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Things U Didnt Know About The Roman Gladiators by Nobody: 11:38am On May 28, 2017 |
Beloved by the masses and sometimes
scorned by the elites, Roman gladiators
were the working class heroes of antiquity.
For more than 650 years, people flocked to
arenas across the empire to watch these
armed and highly trained warriors engage
in a blood-soaked spectacle equal parts
sport, theater and cold-blooded murder. Get
the facts on the enigmatic men-at-arms
behind Ancient Rome’s most notorious form
of entertainment.
1
They weren’t always slaves.
Not all gladiators were brought to the arena
in chains. While most early combatants were
conquered peoples and slaves who had
committed crimes, grave inscriptions show
that by the 1st century A.D. the
demographics had started to change. Lured
by the thrill of battle and the roar of the
crowds, scores of free men began
voluntarily signing contracts with gladiator
schools in the hope of winning glory and
prize money. These freelance warriors were
often desperate men or ex-soldiers skilled in
fighting, but some were upper-class
patricians, knights and even senators eager
to demonstrate their warrior pedigree.
2
Gladiatorial bouts were originally part of
funeral ceremonies.
Many ancient chroniclers described the
Roman games as an import from the
Etruscans, but most historians now argue
that gladiator fights got their start as a
blood rite staged at the funerals of wealthy
nobles. When distinguished aristocrats died,
their families would hold graveside bouts
between slaves or condemned prisoners as
a kind of macabre eulogy for the virtues the
person had demonstrated in life. According
to the Roman writers Tertullian and Festus,
since the Romans believed that human
blood helped purify the deceased person’s
soul, these contests may have also acted as
a crude substitute for human sacrifice. The
funeral games later increased in scope
during the reign of Julius Caesar, who
staged bouts between hundreds of
gladiators in honor of his deceased father
and daughter. The spectacles proved hugely
popular, and by the end of the 1st century
B.C., government officials began hosting
state-funded games as a way of currying
favor with the masses.
3
They didn’t always fight to the death.
Hollywood movies and television shows
often depict gladiatorial bouts as a bloody
free-for-all, but most fights operated under
fairly strict rules and regulations. Contests
were typically single combat between two
men of similar size and experience.
Referees oversaw the action, and probably
stopped the fight as soon as one of the
participants was seriously wounded. A
match could even end in a stalemate if the
crowd became bored by a long and drawn
out battle, and in rare cases, both warriors
were allowed to leave the arena with honor
if they had put on an exciting show for the
crowd.
Since gladiators were expensive to house,
feed and train, their promoters were loath
to see them needlessly killed. Trainers may
have taught their fighters to wound, not kill,
and the combatants may have taken it upon
themselves to avoid seriously hurting their
brothers-in-arms. Nevertheless, the life of a
gladiator was usually brutal and short. Most
only lived to their mid-20s, and historians
have estimated that somewhere between
one in five or one in 10 bouts left one of its
participants dead.
4
The famous “thumbs down” gesture
probably didn’t mean death.
If a gladiator was seriously wounded or
threw down his weapon in defeat, his fate
was left in the hands of the spectators. In
contests held at the Colosseum, the emperor
had the final say in whether the felled
warrior lived or died, but rulers and fight
organizers often let the people make the
decision. Paintings and films often show the
throngs giving a “thumbs down” gesture
when they wanted a disgraced gladiator to
be finished off, but this may not be
accurate. Some historians think the sign for
death may have actually been the thumbs
up, while a closed fist with two fingers
extended, a thumbs down, or even a waved
handkerchief might have signaled mercy.
Whatever gesture was used, it was typically
accompanied by ear-piercing cries of either
“let him go!” or “slay him!” If the crowd
willed it, the victorious gladiator would
deliver a grisly coup de grace by stabbing
his opponent between the shoulder blades
or through the neck and into the heart.
5
They were organized into different classes
and types.
By the time the Colosseum opened in 80
A.D., gladiator games had evolved from
freewheeling battles to the death into a
well-organized blood sport. Fighters were
placed in classes based on their record, skill
level and experience, and most specialized
in a particular fighting style and set of
weaponry. Most popular were the
“thraeces” and “murmillones,” who fought
with sword and shield, but there were also
the “equites,” who entered the arena on
horseback; the “essedarii,” who battled
from chariots; and the “dimachaerus,” who
may have wielded two swords at once. Of
all the popular gladiator types, perhaps the
most unusual was the “retiarius,” who was
armed with only a net and a trident. These
warriors tried to ensnare their opponents
with their net before moving in for the kill,
but if they failed, they were left almost
entirely defenseless.
6
They only rarely fought against animals.
The Colosseum and other Roman arenas are
often associated with gruesome animal
hunts, but it was uncommon for the
gladiators to be involved. Tangling with
wild beasts was reserved for the
“venatores” and “bestiarii,” special classes
of warrior who squared off against
everything from deer and ostriches to lions,
crocodiles, bears and even elephants.
Animal hunts were typically the opening
event at the games, and it wasn’t unusual
for scores of unfortunate creatures to be
slaughtered in a single exhibition. Nine
thousand animals were slain during a 100-
day ceremony to mark the opening of the
Colosseum, and another 11,000 were later
killed as part of a 123-day festival held by
the Emperor Trajan in the 2nd century A.D.
While most animals were merely
slaughtered for sport, others were trained
to do tricks or even pitted against one
another in fights. Wild animals also served
as a popular form of execution. Convicted
criminals and Christians were often thrown
to ravenous dogs, lions and bears as part of
the day’s entertainment.
7
Women also fought as gladiators.
Female slaves were regularly condemned to
the arena alongside their male counterparts,
but a few citizens took up the sword of the
own free will. Historians are not sure when
women first suited up to fight as gladiators,
but by the 1st century A.D. they had become
a common fixture at the games. These lady
warriors may not have been taken seriously
in the patriarchal Roman culture—the
Emperor Domitian enjoyed pitting women
against dwarves—but a few appear to have
proven themselves in single combat. A
marble relief dating to around the 2nd
century A.D. depicts a bout between two
women dubbed “Amazon” and “Achillia,”
whom the inscription says fought to an
honorable draw. Women also joined in the
animal hunts, but their stint in the arena
may have come to an end around 200 A.D.,
when the Emperor Septimius Severus
banned their participation in the games.
8
Some gladiators organized themselves
into trade unions.
Though they were regularly forced to come
to blows in life-or-death combat, gladiators
viewed themselves as a kind of
brotherhood, and some even organized into
unions, or “collegia,” with their own elected
leaders and protector deities. When a
warrior fell in battle, these groups would
ensure that their comrade received a proper
funeral and grave inscription honoring his
achievements in the arena. If the deceased
had a wife and children, they would also
see that the family received monetary
compensation for their loss.
9
Several Roman emperors participated in
staged gladiatorial bouts.
Hosting gladiator games was an easy way
for Roman emperors to win the love of the
people, but a few took it a step further and
actually participated in combat. Several
rulers performed in the arena including
Caligula, Titus and Hadrian—though most
likely under highly controlled conditions or
with dull blades. A deadeye with a spear, the
deranged Emperor Commodus often tried to
wow the crowds by killing bears and
panthers from the safety of a raised
platform. He also competed in a few
gladiator fights, though usually against
inexperienced fighters or even terrified and
poorly armed members of the audience.
When he inevitably won the contests,
Commodus made sure to reward himself
with the massive sum of one million Roman
sesterces.
10
Gladiators often became celebrities and
sex symbols.
Though often dismissed as uncivilized
brutes by Roman historians, the gladiators
won massive fame among the lower
classes. Their portraits graced the walls of
many public places; children played with
gladiator action figures made of clay; and
the most successful fighters even endorsed
products just like the top athletes of today.
They were also renowned for their ability to
make Roman women swoon. Graffiti from
Pompeii describes one fighter who “catches
the girls at night in his net” and another
who is “the delight of all the girls.” Many
women wore hairpins and other jewelry
dipped in gladiator blood, and some even
mixed gladiator sweat—then considered an
aphrodisiac—into facial creams and other
cosmetics. |
Re: Things U Didnt Know About The Roman Gladiators by BlackDBagba: 11:57am On May 28, 2017 |
Very captivating read. Make it easier for others to read though, space it out a little. Thumbs up!!! |
Re: Things U Didnt Know About The Roman Gladiators by Michealforever: 12:40pm On May 28, 2017 |
No comma, no full stop, no paragraph |
(1) (Reply)
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