Scenic and challenging marathons around the world
A soldier named Pheidippides in 490 B.C. ran from a battleground in Marathon—where outnumbered Greeks had been invaded by Persians—to Athens in order to announce the news of a Greek victory. Bursting into the Acropolis, he shouted “Nike! Nike! Nenikekiam,” (which roughly translates to “Victory! Victory! Rejoice, we conquer!”) before collapsing and dying.
That story of the first marathon inspired Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the International Olympic Committee, to add a 24.9-mile race dubbed “the marathon” to the 1896 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece. A Greek postal worker won the race; only nine runners reached the finish line.
























