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- Pheidippides - Wikipedia
'Son of Pheídippos') or Philippides (Φιλιππίδης) was a 5th-century-BC Athenian running courier who was the central figure in the story that inspired the marathon race
- The Real Pheidippides Story - Runners World
As the well-worn legend goes, after the badly outnumbered Greeks somehow managed to drive back the Persians who had invaded the coastal plain of Marathon, an Athenian messenger named Pheidippides
- Pheidippides | Marathon, Time, Route, Legend | Britannica
Pheidippides was a legendary Greek courier who is popularly believed to have run 40 km (about 25 miles) to Athens after the Battle of Marathon to announce the Greeks’ victory over Persian invaders
- The Story of the Real Marathon Run in Ancient Greece
The Athens Marathon the Authentic was established to commemorate the historic run of Pheidippides, an Athenian soldier who ran from the battlefield at Marathon to inform his fellow Greeks that the battle had been won
- Authentic Phidippides Run
Trace the legendary footsteps of Pheidippides on one of the most demanding ultradistance courses and the longest open-road run in the world
- Pheidippides: The First Man to Run A Marathon | HistoryExtra
Pheidippides: is the ancient Greek marathon runner remembered for the wrong run? Every marathon that takes place today recalls the feats of a heroic messenger in ancient Greece, who ran not just 26 miles but 300 and accomplished this remarkable feat of endurance running in only three days
- The Real Story of Pheidippides - Greek Boston
Pheidippides, also referred to as Pheidippides, was the messenger soldier who famously ran a long distance from the battlefield at Marathon to Athens in order to tell the people that the Athenians had, in fact won
- 490 BC: The Greeks Triumph at Marathon and the Legend of Pheidippides
According to legend, a messenger named Pheidippides ran 26 miles from Marathon to Athens to deliver the news of the victory, only to collapse and die from exhaustion His legendary run inspired the modern marathon race, commemorating the bravery and endurance of the ancient Greek warriors
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