Thelostgames.com
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== TheLostGames.com == | == TheLostGames.com == | ||
* [http://www.thelostgames.com Direct link] | * [http://www.thelostgames.com Direct link] | ||
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==== Biography ==== | ==== Biography ==== | ||
- | See [[Eli#Biography|Biography]] | + | '''Eli Hunt's Biography''' |
+ | <blockquote> | ||
+ | :Some people call me an amateur historian. Others call me an adventurer. I see myself as an investigator. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :What do I investigate? Ancient Olympic mysteries. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :'''Biography''' | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :I grew up in the city of York. My father was a professor of archaeology, my mum was a professor of history. When I was 10 years old, they took me on an "educational holiday" — to the ruins at Ancient Olympia. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :Most of the tourists were paying attention to the best preserved parts — the Temple of Zeus, the palaestra colonnade, the entrance to the stadium. I was more interested in the piles of rubble, the places no one was looking. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :My parents didn't even notice I had left their side. It was two hours before they found me digging through the dirt. They were quite mad at me for running off — until I showed them what I'd found — a tiny bronze statue. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :I turned the statue in to the archaeological museum, and their researchers later authenticated it as a lost work of Pheidias, the greatest of all ancient Greek sculptors. The researchers were thrilled, my parents were proud as could be, and the media dubbed me a young hero of history. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :I've been an avid fan and researcher of the Ancient Olympics ever since. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :In recent years, I've become especially interested in the "lost history" of the Olympics — the stories that most experts dismiss as urban legends, without even bothering to look for evidence. I ask the questions that most historians and archaeologists have never even tried to answer. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :In the past few years, I've spent a small fortune traveling the world, following up on the leads that everyone else wants to ignore. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :My first book chronicling these investigations, The Lost Olympics: Forgotten Mysteries and Urban Legends from Ancient Greece, will be published in late 2008. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :In the meanwhile, I'm pleased to share some of the stories with you on this site, through my new podcast series "The Lost Olympics." | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :'''Contact me''' | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :I'm always looking for new leads on mysterious artifacts and strange discoveries. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :And if you have your own theories about Ancient Olympic history, I'd love to hear them. | ||
+ | :<br> | ||
+ | :Email me: '''thelostgamesSPLATgmail.com''' | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
==== FAQ ==== | ==== FAQ ==== | ||
==== Interesting links ==== | ==== Interesting links ==== |
Revision as of 17:37, 10 March 2008
TheLostGames.com
- Direct link
- Official website of Eli Hunt
- Discovered on March 5th, 2008
Content Overview
Podcasts
- The Lost Sport of Olympia (details and transcript)
- The Ancient Game Keepers (details and transcript)
Biography
Eli Hunt's Biography
- Some people call me an amateur historian. Others call me an adventurer. I see myself as an investigator.
- What do I investigate? Ancient Olympic mysteries.
- Biography
- I grew up in the city of York. My father was a professor of archaeology, my mum was a professor of history. When I was 10 years old, they took me on an "educational holiday" — to the ruins at Ancient Olympia.
- Most of the tourists were paying attention to the best preserved parts — the Temple of Zeus, the palaestra colonnade, the entrance to the stadium. I was more interested in the piles of rubble, the places no one was looking.
- My parents didn't even notice I had left their side. It was two hours before they found me digging through the dirt. They were quite mad at me for running off — until I showed them what I'd found — a tiny bronze statue.
- I turned the statue in to the archaeological museum, and their researchers later authenticated it as a lost work of Pheidias, the greatest of all ancient Greek sculptors. The researchers were thrilled, my parents were proud as could be, and the media dubbed me a young hero of history.
- I've been an avid fan and researcher of the Ancient Olympics ever since.
- In recent years, I've become especially interested in the "lost history" of the Olympics — the stories that most experts dismiss as urban legends, without even bothering to look for evidence. I ask the questions that most historians and archaeologists have never even tried to answer.
- In the past few years, I've spent a small fortune traveling the world, following up on the leads that everyone else wants to ignore.
- My first book chronicling these investigations, The Lost Olympics: Forgotten Mysteries and Urban Legends from Ancient Greece, will be published in late 2008.
- In the meanwhile, I'm pleased to share some of the stories with you on this site, through my new podcast series "The Lost Olympics."
- Contact me
- I'm always looking for new leads on mysterious artifacts and strange discoveries.
- And if you have your own theories about Ancient Olympic history, I'd love to hear them.
- Email me: thelostgamesSPLATgmail.com