It All Started With The Summer Games Medals
At the first Olympic Games of the modern era in Athens in 1896, the winner was crowned with an olive wreath and received a silver medal. James B. Connolly of Massachusetts was the first modern Olympic champion to be rewarded thus. The 1904 Olympic Games in St Louis, were the first at which gold, silver and bronze medals were awarded for first, second, and third place.
With the exception of the medals for the 1956 equestrian events, the medals for the Games of the Olympiad became standardized starting in 1928. On one side, there was the traditional design of the goddess of victory, holding a palm in her left hand and a winner’s crown in her right hand. On the other, an Olympic champion was carried triumphantly by the crowd, with an Olympic stadium in the background. For the 1972 Games in Munich, the Organising Committee started a new trend, with a reverse designed by an artist from the Bauhaus school, Gerhard Marcks. A further design adaptation was introduced for the 2004 Games in Athens when the International Olympic Committee (IOC) approved the Organising Committee’s (OCOG) proposal for an updated version of the goddess of victory and the stadium.
At the 1904 Olympic Games in St Louis, the medal was attached to a coloured ribbon with a pin to fix it to the athlete’s chest. It was not until 1960, in Rome however, that the Olympic medals were first designed to be placed around the winners’ necks. On this occasion, a laurel leaf chain was designed for the purpose. At subsequent Games editions, however, it has most often been a coloured ribbon that was used.
The Winter Games Medals
In the beginning, it was stipulated that the Olympic medals for the Winter Games must be different from those of the Summer Games. Today, their design must take into account certain visual elements defined by the IOC and the OCOG, with the IOC having the final approval. The Greek goddess of victory must not appear on the obverse. They must show the Olympic emblem, the full name of the Games in question, the name of the sport or discipline concerned and the OCOG’s emblem.
Additionally, the Winter Games medals should reflect the visual look, plus cultural and aesthetic elements selected by the OCOG. For the 2010 Games in Vancouver, for example, the obverse of each medal featured a unique cropping taken from a contemporary First Nations piece of art. The Sochi medals for 2014 meld metal with an etched polycarbonate core.
Olympic Medals
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PyeongChang 2018
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Rio 2016
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Sochi 2014
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London 2012
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Vancouver 2010
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Beijing 2008
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Torino 2006
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Athens 2004
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Salt Lake City 2002
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Sydney 2000
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Nagano 1998
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Atlanta 1996
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Lillehammer 1994
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Barcelona 1992
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Albertville 1992
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Seoul 1988
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Calgary 1988
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Los Angeles 1984
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Sarajevo 1984
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Moscow 1980
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Lake Placid 1980
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Montreal 1976
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Innsbruck 1976
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Munich 1972
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Sapporo 1972
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Mexico 1968
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Grenoble 1968
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Tokyo 1964
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Innsbruck 1964
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Rome 1960
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Squaw Valley 1960
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Melbourne 1956
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Stockholm 1956
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Cortina d'Ampezzo 1956
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Oslo 1952
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Helsinki 1952
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London 1948
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St. Moritz 1948
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Garmisch-Partenkirchen 1936
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Berlin 1936
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Los Angeles 1932
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Lake Placid 1932
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St Moritz 1928
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Amsterdam 1928
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Chamonix 1924
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Paris 1924
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Antwerp 1920
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Stockholm 1912
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London 1908
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St. Louis 1904
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Paris 1900
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Athens 1896