A
R E N A
Onto the floor of the amphitheater sand was poured to absorb the blood.
The word for sand in Latin is HARENA, from which our word "arena" comes |
The
Colosseum
The
Colosseum is one of Rome's most famous buildings. Initiated by Vespaisian,
the official opening ceremonies were conducted by emperor Titus in AD
80.
In
its prime the huge theater consisted of four floors. The first three had
arched entrances, while the fourth floor utilized rectangular doorways.
The floors each measured between 10,5-13,9 meters (32-42 feet) in height.
The total height of the construction was approximately 48 meters (144
feet). The arena measured 79 x 45 meters (237-135 feet), and consisted
of wood and sand.
(The word "arena" is derived from the Latin arena, which means "sand.")
Nets along the sides protected the audience. The Colosseum had a total
spectator capacity of 45,000-55,000. The main pedestals were built of
marble blocks weighing 5 metric tons (11,000 pounds.) Initially the huge
marble blocks were held together by metal-pins. However, the pins were
soon carried off by thieves, and had to be replaced by mortar. The total
amount of marble needed for the construction measured approximately 100,000
cubic meters. It was carried by 200 ox-pulled carts, which supplied a
sufficient flow of needed materials. It took eight years to complete this
magnificent structure.
Gladiators
"Caladus,
the Thracian, makes all the girls sigh."
(Slogan scrawled on a wall at Pompeii. Gladiators were often sex symbols)
The
gladiators who fought in these games were mostly prisoners, slaves and
criminals who trained long and hard in schools like the one Caesar built;
although a few such fighters were paid volunteers. Some of the latter
became involved because they had financial difficulties, and these events
offered
generous prize money for the winners. Other volunteers were motivated
by the physical challenge and appeal of danger or the prospect of becoming
popular idols and sex symbols who could have their pick of pretty young
women. Among the graffiti slogans still scrawled on walls at Pompeii,
the famous Roman town preserved under a layer of volcanic ash, are: "Caladus,
the Thracian, makes all the girls sigh," and "Crescens, the
net fighter, holds the hearts of all the girls."
The
terms "Thracian" and "net fighter" referred to the
customary division of gladiators into various types and categories. Among
the four main types that had evolved by the early Empire was the heavily
armed Samnite,
later called a hoplomachus or secutor. (The Romans may have recognized
these three as separate and distinct types, but any such distinctions
are now unclear; all employed basically the same weapons and tactics.)
A Samnite carried a sword or a lance, a scutum (the rectangular shield
used by Roman legionary soldiers),a metal helmet, and protective armor
on his right arm and left leg. Another type, the Thracian (so named because
he resembled fighters from Thrace, a region of northern Greece), was not
as elaborately armed. He wielded a curved short sword, the sica, and a
small round shield, the parma.
A
third kind of gladiator, the murmillo, or "fishman" (after the
fish-shaped crest on his helmet), was apparently similar to a Samnite
but less heavily armed. A murmillo customarily fought still another kind
of warrior, the retiarius, or "net-man," who wore no armor at
all. A retiarius attempted to ensnare his opponent in his net (or used
the net to trip the other man) and then to stab him with a long, razor-sharp
trident, or three-pronged spear.
In
addition to the pairings of these main gladiator types, there were a number
of special and off-beat types and pairings. These included equites, who
fought on horseback using lances, swords, and/or lassoes; the essedarii,
who confronted each other on chariots; and, perhaps the most bizarre of
the lot, the andabatae, who grappled while blindfolded by massive helmets
with no eyeholes. Women gladiators came into vogue under the emperors
Nero and Domitian in thee late first century A.D. Evidence shows that
Domitian sometimes pitted female fighters against male dwarves as well
as against one another.
"We
Who Are About to Die Salute You!"
On
the eagerly anticipated day when munera were scheduled at the Colosseum
or another amphitheater, the gladiators first entered the arena in a colorful
parade known as the pompa. This was similar in some ways to the procession
of the athletes on opening day of the modern Olympic Games. They
were usually accompanied by jugglers, acrobats, and other performers,
and all kept time to marching music provided by musicians playing trumpets,
flutes, drums, and sometimes a large hydraulic organ. (The organ probably
also played during the actual fighting, producing the same effect as the
background musical score of a movie.)
Following
the pompa, the acrobats and other minor performers exited and the gladiators
proceeded, in full public view, to draw lots, which decided who would
fight whom. Then an official inspected their weapons to make sure they
were sound and well sharpened. Finally, the gladiators soberly raised
their weapons toward the highest-ranking official present (usually either
the emperor or munerarius, the magistrate in charge of the spectacle)
all recited the phrase, "Morituri te salutamus!" ("We who
are about to die salute you!") After that, the first pairing began.
Having
no rules or referees, the combat was invariably desperate and often savage.
The spectators, like those at modern boxing matches and bullfights, reacted
excitedly. Typical shouted phrases included "Verbera!" ("Strike!"),
"Habet!" ("A hit!"), "iHoc habet!" ("Now
he's done for! "), and "Ure!"("Burn
him up!").The fighting had several possible outcomes. If both warriors
fought bravely and could not best each other, the munerarius declared
the bout a draw and allowed them to leave the arena and fight another
day. Sometimes both officials and spectators felt that the fighters were
not giving it their all. Or one man turned and ran. "Officiosus fled
on November 6 in the consulate of Drusus Caesar and M. Junius Norbanus,"
reads a Pompeian inscription. Such offenders were punished by whipping
or branding with hot irons.
A
more common outcome was when one gladiator went down wounded. He was allowed
to raise one finger, a sign of appeal for mercy, after which the emperor
or munerarius decided his fate, usually in accordance with the crowd's
wishes. If the spectators desired a fighter spared, they either waved
their handkerchiefs or pointed their thumbs downward, the signal for the
victor to drop his or her sword. At the same time they shouted "Mitte!
("Spare him!") On the other hand,
if the choice was death,
they Pressed their thumbs toward their own chests (symbolizing a sword
through the heart) and yelled "lugula!"
("Cut his throat!").
Another
possible outcome was when one fighter killed an opponent outright; and
still another when the fallen combatant pretended to be dead. Few, if
any, were successful at this ruse, for men dressed like the Etruscan demon
Charun (a retained custom illustrating the games Etruscan roots) ran out
and applied hot irons to the bodies. Any fakers exposed in this way promptly
had their throats cut. Then young boys cleaned the bloodstains from the
sand, and men dressed as the god Mercury (transporter of tile dead) whisked
away the corpses, all in preparation for the next round of battles.
Test and
pictures from Greek and Roman Sport by Don Nardo and from The Birth of
Western Civilization |