, with the bulkier and less defined physique typical of the sport Competitive weightlifting is believed to pre-date written history. There are records in many civilizations of feats of strength performed by great heroes, perhaps mythological, such as
Heracles,
Goliath,
Orm Storolfsson and
Milo of Croton. In Ancient China and Greece, men lifted stones to prove their strength and manhood. There is a tradition in Scotland of weight lifting competitions in
Scottish Highland Gatherings, which have been annual events since the 1820s; and these contests are forerunners of modern
strength athletics. When in 1896 the modern international
Olympic Games began, weight lifting was an event at the first Games; and since 1920
weightlifting has been a regular part of the Olympics. By 1932 the Olympic competition comprised three lifts, all of which are different ways of lifting a weighted barbell from ground to overhead: namely the
snatch, the
clean and jerk, and the
clean and press. The
snatch is a wide-grip lift, in which the barbell is lifted overhead in one motion. The
clean and jerk and the
clean and press are combination lifts in which the weight is first taken from the ground to the front of the shoulders (the
clean), and then from the shoulders to overhead (the first using a
jerk, the second an
overhead press). After 1972 the
clean and press was discontinued because of difficulties in judging proper form. Today, the
snatch and the
clean and jerk are together known as the "olympic lifts"; and the sport of weightlifting as practiced at the Olympics can be called "olympic weightlifting" or "olympic-style weightlifting" to distinguish it from other weightlifting sports (wherever it is practiced). Its international governing body is the
International Weightlifting Federation, which was founded in 1905. The 1950s and 1960s saw the sport of
powerlifting developing, originating in competitions where athletes competed in different lifting events to those at the Olympics. These different lifts were sometimes called "odd lifts". Previously, the weightlifting governing bodies in the United Kingdom and the United States had recognized various "odd lifts" for competition and record purposes. Eventually these competitions became standardized to three specific lifts: the
squat,
bench press, and
deadlift; and this form of weightlifting sport was given its distinct name of
powerlifting, with the
International Powerlifting Federation being formed in 1972 to regulate and promote the sport. In 1964 weightlifting debuted in the
Paralympic Games, in the form of the bench press; and since the 1992 Games has been called powerlifting, specifically
Para powerlifting or Paralympic powerlifting. ==Weightlifting for strength, health, and appearance==