11:07 am today

Olympics: What exactly are the Phryges, the mascots of the Paris Olympics?

11:07 am today
France, Marseille, 2024-05-08. The Phryges, official mascots of the Paris 2024 Games, were present at the ceremony to welcome the Olympic flame to the Old Port, ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Photograph by Julie GAZZOTI / Hans Lucas.
France, Marseille, 2024-05-08. Les Phryges, mascottes officielles des Jeux de Paris 2024, etaient presentes lors de la ceremonie d arrivee de la flamme Olympique sur le Vieux-Port, avant les Jeux Olympiques et Paralympiques de Paris 2024. Photographie par Julie GAZZOTI / Hans Lucas. (Photo by Julie Gazzoti / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP)

The Phryges, official mascots of the Paris 2024 Games. Photo: Julie Gazzoti / Hans Lucas / Hans Lucas via AFP

Unlike most others in recent years, the mascots of the Paris Olympics are not recognisably humanoid or animal.

Instead, the French have gone with a pair of hats known as the Phryges.

Perhaps best-known outside France as the kind of hat the Smurfs wore, the Phrygian cap dates back thousands of years.

It first emerged in present-day Iran, and was worn by people in Ancient Greece and Rome.

By the late 1700s it had become a symbol of freedom, popular with revolutionaries in both France and the US. While its prominence in the US faded, it remained a symbol of liberty in Europe, and according to the Olympics website "are seen everywhere in French culture and everyday life, from paintings to stamps, town halls to coins".

"They are a symbol of French history and values, the perfect representation for their home Games."

Their colours - red, white and blue - are those of the French flag.

There are two different Phryges. One has two legs, and represents the Olympics, and the other has one leg replaced with a blade - representing the Paralympics.

The mascots' motto is: "Alone we go faster, but together we go further."

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