter sports like skiing and ice skating. Each Games involves athletes from over 200 countries.
Olympic flame
A flame lit before each Olympic Games at Olympia in Greece, using only the sun's rays focused through a curved mirror. The flame is then carried by relay to the host city.
Example: The flame burns in a great cauldron at the host stadium throughout the Games. When the Games end, the flame is put out, and the cycle begins again at Olympia.
Olympic torch
The hand-held torch that carries the Olympic flame during the relay. Each Olympic Games designs its own torch — often artistically — with thousands of copies made for the runners.
Example: The 2024 Paris torch was symmetrical so it could be held with either hand equally well, including by runners with disabilities.
Olympia
An ancient Greek site in the western Peloponnese, where the original Greek Olympic Games were held from about 776 BCE to 393 CE. The site is now a major archaeological park.
Example: The Olympic flame is still lit at Olympia today, in front of the ruined temple of Hera, by women dressed as ancient priestesses.
Carl Diem
A German sports administrator (1882-1962) who created the Olympic torch relay for the 1936 Berlin Olympics. He was not a leading Nazi, but his relay was used by the Nazi government for propaganda.
Example: Diem's idea was to link the modern Berlin Games to ancient Greek tradition by physically carrying a flame from Olympia to Berlin.
Propaganda
Information — often visual or emotional — used to promote a political view or government. The 1936 Olympic torch relay was used as Nazi propaganda to present Germany as a strong modern country.
Example: The 1936 Berlin Olympics produced a famous propaganda film by Leni Riefenstahl, which begins with images of the torch relay.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline: ancient Greek Olympics (776 BCE - 393 CE), modern Olympics begin (1896), first modern flame at host city (1928), first relay from Olympia (1936 Berlin), each subsequent Games. Discuss how a 'tradition' that is less than 100 years old has come to feel ancient.
  • Geography: On a world map, mark Olympia in Greece. Then trace the route of one famous torch relay — the 2008 Beijing relay went to every continent, the 2012 London relay covered the United Kingdom, Ireland, and parts of Europe. Discuss how relay routes shape attention to places.
  • Citizenship: In some years, Olympic torch relays have caused protests. The 2008 Beijing relay was followed by protests over China's policies in Tibet. Discuss whether sporting events should be separated from politics, or whether politics is always part of how we experience sport.
  • Ethics: Hold a class discussion: 'When a tradition has a complicated origin — like the torch, started by Nazi Germany — should we keep it, change it, or replace it?' Strong answers will see that there are real arguments on both sides, and that some traditions have moved past their origins while others have not.
  • Art: Each Olympic Games designs a unique torch. Look at images of past Olympic torches. Each student designs their own — for an imagined Olympics in their home city. The design should mean something specific. Discuss what each torch says about the country and the time.
  • Science: Discuss how a parabolic mirror focuses sunlight. The mirror's curved shape gathers parallel rays of light into a single point, where the temperature is high enough to start a fire. Try the experiment with a magnifying glass and a piece of paper on a sunny day (with adult supervision).
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The Olympic torch relay is an ancient Greek tradition.

Right

It was invented for the 1936 Berlin Olympics, by Nazi Germany. The ancient Greeks had fires and some torch races, but not an intercontinental relay. The modern tradition is inspired by ancient Greece, not continuing it directly.

Why

Many people assume the relay is ancient because it feels ancient. Knowing the real history makes the tradition more interesting.

Wrong

The flame is lit with a match or lighter for convenience.

Right

It is lit using only the sun's rays focused through a curved mirror. This connects the modern ceremony to ancient skill and to a fuel that belongs to all of humanity.

Why

The slowness and weather-dependence of the sun-method are part of what makes the flame feel sacred. Efficiency is not the only value.

Wrong

The Olympic torch only means good things.

Right

It is a powerful symbol that means different things to different people. To many, unity and peace through sport. To others, complicated reminders of its 1936 origin or of host countries' politics. The torch is a container for many meanings.

Why

Symbols are rarely simple. Knowing the complications is part of taking a symbol seriously.

Wrong

Only Olympic athletes carry the torch.

Right

Most torchbearers are not Olympic athletes. They are local heroes, schoolchildren, volunteers, and ordinary people chosen for their service to their communities. The famous athletes light the cauldron at the end.

Why

This shows that the relay is meant to involve communities, not just sport. Thousands of ordinary people have carried the torch.

Teaching this with care

Treat the Olympic torch with the seriousness of any major modern symbol. The connection to Nazi Germany must be told honestly but not used to dismiss the torch's modern positive meanings. Be clear about what the 1936 Berlin Olympics were — a propaganda event for Hitler's regime — without dwelling on graphic details of Nazi ideology. Younger students need to know what the Nazis stood for in basic terms (a regime that murdered six million Jews and started the Second World War) without needing the full detail. Older students can handle more. Be balanced when discussing torch protests. The 2008 Beijing protests over Tibet are part of the history; mention them without taking a partisan position on China-Tibet relations specifically. The 2024 Paris torch design for accessibility is worth mentioning positively. If you have students from countries that have hosted the Olympics — Greece, the United Kingdom, China, Japan, France, the United States, Australia, and many others — they may have personal connections to the torch passing through their towns. Give them space to share if they want. Be careful with 'ancient versus modern' framing — do not say the modern Olympic torch is fake or fraudulent because it is recent. It is a genuine modern tradition with deep ancient inspiration. Both can be true at once. Finally, do not turn the lesson into a critique of the Olympics generally. There are real debates about cost, environmental impact, and political use of the Games, but those are not the lesson. The lesson is about the torch as an object and a symbol.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Olympic torch.

  1. What is the Olympic flame, and where is it lit?

    The Olympic flame is a flame lit before each Olympic Games at Olympia in Greece, where the ancient Olympic Games were held. It is lit using only the sun's rays focused through a curved mirror, and then carried by relay to the host city.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the location (Olympia) and the lighting method (sun, mirror). Either is enough for partial credit.
  2. When was the modern Olympic torch relay started?

    In 1936, for the Berlin Olympic Games, by Nazi Germany. It was created partly for propaganda — to present Germany as a strong, modern country. The tradition has continued at every Olympics since 1948.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the year and the German origin. Awareness of the propaganda use is a bonus.
  3. Why is it important to know that the torch relay is a modern invention, not an ancient Greek tradition?

    Because traditions are sometimes presented as older than they are. The relay is genuinely inspired by ancient Greece but does not continue an ancient practice. Knowing the real history makes the tradition more interesting and helps us think honestly about how symbols are made.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the difference between 'inspired by' and 'continuing'. The point is honest history.
  4. How does the parabolic mirror work to light the flame?

    The mirror is curved like a small bowl. It catches the sun's parallel rays and focuses them onto a single point. At that point, the concentrated sunlight is hot enough to start a fire. This method has been known since ancient Greek times.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the curved shape and the focusing of sunlight. Specific physics terms are a bonus.
  5. Why might the same Olympic torch mean different things to different people?

    Because symbols are containers — they hold the meanings people put into them. To many, the torch means international unity and peace through sport. To others, it brings complicated reminders of its 1936 origin or of host countries' politics. All of these readings are real.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises that symbols can carry many meanings. The point is that 'what does this mean' depends on who is asking.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Olympic torch relay was started by Nazi Germany. The tradition has continued for nearly 90 years and now means something very different. Can a tradition outgrow its origins?

    This is a real question with arguments on both sides. Some students will say yes — symbols can change meaning, and most people watching a torch relay today have no association with 1936. Others will say no — origins are part of what something is, and we should remember where things come from. Strong answers will see that both can be true at once. The torch is a symbol of international unity and a symbol with a complicated history. Acknowledging the history does not erase the modern meaning. End by saying that this question applies to many other traditions, monuments, and symbols around the world.
  2. In some years, Olympic torch relays have been followed by protests — for example in 2008 over China's policies in Tibet. Should sporting events be separated from politics, or is politics always part of how we experience them?

    This is one of the oldest debates about the Olympics. Students may say sport should be neutral; politics ruins the games; or that hosting a major event is itself a political choice and protests are legitimate. Strong answers will see that this is a hard question with no clean answer. The Olympics have been used for political purposes by many host countries (Berlin 1936, Beijing 2008, Sochi 2014, others) and have also been a place where political division has been bridged. End by saying that this is a real ongoing argument among athletes, organisers, and viewers.
  3. If you could design an Olympic torch for an imagined Games in your own city, what would it look like and what would it mean?

    This is a creative question. Students may design torches inspired by their local landscape, history, or culture. Push them to explain not just the design but the meaning — what does each part stand for? The deeper point is that symbols are designed. Each torch is a small piece of public art, with choices made by specific designers. The Olympic torch is one of the most-watched designed objects in the world.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'How do you start a fire without matches, lighters, or any modern tools?' Take guesses. Then say: 'Every two years, in Greece, a group of people light a small fire using only the sun and a curved mirror. That fire becomes the Olympic flame. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Olympic torch and flame: a flame lit at Olympia in Greece using a parabolic mirror, then carried by relay to the host city of the next Olympic Games. Each Games designs its own torch, often elaborately. The relay involves thousands of runners. Pause and ask: 'How old do you think this tradition is?' Most students will guess very old. Then surprise them: the relay was started in 1936.
  3. UNDO THE WRONG STORIES (15 min)
    On the board, write three statements: (1) The Olympic torch relay is an ancient Greek tradition. (2) The torch only means good things. (3) Only Olympic athletes carry the torch. Take each in turn. Replace each with what we now know — the relay started in 1936; the torch carries many meanings, including complicated ones; thousands of ordinary people carry the torch. End by asking: 'Why might a 90-year-old tradition feel like it is much older?'
  4. THE SYMBOL ACTIVITY (10 min)
    On a piece of paper, each student designs a torch for an imagined Games in their own city. The design should include: a shape, a fuel, a colour scheme, and one feature that means something specific to their place. Each student writes one sentence explaining what their torch means. Display the designs. Discuss: how does design carry meaning? The Olympic torch is one of the most-watched designed objects in the world.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'Can a tradition outgrow its origins?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'The Olympic torch is a 90-year-old tradition pretending to be 2,500 years old. It was created for purposes some of us would not approve of today. It has become a symbol that millions of people love. Both things are true at once. The torch teaches us that symbols are made by people, change with time, and carry the meanings we put into them. The flame is real. What we do with it is up to us.'
Classroom materials
Mirror and Sun
Instructions: On a sunny day, with adult supervision, take a magnifying glass outside. Hold it so the sun's rays pass through it and focus on a piece of paper or dry leaf. Move the lens up and down until the bright spot is as small and bright as possible. After a few seconds, the paper or leaf will start to smoke. (A parabolic mirror does the same thing in reverse — reflecting and focusing rather than refracting.) Discuss: this is the same physics that lights the Olympic flame at Olympia.
Example: In Mr Dimitri's class, students used magnifying glasses on a sunny afternoon. After about 30 seconds, one student's leaf started to smoke. The teacher said: 'You have just done what the priestesses do at Olympia. The light from 150 million kilometres away has been focused enough to start a fire. The Greeks knew this 2,500 years ago. They knew it because they had carefully made mirrors and lenses. The same physics. The same flame.'
Design Your Torch
Instructions: Each student designs an Olympic torch on paper. Requirements: (1) a shape — including handle and bowl; (2) a colour scheme — what colours and why; (3) a feature unique to their city or country; (4) one sentence explaining what the torch stands for. Display the designs. Discuss: how does design carry meaning?
Example: In Ms Yuki's class, students designed torches with cherry blossoms (Japan), Maori carvings (New Zealand), Adinkra symbols (Ghana), and one with a curved shape inspired by the local river. The teacher said: 'Each of you has now done what real torch designers do. You picked a shape with reasons. You picked colours with meanings. You connected the torch to a place. The 2024 Paris torch was designed exactly this way — by a team that thought about every part. Your designs are not random. Neither are the real ones.'
The Honest Tradition
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'Are there traditions you take part in that are newer than people realise? Or older than people realise?' Examples might include: many 'ancient' costumes are actually 19th-century inventions; many 'modern' practices have very old roots; many family traditions are actually only a couple of generations old. Each group shares one example. Discuss: what do we lose and gain by being honest about the real ages of traditions?
Example: In one class, students named: the kilt (much of the modern Scottish form was invented in the 19th century), the white wedding dress (popularised by Queen Victoria in 1840), Hawaiian hula (ancient roots, modernised performance form), Christmas trees (a 16th-century German tradition that spread globally in the 19th century). The teacher said: 'You have just listed several traditions that are not what they look like. None of these is fake. They are all real traditions. They are also more recent than people often think. The Olympic torch is in the same category — a real modern tradition with ancient inspiration. Knowing this is honest history.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Hōkūleʻa for a different kind of revival — an actual ancient practice brought back, in contrast to a modern practice given an ancient feel.
  • Try a lesson on the Asante gold weight for another object that is both art and tool, with a tradition spanning centuries.
  • Try a lesson on the Antikythera mechanism for another object connecting ancient Greece to the modern world.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how symbols are used in politics — flags, monuments, mascots, anthems. The Olympic torch is one of many symbols whose meaning is contested.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on the design of public symbols. What makes a flag work? What makes a logo memorable? What makes a torch feel sacred?
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a project on the 1936 Berlin Olympics and Nazi propaganda — for older students who can handle the material carefully.
Key takeaways
  • The Olympic torch and flame are central symbols of the modern Olympic Games. The flame is lit in Olympia, Greece, using only the sun's rays focused through a curved mirror.
  • The modern torch relay was created in 1936 by Nazi Germany for the Berlin Olympics, partly as propaganda. After the Second World War, it continued as a separate tradition.
  • The ancient Greeks did not have an Olympic torch relay. They had fires and some torch races, but not the modern intercontinental relay. The modern tradition is inspired by ancient Greece, not continuing it.
  • Each Olympic Games designs its own torch, often elaborately. Recent torches have included designs for accessibility, environmental themes, and cultural specifics of the host country.
  • The torch is a symbol that means different things to different people — international unity and peace to many, complicated reminders of its origin or of host countries' politics to others.
  • Like all powerful symbols, the Olympic torch is a container for the meanings people put into it. Knowing the real history of the tradition makes it more interesting, not less.
Sources
  • The Nazi Olympics: Berlin 1936 — David Clay Large (2007) [academic]
  • The Olympic Torch Relay: A Brief History — International Olympic Committee (2024) [institution]
  • Why Hitler invented the modern Olympic torch relay — BBC History (2016) [news]
  • Olympia: The Story of the Ancient Olympic Games — Robin Waterfield (2023) [book]
  • Olympic torch designs through the years — Olympic Museum, Lausanne (2024) [museum]