In this wikipedia, article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circle#Area_enclosed its stated that the circle is the closed curve which has the maximum area for a given arc length. First, of all, I would like to see different proofs, for this result. (If there are any elementary ones!)
One, interesting observation, which one can think while seeing this problem, is: How does one propose such type of problem? Does, anyone take all closed curves, and calculate their area to come this conclusion? I don't think that's the right intuition.

There are relatively simple proofs in textbooks on calculus of variations.
In more elementary approaches a convex figure is deformed, in discrete steps or through a continuous unbending process, toward a circle, and two things need to be proved: convergence to the circle, and increase of the isoperimetric ratio throughout the flow. Usually one step is easy and the other is difficult, requiring non-elementary methods to make rigorous. It is also necessary to make explicit what class of curves is considered: rectifiable, piecewise smooth, or something else.
The simplest argument I know that is elementary and rigorous is to prove the finite-dimensional approximation, that for fixed edge lengths of a polygon, there is a maximum area (by compactness) and (by elementary geometry or Lagrange multipliers) it is the one where all vertices are on a circle. Then, use this to prove that any smooth curve, if it beats the circle, has a finite polygonal approximation that beats the inscribed polygon.