2004 Summer Olympics torch relay
The 2004 Summer Olympics Torch Relay took the Olympic Flame across every habitable continent, returning to Athens, Greece. Every city which had hosted, will host, or coincidentally elected to host the Summer Olympics, the Winter Olympics and the Youth Olympics was revisited by the torch, as well as several other cities chosen for their international importance. The main reason why the torch relay went around the world was to highlight the fact that the Olympic Games were started in Greece and in modern times have been held around the world and then took place in Greece in 2004.
The relay was the first time the Olympic flame had travelled to Africa and South America. The flame was transported from country to country aboard a specially-equipped Boeing 747 leased from Atlanta Icelandic called Zeus. On board the flame was carried and burned continuously in specially modified miners lamps.
Route in Greece (first phase)
March 25:- Olympia, Elis, Pyrgos, Andritsaina
- Megalopolis, Dorio, Kopanaki, Kyparissia, Filiatra, Gargalianoi, Pylos
March 28:
- Mystras, Gytheio
March 30:
March 31:
The International Leg of the 2004 Olympic Torch Relay officially began on June 4, 2004, when the flame touched down in Sydney, Australia, host city of the 2000 Summer Olympics.
Date | Map |
June 4: Sydney, Australia June 5: Melbourne | |
June 6: Tokyo, Japan June 7: Seoul, South Korea June 8: Beijing, China June 10: Delhi, India | |
June 11: Cairo, Egypt June 12: Cape Town, South Africa | |
June 13: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil June 15: Mexico City, Mexico June 16: Los Angeles, United States June 17: St. Louis June 18: Atlanta June 19: New York June 20: Montreal, Canada | |
June 21: Antwerp, Belgium June 22: Brussels June 23: Amsterdam, Netherlands June 24: Geneva, Switzerland June 24: Lausanne June 25: Paris, France June 26: London, United Kingdom June 27: Madrid, Spain June 27: Barcelona June 28: Rome, Italy June 29: Munich, Germany June 30: Berlin July 1: Stockholm, Sweden July 2: Helsinki, Finland July 3: Moscow, Russia July 5: Kiev, Ukraine July 6: Istanbul, Turkey July 7: Sofia, Bulgaria July 8: Nicosia, Cyprus |
The International Leg of the 2004 Olympic Torch Relay officially concluded on July 8, 2004, just over a month after it began its global journey and just over a month before the 2004 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony on August 13, 2004.
Route in Greece (third phase)
July 9- Heraklion
- Knossos, Malia, Agios Nikolaos, Sitia
- Ierapetra, Pyrgos, Agia Galini
July 13
- Karpathos, Kalymnos, Kos, Kastellorizo, Rhodes
July 15
July 16
- Lemnos, Thasos, Samothrace
- Orestiada, Didymoteicho, Soufli, Feres, Alexandroupoli
- Sapes, Komotini, Lake Vistonida, Abdera, Xanthi
July 20
- Drama, Alistrati, Nea Zichni, Serres
July 22
- Langadas, Polygyros
- Moudania, Triglia, Epanomi, Michaniona, Thermi, Thessaloniki
- Pella, Giannitsa, Alexandreia, Litochoro, Dion
July 26
July 27
- Psarades, Amyntaio, Ptolemaida, Kozani
July 29
July 30
July 31
- Trikala, Karditsa, Larissa, Nea Ionia, Volos
August 2
- Kymi, Aliveri, Amarynthos, Chalcis
August 4
August 5 :
August 6 :
August 7 :
- Arta, Menidi, Amfilochia, Agrinio
- Missolonghi, Rio–Antirrio bridge, Patras
- Aigio, Akrata, Xylokastro, Kiato, Corinth
- Thebes, Marathon
- Piraeus
- Athens
Aftermath
The International Olympic Committee has indicated that, due to the success of the 2004 run, they might sanction a global circumnavigation of the flame before every succeeding Olympics. However, those plans were abandoned in March 2009 due to the protests in the international leg of the torch relay of the 2008 Summer Olympics.The torch relay proved instrumental in the recognition of the importance of trending on Twitter by Abdur Chowdhury during a train journey, a usage which eventually expanded to other Internet platforms.