![]() However, no continent is represented by any specific ring. As can be read in the Olympic Charter, the Olympic symbol represents the union of the five regions of the world and the meeting of athletes from throughout the world at the Olympic Games. The current view of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is that the symbol "reinforces the idea" that the Olympic Movement is international and welcomes all countries of the world to join. The rings would subsequently be featured prominently in Nazi images in 1936 as part of an effort to glorify the Third Reich. ![]() This created a myth that the symbol had an ancient Greek origin. This has become known as "Carl Diem's Stone". Later, two British authors Lynn and Gray Poole when visiting Delphi in the late 1950s saw the stone and reported in their "History of the Ancient Games" that the Olympic rings design came from ancient Greece. The ceremony was celebrated but the stone was never removed. For this reason he ordered construction of a milestone with the Olympic rings carved in the sides, and that a torchbearer should carry the flame along with an escort of three others from there to Berlin. Carl Diem, president of the Organizing Committee of the 1936 Summer Olympics, wanted to hold a torchbearers' ceremony in the stadium at Delphi, site of the famous oracle, where the Pythian Games were also held. The symbol's popularity and widespread use began during the lead-up to the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin. They would first officially debut at the Games of the VII Olympiad in Antwerp, Belgium in 1920. The 1914 Congress had to be suspended because of the outbreak of World War I, but the symbol and flag were later adopted. In his article published in the "Olympic Revue" the official magazine of the International Olympic Committee in November 1992, the American historian Robert Barney explains that the idea of the interlaced rings came to Pierre de Coubertin when he was in charge of the USFSA, an association founded by the union of two French sports associations and until 1925, responsible for representing the International Olympic Committee in France: The emblem of the union was two interlaced rings (like the vesica piscis typical interlaced marriage rings) and originally the idea of Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung: for him, the ring symbolized continuity and the human being. The blue and yellow of Sweden, the blue and white of Greece, the tri- colours of France, England and America, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Hungary, the yellow and red of Spain next to the novelties of Brazil or Australia, with old Japan and new China. ".the six colours thus combined reproduce the colours of all the nations, with no exception. ![]() Upon its initial introduction, Coubertin stated the following in the August, 1912 edition of Olympique: According to Coubertin, the ring colours with the white background stand for those colors that appeared on all the national flags that competed in the Olympic games at that time. ![]() The symbol was originally designed in 1912 by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, co-founder of the modern Olympic Games. The symbol of the Olympic Games is composed of five interlocking rings, coloured blue, yellow, black, green, and red on a white field, known as the "Olympic rings".
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