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Greece, ancient
2003 Thomas Braun, Christopher G. Simon, David W. J. Gill, Alison Burford, Anastasia N. Dinsmoor, William B. Dinsmoor jr, I. Leventi, Georges Roux, Margaret Lyttleton, Thomas Noble Howe, J. J. Coulton, Frederick Cooper, F. E. Winter, Barbara Tsakirgis, Lothar Haselberger, Marie-Christine Hellmann, John Onians, R. A. Tomlinson, Darice Birge, Wolfram Hoepfner, Reinhard Stupperich, Kalinka Huber, Susan Woodford, Andrew F. Stewart, Sheila Adam, Carol C. Mattusch, Olga Palagia, Jane Burr Carter, Jeffrey M. Hurwit, Gregory V. Leftwich, Elizabeth Bartman, Ann Thomas Wilkins, B. A. Sparkes, Tom Rasmussen, Joseph Veach Noble, Alan Johnston, Henry R. Immerwahr, Nicolas Coldstream, Robert Cook, Mary Blomberg, Maria Pipili, Elizabeth Moignard, J. M. Hemelrijk, John H. Oakley, Pascal Leblond, Ian McPhee, Irma Wehgartner, Susan I. Rotroff, Nancy Thomson de Grummond, V. von Graeve, Paolo Moreno, Martin Robertson, Jaimee Uhlenbrock, A. M. Snodgrass, Ian Carradice, Virginia Webb, Stephan Steingräber, David Whitehouse, Reynold Higgins, Imma Kilian-Dirlmeier, Donald M. Bailey, Nancy L. Klein, Anne Pearson, Alexandra Bounia, Thomas Mannack +64 moreopenaire +1 more sourceGymnasium (ancient Greece)
Abstract In ancient Greece, the gymnasium served as a training ground for athletes participating in open competitions. It served as a venue for intellectual pursuits and social interaction as well. Gymnós, which means "naked" in Ancient Greek, is where the word originates.openaire +1 more source