What is the Olympic torch? History, symbolism of Olympic flame heading into 2024 Paris Olympics (2024)

There perhaps is not a more symbolic and equally visible item at the Olympic Games than the Olympic torch.

Whether it was Muhammad Ali lighting the Olympic cauldron during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, the bullseye shot of the 1992 Barcelona Olympics or "walking on air" in the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Olympic torch is one of the oldest and perhaps most cherished parts of the Olympic Games.

Every four years as the Olympics commence, this shining and uniquely designed piece of metal carries on a tradition like no other, one that's built in rich history — a common theme to the Olympics as a whole. And so, in the lead-up to the 2024 Paris Olympics, curiosity has once again risen on the history of the Olympic torch and its meaning to the Summer Games.

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Here's what you need to know about the Olympic torch leading into the 2024 Paris Olympics:

What is the Olympic torch?

The Olympic torch — specifically, the Olympic flame — is perhaps one of the most sacred traditions of the Olympic Games.

It dates back to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, when Carl Diem — secretary general of the Olympics' organising committee — suggested the idea of a flame being lit in Olympia, the founding site of the Olympics, and transported to the Olympic games.

The Olympic torch is first lit in Olympia, where it then begins the first of two Olympic relays. The former is shorter than the latter, as the torch travels through different territories and towns of Greece by foot to Panathenaic Stadium in Athens across 11 days. Per NBC.com, the 2024 Olympic torch relay from Olympia to Athens had more than 600 people participate in it as torchbearers.

Once the Olympic torch reaches the Panathenaic Stadium, it is carried into the stadium for a ceremony in which it is handed off to the delegation of that year's Olympic Games.

Per the Olympics, it is a "manifestation of the positive values that man has always associated with the symbolism of fire and thus makes the link between the ancient and the modern Games."

REQUIRED READING:Paris Olympics 2024 schedule: Complete time, dates for each event at Summer Games

Paris 2024 Olympic torch

Each Olympic Games has its own Olympic torch built and designed. Here's a look at the torch for not only the 2024 Paris Olympics, but also previous Olympic Games:

How does the Olympic torch travel to the Olympics?

It's a two-step process.

First, following the lighting of the Olympic flame in Greece, the Olympic torch is brought to the host city of that year's Olympics, either Summer or Winter, by means of transportation. As noted by the Olympics website, the Olympic torch was brought over to France from Greece by sea and transported on the Belem, a 19th-century French three-masted ship.

Then, once the Olympic torch arrives at the host country, the 68-day long Olympic torch relay begins. For the 2024 Paris Olympics, the torch relay began in Marseille, roughly eight hours south of Paris off the shore of the Balearic Sea.

"Throughout the torch relay, the flame announces the Olympic Games and spreads a message of peace and friendship between peoples," as written on the Olympics website.

Olympic torch route 2024

The 68-day Olympic torch route for the 2024 Paris Olympics began on Wednesday, May 8 in Marseille, France. Since then, the Olympic torch has crossed through 64 territories in France, finishing in Paris on Friday, July 26 with the opening ceremony.

By end of the 2024 Olympic torch relay, more than 10,000 torchbearers will have carried the Olympic torch.

Here's a full breakdown of the route of the Olympic torch for the 2024 Paris Olympics:

  • May 8: Marseille
  • May 9: Marseille
  • May 10: Var
  • May 11: Alpes-de-Haute-Provence
  • May 12: Bouches-du-Rhône
  • May 13: Millau-Sète-Montpellier
  • May 14: Corse
  • May 15: Pyrénées-Orientales
  • May 16: Aude
  • May 17: Haute-Garonne
  • May 18: Gers
  • May 19: Hautes-Pyrénées
  • May 20: Pyrénées-Atlantiques
  • May 22: Dordogne
  • May 23: Bordeaux et leLibournais
  • May 24: Charente
  • May 25: Vienne
  • May 27: Indre
  • May 28: Maine-et-Loire
  • May 29: Mayenne
  • May 30: Calvados
  • June 1: Ille-et-Vilaine
  • June 2: Deux-Sèvres
  • June 4: Vendée
  • June 5: Entre Loire et Atlantique
  • June 6: Morbihan
  • June 7: Finistère
  • June 9: Guyane
  • June 11: New Caledonia
  • June 12: La Réunion
  • June 13: Polynésie française
  • June 15: Guadeloupe
  • June 17: Martinique
  • June 18: Alpes-Maritimes
  • June 19: Vaucluse
  • June 20: Drôme
  • June 21: Vichy
  • June 22: Loire
  • June 23: Haute-Savoie
  • June 25: Doubs
  • June 26: Collectivité européenne d'Alsace
  • June 27: Moselle
  • June 28: Haute-Marne
  • June 29: Meuse
  • June 30: Marne
  • July 2: Nord
  • July 3: Pas-de-Calasis
  • July 4: Somme
  • July 5: Seine-Maritime
  • July 6: Eure
  • July 7: C'Chartres
  • July 8: Loir-et-Cher
  • July 10: Loiret
  • July 11: Yonne
  • July 12: Côte-d'Or
  • July 13: Aube
  • July 14: Paris
  • July 15: Paris
  • July 17: Aisne
  • July 18: Oise
  • July 19: Val-d'Oise
  • July 20: Seine-et-Marne
  • July 21: Val-de-Marne
  • July 22: Essonne
  • July 23: Yvelines
  • July 24: Hauts-de-Seine
  • July 25: Seine-Saint-Denis
  • July 26: Seine-Saint-Denis and Paris

Has the Olympic torch ever gone out?

Yes, the Olympic torch has gone out on numerous occasions, both on accident and deliberately. However, Olympic organizers safeguard this by keeping multiple copies of the flame, either transported with the relay or maintained in backup locations.

Some notable examples of the flame going out (and being reignited) include the 1976 Montreal Olympics, in which a rainstorm put out the Olympic flame days before the Games opened. An official re-lit the flame with a cigarette lighter, though it was doused and re-lit using a backup of the original flame.

Another example included in the 2014 Sochi Olympics, when the flame was blown out at the Kremlin and later reignited by a security officer's lighter (instead of a backup flame). An example of the flame deliberately being put out was in 2016, when protesters in Rio de Janeiro halted the torch relay and extinquished the flame to protest spending by the city to host the Olympics.

What is the Olympic torch? History, symbolism of Olympic flame heading into 2024 Paris Olympics (2024)
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