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Gladiator

A gladiator (Latin: gladiator, "swordsman", from gladius, "sword") was an armed combatant who entertained audiences in the Roman Republic and Roman Empire in violent confrontations with other gladiators, wild animals, and condemned criminals. Some gladiators were volunteers who risked their lives and their legal and social standing by appearing in the arena. Most were despised as slaves, schooled under harsh conditions, socially marginalized, and segregated even in death.

Part of the Zliten mosaic from Libya (Leptis Magna), about 2nd century AD. It shows (left to right) a thraex fighting a murmillo, a hoplomachus standing with another murmillo (who is signaling his defeat to the referee), and one of a matched pair.

Irrespective of their origin, gladiators offered spectators an example of Rome's martial ethics and, in fighting or dying well, they could inspire admiration and popular acclaim. They were celebrated in high and low art, and their value as entertainers was commemorated in precious and commonplace objects throughout the Roman world.

The origin of gladiatorial combat is open to debate. There is evidence of it in funeral rites during the Punic Wars of the 3rd century BC, and thereafter it rapidly became an essential feature of politics and social life in the Roman world. Its popularity led to its use in ever more lavish and costly games.

The gladiator games lasted for nearly a thousand years, reaching their peak between the 1st century BC and the 2nd century AD. Christians disapproved of the games because they involved idolatrous pagan rituals, and the popularity of gladatorial contests declined in the fifth century, leading to their disappearance.

History

Origins

 
Relief of gladiators from Amphitheatre of Mérida, Spain

Early literary sources seldom agree on the origins of gladiators and the gladiator games.[1] In the late 1st century BC, Nicolaus of Damascus believed they were Etruscan.[2] A generation later, Livy wrote that they were first held in 310 BC by the Campanians in celebration of their victory over the Samnites.[3] Long after the games had ceased, the 7th century AD writer Isidore of Seville derived Latin lanista (manager of gladiators) from the Etruscan word for "executioner", and the title of "Charon" (an official who accompanied the dead from the Roman gladiatorial arena) from Charun, psychopomp of the Etruscan underworld.[4] This was accepted and repeated in most early modern, standard histories of the games.[5]

For some modern scholars, reappraisal of pictorial evidence supports a Campanian origin, or at least a borrowing, for the games and gladiators.[6] Campania hosted the earliest known gladiator schools (ludi).[7] Tomb frescoes from the Campanian city of Paestum (4th century BC) show paired fighters, with helmets, spears and shields, in a propitiatory funeral blood-rite that anticipates early Roman gladiator games.[8] Compared to these images, supporting evidence from Etruscan tomb-paintings is tentative and late. The Paestum frescoes may represent the continuation of a much older tradition, acquired or inherited from Greek colonists of the 8th century BC.[9]

Livy places the first Roman gladiator games (264 BC) in the early stage of Rome's First Punic War, against Carthage, when Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva had three gladiator pairs fight to the death in Rome's "cattle market" forum (Forum Boarium) to honor his dead father, Brutus Pera. Livy describes this as a "munus" (plural: munera), a gift, in this case a commemorative duty owed the manes (spirit, or shade) of a dead ancestor by his descendants.[10][11] The development of the gladiator munus and its gladiator types was most strongly influenced by Samnium's support for Hannibal and the subsequent punitive expeditions against the Samnites by Rome and its Campanian allies; the earliest, most frequently mentioned and probably most popular type was the Samnite.[12]

The war in Samnium, immediately afterwards, was attended with equal danger and an equally glorious conclusion. The enemy, besides their other warlike preparation, had made their battle-line to glitter with new and splendid arms. There were two corps: the shields of the one were inlaid with gold, of the other with silver ... The Romans had already heard of these splendid accoutrements, but their generals had taught them that a soldier should be rough to look on, not adorned with gold and silver but putting his trust in iron and in courage ... The Dictator, as decreed by the senate, celebrated a triumph, in which by far the finest show was afforded by the captured armour. So the Romans made use of the splendid armour of their enemies to do honour to their gods; while the Campanians, in consequence of their pride and in hatred of the Samnites, equipped after this fashion the gladiators who furnished them entertainment at their feasts, and bestowed on them the name Samnites.[13]

Livy's account skirts the funereal, sacrificial function of early Roman gladiator combats and reflects the later theatrical ethos of the Roman gladiator show: splendidly, exotically armed and armoured barbarians, treacherous and degenerate, are dominated by Roman iron and native courage.[14] His plain Romans virtuously dedicate the magnificent spoils of war to the gods. Their Campanian allies stage a dinner entertainment using gladiators who may not be Samnites, but play the Samnite role. Other groups and tribes would join the cast list as Roman territories expanded. Most gladiators were armed and armoured in the manner of the enemies of Rome.[15] The gladiator munus became a morally instructive form of historic enactment in which the only honourable option for the gladiator was to fight well, or else die well.[16]

Development

In 216 BC, Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, late consul and augur, was honoured by his sons with three days of gladiatora munera in the Forum Romanum, using twenty-two pairs of gladiators.[17] Ten years later, Scipio Africanus gave a commemorative munus in Iberia for his father and uncle, casualties in the Punic Wars. High status non-Romans, and possibly Romans too, volunteered as his gladiators.[18] The context of the Punic Wars and Rome's near-disastrous defeat at the Battle of Cannae (216 BC) link these early games to munificence, the celebration of military victory and the religious expiation of military disaster; these munera appear to serve a morale-raising agenda in an era of military threat and expansion.[19] The next recorded munus, held for the funeral of Publius Licinius in 183 BC, was more extravagant. It involved three days of funeral games, 120 gladiators, and public distribution of meat (visceratio data)[20]—a practice that reflected the gladiatorial fights at Campanian banquets described by Livy and later deplored by Silius Italicus.[21]

The enthusiastic adoption of gladiatoria munera by Rome's Iberian allies shows how easily, and how early, the culture of the gladiator munus permeated places far from Rome itself. By 174 BC, "small" Roman munera (private or public), provided by an editor of relatively low importance, may have been so commonplace and unremarkable they were not considered worth recording:[22]

Many gladiatorial games were given in that year, some unimportant, one noteworthy beyond the rest—that of Titus Flamininus which he gave to commemorate the death of his father, which lasted four days, and was accompanied by a public distribution of meats, a banquet, and scenic performances. The climax of the show which was big for the time was that in three days seventy four gladiators fought.[23]

In 105 BC, the ruling consuls offered Rome its first taste of state-sponsored "barbarian combat" demonstrated by gladiators from Capua, as part of a training program for the military. It proved immensely popular.[24] Thereafter, the gladiator contests formerly restricted to private munera were often included in the state games (ludi)[25] that accompanied the major religious festivals. Where traditional ludi had been dedicated to a deity, such as Jupiter, the munera could be dedicated to an aristocratic sponsor's divine or heroic ancestor.[26]

Peak

 
A retiarius stabs at a secutor with his trident in this mosaic from the villa at Nennig, Germany, c. 2nd–3rd century AD.
 
Roman glassware decorated with a gladiator, dated 52–125 AD and found at Begram, Afghanistan, a royal city of the Kushan Empire where, according to Warwick Ball, it was likely on its way to Han dynasty China via the Silk Road along with other glass items.[27]

Gladiatorial games offered their sponsors extravagantly expensive but effective opportunities for self-promotion, and gave their clients and potential voters exciting entertainment at little or no cost to themselves.[28] Gladiators became big business for trainers and owners, for politicians on the make and those who had reached the top and wished to stay there. A politically ambitious privatus (private citizen) might postpone his deceased father's munus to the election season, when a generous show might drum up votes; those in power and those seeking it needed the support of the plebeians and their tribunes, whose votes might be won with the mere promise of an exceptionally good show.[29] Sulla, during his term as praetor, showed his usual acumen in breaking his own sumptuary laws to give the most lavish munus yet seen in Rome, for the funeral of his wife, Metella.[30]

In the closing years of the politically and socially unstable Late Republic, any aristocratic owner of gladiators had political muscle at his disposal.[31][32][33] In 65 BC, newly elected curule aedile Julius Caesar held games that he justified as munus to his father, who had been dead for 20 years. Despite an already enormous personal debt, he used 320 gladiator pairs in silvered armour.[34] He had more available in Capua but the senate, mindful of the recent Spartacus revolt and fearful of Caesar's burgeoning private armies and rising popularity, imposed a limit of 320 pairs as the maximum number of gladiators any citizen could keep in Rome.[35] Caesar's showmanship was unprecedented in scale and expense;[36] he had staged a munus as memorial rather than funeral rite, eroding any practical or meaningful distinction between munus and ludi.[37]

Gladiatorial games, usually linked with beast shows, spread throughout the republic and beyond.[38] Anti-corruption laws of 65 and 63 BC attempted but failed to curb the political usefulness of the games to their sponsors.[39] Following Caesar's assassination and the Roman Civil War, Augustus assumed imperial authority over the games, including munera, and formalised their provision as a civic and religious duty.[40] His revision of sumptuary law capped private and public expenditure on munera, claiming to save the Roman elite from the bankruptcies they would otherwise suffer, and restricting gladiator munera to the festivals of Saturnalia and Quinquatria.[41] Henceforth, an imperial praetor's official munus was allowed a maximum of 120 gladiators at a ceiling cost of 25,000 denarii; an imperial ludi might cost no less than 180,000 denarii.[42] Throughout the empire, the greatest and most celebrated games would now be identified with the state-sponsored imperial cult, which furthered public recognition, respect and approval for the emperor's divine numen, his laws, and his agents.[43][26] Between 108 and 109 AD, Trajan celebrated his Dacian victories using a reported 10,000 gladiators and 11,000 animals over 123 days.[44] The cost of gladiators and munera continued to spiral out of control. Legislation of 177 AD by Marcus Aurelius did little to stop it, and was completely ignored by his son, Commodus.[45]

Decline

The decline of the gladiatorial munus was a far from straightforward process.[46] The crisis of the 3rd century imposed increasing military demands on the imperial purse, from which the Roman Empire never quite recovered, and lesser magistrates found their provision of various obligatory munera an increasingly unrewarding tax on the doubtful privileges of office. Still, emperors continued to subsidize the games as a matter of undiminished public interest.[47] In the early 3rd century AD, the Christian writer Tertullian condemned the attendance of Christians: the combats, he said, were murder, their witnessing spiritually and morally harmful and the gladiator an instrument of pagan human sacrifice.[48] Carolyn Osiek comments:

The reason, we would suppose, would be primarily the bloodthirsty violence, but his is different: the extent of religious ritual and meaning in them, which constitutes idolatry. Although Tertullian states that these events are forbidden to believers, the fact that he writes a whole treatise to convince Christians that they should not attend (De Spectaculis) shows that apparently not everyone agreed to stay away from them.[49]

In the next century, Augustine of Hippo deplored the youthful fascination of his friend (and later fellow-convert and bishop) Alypius of Thagaste, with the munera spectacle as inimical to a Christian life and salvation.[50] Amphitheatres continued to host the spectacular administration of Imperial justice: in 315 Constantine the Great condemned child-snatchers ad bestias in the arena. Ten years later, he forbade criminals being forced to fight to the death as gladiators:

Bloody spectacles do not please us in civil ease and domestic quiet. For that reason we forbid those people to be gladiators who by reason of some criminal act were accustomed to deserve this condition and sentence. You shall rather sentence them to serve in the mines so that they may acknowledge the penalties of their crimes with blood.[51]

 
A 5th-century mosaic in the Great Palace of Constantinople depicts two venatores fighting a tiger

This has been interpreted as a ban on gladiatorial combat. Yet, in the last year of his life, Constantine wrote a letter to the citizens of Hispellum, granting its people the right to celebrate his rule with gladiatorial games.[52]

In 365, Valentinian I (r. 364–375) threatened to fine a judge who sentenced Christians to the arena and in 384 attempted, like most of his predecessors, to limit the expenses of gladiatora munera.[53][54][55]

In 393, Theodosius I (r. 379–395) adopted Nicene Christianity as the state religion of the Roman Empire and banned pagan festivals.[56] The ludi continued, very gradually shorn of their stubbornly pagan elements. Honorius (r. 395–423) legally ended gladiator games in 399, and again in 404, at least in the Western Roman Empire. According to Theodoret, the ban was in consequence of Saint Telemachus' martyrdom by spectators at a gladiator munus.[57] Valentinian III (r. 425–455) repeated the ban in 438, perhaps effectively, though venationes continued beyond 536.[58] By this time, interest in gladiator contests had waned throughout the Roman world. In the Byzantine Empire, theatrical shows and chariot races continued to attract the crowds, and drew a generous imperial subsidy.

Organisation

The earliest munera took place at or near the tomb of the deceased and these were organised by their munerator (who made the offering). Later games were held by an editor, either identical with the munerator or an official employed by him. As time passed, these titles and meanings may have merged.[59] In the republican era, private citizens could own and train gladiators, or lease them from a lanista (owner of a gladiator training school). From the principate onwards, private citizens could hold munera and own gladiators only with imperial permission, and the role of editor was increasingly tied to state officialdom. Legislation by Claudius required that quaestors, the lowest rank of Roman magistrate, personally subsidise two-thirds of the costs of games for their small-town communities—in effect, both an advertisement of their personal generosity and a part-purchase of their office. Bigger games were put on by senior magistrates, who could better afford them. The largest and most lavish of all were paid for by the emperor himself.[60][61]

The gladiators

 
A Cestus boxer and a rooster in a Roman mosaic at the National Archaeological Museum, Naples, 1st century AD

The earliest types of gladiator were named after Rome's enemies of that time: the Samnite, Thracian and Gaul. The Samnite, heavily armed, elegantly helmed and probably the most popular type, was renamed secutor and the Gaul renamed murmillo, once these former enemies had been conquered then absorbed into Rome's Empire. In the mid-republican munus, each type seems to have fought against a similar or identical type. In the later Republic and early Empire, various "fantasy" types were introduced, and were set against dissimilar but complementary types. For example, the bareheaded, nimble retiarius ("net-man"), armoured only at the left arm and shoulder, pitted his net, trident and dagger against the more heavily armoured, helmeted Secutor.[62] Most depictions of gladiators show the most common and popular types. Passing literary references to others has allowed their tentative reconstruction. Other novelties introduced around this time included gladiators who fought from chariots or carts, or from horseback. At an unknown date, cestus fighters were introduced to Roman arenas, probably from Greece, armed with potentially lethal boxing gloves.[63]

The trade in gladiators was empire-wide, and subjected to official supervision. Rome's military success produced a supply of soldier-prisoners who were redistributed for use in State mines or amphitheatres and for sale on the open market. For example, in the aftermath of the Jewish Revolt, the gladiator schools received an influx of Jews—those rejected for training would have been sent straight to the arenas as noxii (lit. "hurtful ones").[64] The best—the most robust—were sent to Rome. In Rome's military ethos, enemy soldiers who had surrendered or allowed their own capture and enslavement had been granted an unmerited gift of life. Their training as gladiators would give them opportunity to redeem their honour in the munus.[65]

 
Pollice Verso ("With a Turned Thumb"), an 1872 painting by Jean-Léon Gérôme

Two other sources of gladiators, found increasingly during the Principate and the relatively low military activity of the Pax Romana, were slaves condemned to the arena (damnati), to gladiator schools or games (ad ludum gladiatorium)[66] as punishment for crimes, and the paid volunteers (auctorati) who by the late Republic may have comprised approximately half—and possibly the most capable half—of all gladiators.[67] The use of volunteers had a precedent in the Iberian munus of Scipio Africanus; but none of those had been paid.[18]

For the poor, and for non-citizens, enrollment in a gladiator school offered a trade, regular food, housing of sorts and a fighting chance of fame and fortune. Mark Antony chose a troupe of gladiators to be his personal bodyguard.[68] Gladiators customarily kept their prize money and any gifts they received, and these could be substantial. Tiberius offered several retired gladiators 100,000 sesterces each to return to the arena.[69] Nero gave the gladiator Spiculus property and residence "equal to those of men who had celebrated triumphs."[70]

Women

From the 60s AD female gladiators appear as rare and "exotic markers of exceptionally lavish spectacle".[71] In 66 AD, Nero had Ethiopian women, men and children fight at a munus to impress the King Tiridates I of Armenia.[72] Romans seem to have found the idea of a female gladiator novel and entertaining, or downright absurd; Juvenal titillates his readers with a woman named "Mevia", hunting boars in the arena "with spear in hand and breasts exposed",[73] and Petronius mocks the pretensions of a rich, low-class citizen, whose munus includes a woman fighting from a cart or chariot.[74] A munus of 89 AD, during Domitian's reign, featured a battle between female gladiators, described as "Amazons".[75] In Halicarnassus, a 2nd-century AD relief depicts two female combatants named "Amazon" and "Achillia"; their match ended in a draw.[76] In the same century, an epigraph praises one of Ostia's local elite as the first to "arm women" in the history of its games.[76] Female gladiators probably submitted to the same regulations and training as their male counterparts.[77] Roman morality required that all gladiators be of the lowest social classes, and emperors who failed to respect this distinction earned the scorn of posterity. Cassius Dio takes pains to point out that when the much admired emperor Titus used female gladiators, they were of acceptably low class.[71]

Some regarded female gladiators of any type or class as a symptom of corrupted Roman appetites, morals and womanhood. Before he became emperor, Septimius Severus may have attended the Antiochene Olympic Games, which had been revived by the emperor Commodus and included traditional Greek female athletics. Septimius' attempt to give Rome a similarly dignified display of female athletics was met by the crowd with ribald chants and cat-calls.[78] Probably as a result, he banned the use of female gladiators in 200 AD.[79][80]

Emperors

Caligula, Titus, Hadrian, Lucius Verus, Caracalla, Geta and Didius Julianus were all said to have performed in the arena, either in public or private, but risks to themselves were minimal.[81] Claudius, characterised by his historians as morbidly cruel and boorish, fought a whale trapped in the harbor in front of a group of spectators.[82] Commentators invariably disapproved of such performances.[83]

Commodus was a fanatical participant at the ludi, and compelled Rome's elite to attend his performances as gladiator, bestiarius or venator. Most of his performances as a gladiator were bloodless affairs, fought with wooden swords; he invariably won. He was said to have restyled Nero's colossal statue in his own image as "Hercules Reborn", dedicated to himself as "Champion of secutores; only left-handed fighter to conquer twelve times one thousand men."[84] He was said to have killed 100 lions in one day, almost certainly from an elevated platform surrounding the arena perimeter, which allowed him to safely demonstrate his marksmanship. On another occasion, he decapitated a running ostrich with a specially designed dart, carried the bloodied head and his sword over to the Senatorial seats and gesticulated as though they were next.[85] As reward for these services, he drew a gigantic stipend from the public purse.[86]

The games

Preparations

 
A duel, using whip, cudgel and shields, mosaic from a Roman villa at Nennig, Germany

Gladiator games were advertised well beforehand, on billboards that gave the reason for the game, its editor, venue, date and the number of paired gladiators (ordinarii) to be used. Other highlighted features could include details of venationes, executions, music and any luxuries to be provided for the spectators, such as an awning against the sun, water sprinklers, food, drink, sweets and occasionally "door prizes". For enthusiasts and gamblers, a more detailed program (libellus) was distributed on the day of the munus, showing the names, types and match records of gladiator pairs, and their order of appearance.[87] Left-handed gladiators were advertised as a rarity; they were trained to fight right-handers, which gave them an advantage over most opponents and produced an interestingly unorthodox combination.[88]

The night before the munus, the gladiators were given a banquet and opportunity to order their personal and private affairs; Futrell notes its similarity to a ritualistic or sacramental "last meal".[89] These were probably both family and public events which included even the noxii, sentenced to die in the arena the following day; and the damnati, who would have at least a slender chance of survival. The event may also have been used to drum up more publicity for the imminent game.[90][91]

The ludi and munus

Official munera of the early Imperial era seem to have followed a standard form (munus legitimum).[92] A procession (pompa) entered the arena, led by lictors who bore the fasces that signified the magistrate-editor's power over life and death. They were followed by a small band of trumpeters (tubicines) playing a fanfare. Images of the gods were carried in to "witness" the proceedings, followed by a scribe to record the outcome, and a man carrying the palm branch used to honour victors. The magistrate editor entered among a retinue who carried the arms and armour to be used; the gladiators presumably came in last.[93]

 
Musicians with trumpet (tuba), water organ (hydraulis), and horns (cornua), from the Nennig gladiator mosaic

The entertainments often began with venationes (beast hunts) and bestiarii (beast fighters).[94] Next came the ludi meridiani, which were of variable content but usually involved executions of noxii, some of whom were condemned to be subjects of fatal re-enactments, based on Greek or Roman myths.[95] Gladiators may have been involved in these as executioners, though most of the crowd, and the gladiators themselves, preferred the "dignity" of an even contest.[96] There were also comedy fights; some may have been lethal. A crude Pompeian graffito suggests a burlesque of musicians, dressed as animals named Ursus tibicen (flute-playing bear) and Pullus cornicen (horn-blowing chicken), perhaps as accompaniment to clowning by paegniarii during a "mock" contest of the ludi meridiani.[97]

Armatures

The gladiators may have held informal warm-up matches, using blunted or dummy weapons—some munera, however, may have used blunted weapons throughout.[98] The editor, his representative or an honoured guest would check the weapons (probatio armorum) for the scheduled matches.[99] These were the highlight of the day, and were as inventive, varied and novel as the editor could afford. Armatures could be very costly—some were flamboyantly decorated with exotic feathers, jewels and precious metals. Increasingly the munus was the editor's gift to spectators who had come to expect the best as their due.[100]

Combat

Lightly armed and armoured fighters, such as the retiarius, would tire less rapidly than their heavily armed opponents; most bouts would have lasted 10 to 15 minutes, or 20 minutes at most.[101] In late Republican munera, between 10 and 13 matches could have been fought on one day; this assumes one match at a time in the course of an afternoon.[90]

Spectators preferred to watch highly skilled, well matched ordinarii with complementary fighting styles; these were the most costly to train and to hire. A general melee of several, lower-skilled gladiators was far less costly, but also less popular. Even among the ordinarii, match winners might have to fight a new, well-rested opponent, either a tertiarius ("third choice gladiator") by prearrangement; or a "substitute" gladiator (suppositicius) who fought at the whim of the editor as an unadvertised, unexpected "extra".[102] This yielded two combats for the cost of three gladiators, rather than four; such contests were prolonged, and in some cases, more bloody. Most were probably of poor quality,[103] but the emperor Caracalla chose to test a notably skilled and successful fighter named Bato against first one supposicitius, whom he beat, and then another, who killed him.[104] At the opposite level of the profession, a gladiator reluctant to confront his opponent might be whipped, or goaded with hot irons, until he engaged through sheer desperation.[105]

 
Mosaic at the National Archaeological Museum in Madrid showing a retiarius named Kalendio (shown surrendering in the upper section) fighting a secutor named Astyanax. The Ø sign by Kalendio's name implies he was killed after surrendering.

Combats between experienced, well trained gladiators demonstrated a considerable degree of stagecraft. Among the cognoscenti, bravado and skill in combat were esteemed over mere hacking and bloodshed; some gladiators made their careers and reputation from bloodless victories. Suetonius describes an exceptional munus by Nero, in which no-one was killed, "not even noxii (enemies of the state)."[105]

Trained gladiators were expected to observe professional rules of combat. Most matches employed a senior referee (summa rudis) and an assistant, shown in mosaics with long staffs (rudes) to caution or separate opponents at some crucial point in the match. Referees were usually retired gladiators whose decisions, judgement and discretion were, for the most part, respected;[106] they could stop bouts entirely, or pause them to allow the combatants rest, refreshment and a rub-down.[107]

Ludi and munera were accompanied by music, played as interludes, or building to a "frenzied crescendo" during combats, perhaps to heighten the suspense during a gladiator's appeal; blows may have been accompanied by trumpet-blasts.[108][88] The Zliten mosaic in Libya (circa 80–100 AD) shows musicians playing an accompaniment to provincial games (with gladiators, bestiarii, or venatores and prisoners attacked by beasts). Their instruments are a long straight trumpet (tubicen), a large curved horn (Cornu) and a water organ (hydraulis).[109] Similar representations (musicians, gladiators and bestiari) are found on a tomb relief in Pompeii.[110]

Victory and defeat

A match was won by the gladiator who overcame his opponent, or killed him outright. Victors received the palm branch and an award from the editor. An outstanding fighter might receive a laurel crown and money from an appreciative crowd but for anyone originally condemned ad ludum the greatest reward was manumission (emancipation), symbolised by the gift of a wooden training sword or staff (rudis) from the editor. Martial describes a match between Priscus and Verus, who fought so evenly and bravely for so long that when both acknowledged defeat at the same instant, Titus awarded victory and a rudis to each.[111] Flamma was awarded the rudis four times, but chose to remain a gladiator. His gravestone in Sicily includes his record: "Flamma, secutor, lived 30 years, fought 34 times, won 21 times, fought to a draw 9 times, defeated 4 times, a Syrian by nationality. Delicatus made this for his deserving comrade-in-arms."[112]

A gladiator could acknowledge defeat by raising a finger (ad digitum), in appeal to the referee to stop the combat and refer to the editor, whose decision would usually rest on the crowd's response.[113] In the earliest munera, death was considered a righteous penalty for defeat; later, those who fought well might be granted remission at the whim of the crowd or the editor. During the Imperial era, matches advertised as sine missione (usually understood to mean "without reprieve" for the defeated) suggest that missio (the sparing of a defeated gladiator's life) had become common practice. The contract between editor and his lanista could include compensation for unexpected deaths;[114] this could be "some fifty times higher than the lease price" of the gladiator.[115]

Under Augustus' rule, the demand for gladiators began to exceed supply, and matches sine missione were officially banned; an economical, pragmatic development that happened to match popular notions of "natural justice". When Caligula and Claudius refused to spare defeated but popular fighters, their own popularity suffered. In general, gladiators who fought well were likely to survive.[116] At a Pompeian match between chariot-fighters, Publius Ostorius, with previous 51 wins to his credit, was granted missio after losing to Scylax, with 26 victories.[117] By common custom, the spectators decided whether or not a losing gladiator should be spared, and chose the winner in the rare event of a standing tie.[118] Even more rarely, perhaps uniquely, one stalemate ended in the killing of one gladiator by the editor himself.[119][120] In any event, the final decision of death or life belonged to the editor, who signalled his choice with a gesture described by Roman sources as pollice verso meaning "with a turned thumb"; a description too imprecise for reconstruction of the gesture or its symbolism. Whether victorious or defeated, a gladiator was bound by oath to accept or implement his editor's decision, "the victor being nothing but the instrument of his [editor's] will."[120] Not all editors chose to go with the crowd, and not all those condemned to death for putting on a poor show chose to submit:

Once a band of five retiarii in tunics, matched against the same number of secutores, yielded without a struggle; but when their death was ordered, one of them caught up his trident and slew all the victors. Caligula bewailed this in a public proclamation as a most cruel murder.[121]

Death and disposal

A gladiator who was refused missio was despatched by his opponent. To die well, a gladiator should never ask for mercy, nor cry out.[122] A "good death" redeemed the gladiator from the dishonourable weakness and passivity of defeat, and provided a noble example to those who watched:[123]

For death, when it stands near us, gives even to inexperienced men the courage not to seek to avoid the inevitable. So the gladiator, no matter how faint-hearted he has been throughout the fight, offers his throat to his opponent and directs the wavering blade to the vital spot. (Seneca. Epistles, 30.8)

Some mosaics show defeated gladiators kneeling in preparation for the moment of death. Seneca's "vital spot" seems to have meant the neck.[124] Gladiator remains from Ephesus confirm this.[125]

 
A flask depicting the final phase of the fight between a murmillo (winning) and a thraex

The body of a gladiator who had died well was placed on a couch of Libitina and removed with dignity to the arena morgue, where the corpse was stripped of armour, and probably had its throat cut as confirmation of death. The Christian author Tertullian, commenting on ludi meridiani in Roman Carthage during the peak era of the games, describes a more humiliating method of removal. One arena official, dressed as the "brother of Jove", Dis Pater (god of the underworld) strikes the corpse with a mallet. Another, dressed as Mercury, tests for life-signs with a heated "wand"; once confirmed as dead, the body is dragged from the arena.[126]

Whether these victims were gladiators or noxii is unknown. Modern pathological examination confirms the probably fatal use of a mallet on some, but not all the gladiator skulls found in a gladiators' cemetery.[127] Kyle (1998) proposes that gladiators who disgraced themselves might have been subjected to the same indignities as noxii, denied the relative mercies of a quick death and dragged from the arena as carrion. Whether the corpse of such a gladiator could be redeemed from further ignominy by friends or familia is not known.[128]

The bodies of noxii, and possibly some damnati, were thrown into rivers or dumped unburied;[129] Denial of funeral rites and memorial condemned the shade (manes) of the deceased to restless wandering upon the earth as a dreadful larva or lemur.[130] Ordinary citizens, slaves and freedmen were usually buried beyond the town or city limits, to avoid the ritual and physical pollution of the living; professional gladiators had their own, separate cemeteries. The taint of infamia was perpetual.[131]

 
Part of the Gladiator Mosaic, displayed at the Galleria Borghese. It dates from approximately 320 AD. The Ø symbol is the theta nigrum ("black theta") or theta infelix ("unlucky theta"), a symbol of death in Greek and Latin epigraphy.[132]

Remembrance and epitaphs

Gladiators could subscribe to a union (collegia), which ensured their proper burial, and sometimes a pension or compensation for wives and children. Otherwise, the gladiator's familia, which included his lanista, comrades and blood-kin, might fund his funeral and memorial costs, and use the memorial to assert their moral reputation as responsible, respectful colleagues or family members. Some monuments record the gladiator's career in some detail, including the number of appearances, victories—sometimes represented by an engraved crown or wreath—defeats, career duration, and age at death. Some include the gladiator's type, in words or direct representation: for example, the memorial of a retiarius at Verona included the engraving of a trident and sword.[133][134] A wealthy editor might commission artwork to celebrate a particularly successful or memorable show, and include named portraits of winners and losers in action; the Borghese Gladiator Mosaic is a notable example. According to Cassius Dio, the emperor Caracalla gave the gladiator Bato a magnificent memorial and State funeral;[104] more typical are the simple gladiator tombs of the Eastern Roman Empire, whose brief inscriptions include the following:

"The familia set this up in memory of Saturnilos."
"For Nikepharos, son of Synetos, Lakedaimonian, and for Narcissus the secutor. Titus Flavius Satyrus set up this monument in his memory from his own money."
"For Hermes. Paitraeites with his cell-mates set this up in memory".[135]

Very little evidence survives of the religious beliefs of gladiators as a class, or their expectations of an afterlife. Modern scholarship offers little support for the once-prevalent notion that gladiators, venatores and bestiarii were personally or professionally dedicated to the cult of the Graeco-Roman goddess Nemesis. Rather, she seems to have represented a kind of "Imperial Fortuna" who dispensed Imperial retribution on the one hand, and Imperially subsidised gifts on the other—including the munera. One gladiator's tomb dedication clearly states that her decisions are not to be trusted.[136] Many gladiator epitaphs claim Nemesis, fate, deception or treachery as the instrument of their death, never the superior skills of the flesh-and-blood adversary who defeated and killed them. Having no personal responsibility for his own defeat and death, the losing gladiator remains the better man, worth avenging.[137]

"I, Victor, left-handed, lie here, but my homeland was in Thessalonica. Doom killed me, not the liar Pinnas. No longer let him boast. I had a fellow gladiator, Polyneikes, who killed Pinnas and avenged me. Claudius Thallus set up this memorial from what I left behind as a legacy."[138]

Life expectancy

A gladiator might expect to fight in two or three munera annually, and an unknown number would have died in their first match. Few gladiators survived more than 10 contests, though one survived an extraordinary 150 bouts;[139] and another died at 90 years of age, presumably long after retirement.[140] A natural death following retirement is also likely for three individuals who died at 38, 45, and 48 years respectively.[133] George Ville, using evidence from 1st century gladiator headstones, calculated an average age at death of 27, and mortality "among all who entered the arena" at 19/100.[141] Marcus Junkelmann disputes Ville's calculation for average age at death; the majority would have received no headstone, and would have died early in their careers, at 18–25 years of age.[142] Between the early and later Imperial periods the risk of death for defeated gladiators rose from 1/5 to 1/4, perhaps because missio was granted less often.[141] Hopkins and Beard tentatively estimate a total of 400 arenas throughout the Roman Empire at its greatest extent, with a combined total of 8,000 deaths per annum from executions, combats and accidents.[143]

Schools and training

The earliest named gladiator school (singular: ludus; plural: ludi) is that of Aurelius Scaurus at Capua. He was lanista of the gladiators employed by the state circa 105 BC to instruct the legions and simultaneously entertain the public.[144] Few other lanistae are known by name: they headed their familia gladiatoria, and had lawful power over life and death of every family member, including servi poenae, auctorati and ancillaries. Socially, they were infames, on a footing with pimps and butchers and despised as price gougers.[145] No such stigma was attached to a gladiator owner (munerarius or editor) of good family, high status and independent means;[146] Cicero congratulated his friend Atticus on buying a splendid troop—if he rented them out, he might recover their entire cost after two performances.[147]

The Spartacus revolt had originated in a gladiator school privately owned by Lentulus Batiatus, and had been suppressed only after a protracted series of costly, sometimes disastrous campaigns by regular Roman troops. In the late Republican era, a fear of similar uprisings, the usefulness of gladiator schools in creating private armies, and the exploitation of munera for political gain led to increased restrictions on gladiator school ownership, siting and organisation. By Domitian's time, many had been more or less absorbed by the State, including those at Pergamum, Alexandria, Praeneste and Capua.[148] The city of Rome itself had four; the Ludus Magnus (the largest and most important, housing up to about 2,000 gladiators), Ludus Dacicus, Ludus Gallicus, and the Ludus Matutinus, which trained bestiarii.[59]

In the Imperial era, volunteers required a magistrate's permission to join a school as auctorati.[149] If this was granted, the school's physician assessed their suitability. Their contract (auctoramentum) stipulated how often they were to perform, their fighting style and earnings. A condemned bankrupt or debtor accepted as novice (novicius) could negotiate with his lanista or editor for the partial or complete payment of his debt. Faced with runaway re-enlistment fees for skilled auctorati, Marcus Aurelius set their upper limit at 12,000 sesterces.[150]

All prospective gladiators, whether volunteer or condemned, were bound to service by a sacred oath (sacramentum).[151] Novices (novicii) trained under teachers of particular fighting styles, probably retired gladiators.[152] They could ascend through a hierarchy of grades (singular: palus) in which primus palus was the highest.[153] Lethal weapons were prohibited in the schools—weighted, blunt wooden versions were probably used. Fighting styles were probably learned through constant rehearsal as choreographed "numbers". An elegant, economical style was preferred. Training included preparation for a stoical, unflinching death. Successful training required intense commitment.[154]

Those condemned ad ludum were probably branded or marked with a tattoo (stigma, plural stigmata) on the face, legs and/or hands. These stigmata may have been text—slaves were sometimes thus marked on the forehead until Constantine banned the use of facial stigmata in 325 AD. Soldiers were routinely marked on the hand.[155]

Gladiators were typically accommodated in cells, arranged in barrack formation around a central practice arena. Juvenal describes the segregation of gladiators according to type and status, suggestive of rigid hierarchies within the schools: "even the lowest scum of the arena observe this rule; even in prison they're separate". Retiarii were kept away from damnati, and "fag targeteers" from "armoured heavies". As most ordinarii at games were from the same school, this kept potential opponents separate and safe from each other until the lawful munus.[156] Discipline could be extreme, even lethal.[157] Remains of a Pompeian ludus site attest to developments in supply, demand and discipline; in its earliest phase, the building could accommodate 15–20 gladiators. Its replacement could have housed about 100 and included a very small cell, probably for lesser punishments and so low that standing was impossible.[158]

Diet and medical care

 
Gladiators after the fight, José Moreno Carbonero (1882)

Despite the harsh discipline, gladiators represented a substantial investment for their lanista and were otherwise well fed and cared for. Their daily, high-energy, vegetarian diet consisted of barley, boiled beans, oatmeal, ash and dried fruit.[159][160] Gladiators were sometimes called hordearii (eaters of barley). Romans considered barley inferior to wheat—a punishment for legionaries replaced their wheat ration with it—but it was thought to strengthen the body.[161] Regular massage and high quality medical care helped mitigate an otherwise very severe training regimen. Part of Galen's medical training was at a gladiator school in Pergamum where he saw (and would later criticise) the training, diet, and long-term health prospects of the gladiators.[162]

Legal and social status

"He vows to endure to be burned, to be bound, to be beaten, and to be killed by the sword." The gladiator's oath as cited by Petronius (Satyricon, 117).

Modern customs and institutions offer few useful parallels to the legal and social context of the gladiatoria munera.[163] In Roman law, anyone condemned to the arena or the gladiator schools (damnati ad ludum) was a servus poenae (slave of the penalty), and was considered to be under sentence of death unless manumitted.[164] A rescript of Hadrian reminded magistrates that "those sentenced to the sword" (execution) should be despatched immediately "or at least within the year", and those sentenced to the ludi should not be discharged before five years, or three years if granted manumission.[165] Only slaves found guilty of specific offences could be sentenced to the arena; however, citizens found guilty of particular offenses could be stripped of citizenship, formally enslaved, then sentenced; and slaves, once freed, could be legally reverted to slavery for certain offences.[166] Arena punishment could be given for banditry, theft and arson, and for treasons such as rebellion, census evasion to avoid paying due taxes and refusal to swear lawful oaths.[167]

Offenders seen as particularly obnoxious to the state (noxii) received the most humiliating punishments.[168] By the 1st century BC, noxii were being condemned to the beasts (damnati ad bestias) in the arena, with almost no chance of survival, or were made to kill each other.[169] From the early Imperial era, some were forced to participate in humiliating and novel forms of mythological or historical enactment, culminating in their execution.[170] Those judged less harshly might be condemned ad ludum venatorium or ad gladiatorium—combat with animals or gladiators—and armed as thought appropriate. These damnati at least might put on a good show and retrieve some respect and, very rarely, survive to fight another day. Some may even have become "proper" gladiators.[171]

 
Mérida amphitheatre, Spain; mural of beast hunt, showing a venator (or bestiarius) and lioness

Among the most admired and skilled auctorati were those who, having been granted manumission, volunteered to fight in the arena.[172] Some of these highly trained and experienced specialists may have had no other practical choice open to them. Their legal status—slave or free—is uncertain. Under Roman law, a freed gladiator could not "offer such services [as those of a gladiator] after manumission, because they cannot be performed without endangering [his] life."[173] All contracted volunteers, including those of equestrian and senatorial class, were legally enslaved by their auctoratio because it involved their potentially lethal submission to a master.[174] All arenarii (those who appeared in the arena) were "infames by reputation", a form of social dishonour which excluded them from most of the advantages and rights of citizenship. Payment for such appearances compounded their infamia.[175] The legal and social status of even the most popular and wealthy auctorati was thus marginal at best. They could not vote, plead in court nor leave a will; and unless they were manumitted, their lives and property belonged to their masters.[176] Nevertheless, there is evidence of informal if not entirely lawful practices to the contrary. Some "unfree" gladiators bequeathed money and personal property to wives and children, possibly via a sympathetic owner or familia; some had their own slaves and gave them their freedom.[177] One gladiator was even granted "citizenship" to several Greek cities of the Eastern Roman world.[178]

Caesar's munus of 46 BC included at least one equestrian, son of a Praetor, and two volunteers of possible senatorial rank.[179] Augustus, who enjoyed watching the games, forbade the participation of senators, equestrians and their descendants as fighters or arenarii, but in 11 AD he bent his own rules and allowed equestrians to volunteer because "the prohibition was no use".[180] Under Tiberius, the Larinum decree[181] (19 AD) reiterated Augustus' original prohibitions. Thereafter, Caligula flouted them and Claudius strengthened them.[182] Nero and Commodus ignored them. Even after the adoption of Christianity as Rome's official religion, legislation forbade the involvement of Rome's upper social classes in the games, though not the games themselves.[183] Throughout Rome's history, some volunteers were prepared to risk loss of status or reputation by appearing in the arena, whether for payment, glory or, as in one recorded case, to revenge an affront to their personal honour.[184][185] In one extraordinary episode, an aristocratic descendant of the Gracchi, already infamous for his marriage, as a bride, to a male horn player, appeared in what may have been a non-lethal or farcical match. His motives are unknown, but his voluntary and "shameless" arena appearance combined the "womanly attire" of a lowly retiarius tunicatus, adorned with golden ribbons, with the apex headdress that marked him out as a priest of Mars. In Juvenal's account, he seems to have relished the scandalous self-display, applause and the disgrace he inflicted on his more sturdy opponent by repeatedly skipping away from the confrontation.[186][187]

Amphitheatres

 
The Amphitheatre of Pompeii, built around 70 BC and buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius 79 AD, once hosted spectacles with gladiators.

As munera grew larger and more popular, open spaces such as the Forum Romanum were adapted (as the Forum Boarium had been) as venues in Rome and elsewhere, with temporary, elevated seating for the patron and high status spectators; they were popular but not truly public events:

A show of gladiators was to be exhibited before the people in the market-place, and most of the magistrates erected scaffolds round about, with an intention of letting them for advantage. Caius commanded them to take down their scaffolds, that the poor people might see the sport without paying anything. But nobody obeying these orders of his, he gathered together a body of labourers, who worked for him, and overthrew all the scaffolds the very night before the contest was to take place. So that by the next morning the market-place was cleared, and the common people had an opportunity of seeing the pastime. In this, the populace thought he had acted the part of a man; but he much disobliged the tribunes his colleagues, who regarded it as a piece of violent and presumptuous interference.[188][189]

Towards the end of the Republic, Cicero (Murena, 72–73) still describes gladiator shows as ticketed—their political usefulness was served by inviting the rural tribunes of the plebs, not the people of Rome en masse–but in Imperial times, poor citizens in receipt of the corn dole were allocated at least some free seating, possibly by lottery.[190] Others had to pay. Ticket scalpers (Locarii) sometimes sold or let out seats at inflated prices. Martial wrote that "Hermes [a gladiator who always drew the crowds] means riches for the ticket scalpers".[191]

 
The Colosseum in Rome, Italy

The earliest known Roman amphitheatre was built at Pompeii by Sullan colonists, around 70 BC.[192] The first in the city of Rome was the extraordinary wooden amphitheatre of Gaius Scribonius Curio (built in 53 BC).[193] The first part-stone amphitheatre in Rome was inaugurated in 29–30 BC, in time for the triple triumph of Octavian (later Augustus).[194] Shortly after it burned down in 64 AD, Vespasian began its replacement, later known as the Amphitheatrum Flavium (Colosseum), which seated 50,000 spectators and would remain the largest in the Empire. It was inaugurated by Titus in 80 AD as the personal gift of the Emperor to the people of Rome, paid for by the imperial share of booty after the Jewish Revolt.[195]

 
Arles Amphitheatre, inside view

Amphitheatres were usually oval in plan. Their seating tiers surrounded the arena below, where the community's judgments were meted out, in full public view. From across the stands, crowd and editor could assess each other's character and temperament. For the crowd, amphitheatres afforded unique opportunities for free expression and free speech (theatralis licentia). Petitions could be submitted to the editor (as magistrate) in full view of the community. Factiones and claques could vent their spleen on each other, and occasionally on Emperors. The emperor Titus's dignified yet confident ease in his management of an amphitheatre crowd and its factions were taken as a measure of his enormous popularity and the rightness of his imperium. The amphitheatre munus thus served the Roman community as living theatre and a court in miniature, in which judgement could be served not only on those in the arena below, but on their judges.[196][197][198] Amphitheatres also provided a means of social control. Their seating was "disorderly and indiscriminate" until Augustus prescribed its arrangement in his Social Reforms. To persuade the Senate, he expressed his distress on behalf of a senator who could not find seating at a crowded games in Puteoli:

In consequence of this the senate decreed that, whenever any public show was given anywhere, the first row of seats should be reserved for senators; and at Rome he would not allow the envoys of the free and allied nations to sit in the orchestra, since he was informed that even freedmen were sometimes appointed. He separated the soldiery from the people. He assigned special seats to the married men of the commons, to boys under age their own section and the adjoining one to their preceptors; and he decreed that no one wearing a dark cloak should sit in the middle of the house. He would not allow women to view even the gladiators except from the upper seats, though it had been the custom for men and women to sit together at such shows. Only the Vestal virgins were assigned a place to themselves, opposite the praetor's tribunal.[199]

These arrangements do not seem to have been strongly enforced.[200]

Factions and rivals

 
The Amphitheatre at Pompeii, depicting the riot between the Nucerians and the Pompeians

Popular factions supported favourite gladiators and gladiator types.[201] Under Augustan legislation, the Samnite type was renamed Secutor ("chaser", or "pursuer"). The secutor was equipped with a long, heavy "large" shield called a scutum; Secutores, their supporters and any heavyweight secutor-based types such as the Murmillo were secutarii.[202] Lighter types, such as the Thraex, were equipped with a smaller, lighter shield called a parma, from which they and their supporters were named parmularii ("small shields"). Titus and Trajan preferred the parmularii and Domitian the secutarii; Marcus Aurelius took neither side. Nero seems to have enjoyed the brawls between rowdy, enthusiastic and sometimes violent factions, but called in the troops if they went too far.[203][204]

There were also local rivalries. At Pompeii's amphitheatre, during Nero's reign, the trading of insults between Pompeians and Nucerian spectators during public ludi led to stone throwing and riot. Many were killed or wounded. Nero banned gladiator munera (though not the games) at Pompeii for ten years as punishment. The story is told in Pompeian graffiti and high quality wall painting, with much boasting of Pompeii's "victory" over Nuceria.[205]

Role in Roman life

It is not known how many gladiatoria munera were given throughout the Roman period. Many, if not most, involved venationes, and in the later empire some may have been only that. In 165 BC, at least one munus was held during April's Megalesia. In the early imperial era, munera in Pompeii and neighbouring towns were dispersed from March through November. They included a provincial magnate's five-day munus of thirty pairs, plus beast hunts.[206] A single late primary source, the Calendar of Furius Dionysius Philocalus for 354, shows how seldom gladiators featured among a multitude of official festivals. Of the 176 days reserved for spectacles of various kinds, 102 were for theatrical shows, 64 for chariot races and just 10 in December for gladiator games and venationes. A century before this, the emperor Alexander Severus (r. 222–235) may have intended a more even redistribution of munera throughout the year; but this would have broken with what had become the traditional positioning of the major gladiator games, at the year's ending. As Wiedemann points out, December was also the month for the Saturnalia, Saturn's festival, in which death was linked to renewal, and the lowest were honoured as the highest.[207]

Role in the military

According to Livy: "A man who knows how to conquer in war is a man who knows how to arrange a banquet and put on a show."[208]

Rome was essentially a landowning military aristocracy. From the early days of the Republic, ten years of military service were a citizen's duty and a prerequisite for election to public office. Devotio (willingness to sacrifice one's life to the greater good) was central to the Roman military ideal, and was the core of the Roman military oath. It applied from highest to lowest alike in the chain of command.[209] As a soldier committed his life (voluntarily, at least in theory) to the greater cause of Rome's victory, he was not expected to survive defeat.[210]

The Punic Wars of the late 3rd century BC—in particular the near-catastrophic defeat of Roman arms at Cannae—had long-lasting effects on the Republic, its citizen armies, and the development of the gladiatorial munera. In the aftermath of Cannae, Scipio Africanus crucified Roman deserters and had non-Roman deserters thrown to the beasts.[211] The Senate refused to ransom Hannibal's Roman captives: instead, they consulted the Sibylline books, then made drastic preparations:

In obedience to the Books of Destiny, some strange and unusual sacrifices were made, human sacrifices amongst them. A Gaulish man and a Gaulish woman and a Greek man and a Greek woman were buried alive under the Forum Boarium ... They were lowered into a stone vault, which had on a previous occasion also been polluted by human victims, a practice most repulsive to Roman feelings. When the gods were believed to be duly propitiated ... Armour, weapons, and other things of the kind were ordered to be in readiness, and the ancient spoils gathered from the enemy were taken down from the temples and colonnades. The dearth of freemen necessitated a new kind of enlistment; 8,000 sturdy youths from amongst the slaves were armed at the public cost, after they had each been asked whether they were willing to serve or no. These soldiers were preferred, as there would be an opportunity of ransoming them when taken prisoners at a lower price.[212]

 
Late 3rd century gladiator mosaic from a private residence in Kourion, Cyprus. All the participants are named. The central figure (Darios) is positioned as a referee but wears a citizen's high-status toga or tunic with broad stripes

The account notes, uncomfortably, the bloodless human sacrifices performed to help turn the tide of the war in Rome's favour. While the Senate mustered their willing slaves, Hannibal offered his dishonoured Roman captives a chance for honourable death, in what Livy describes as something very like the Roman munus. The munus thus represented an essentially military, self-sacrificial ideal, taken to extreme fulfillment in the gladiator's oath.[198] By the devotio of a voluntary oath, a slave might achieve the quality of a Roman (Romanitas), become the embodiment of true virtus (manliness, or manly virtue), and paradoxically, be granted missio while remaining a slave.[151] The gladiator as a specialist fighter, and the ethos and organization of the gladiator schools, would inform the development of the Roman military as the most effective force of its time.[213] Following defeat at the Battle of Arausio in 105 BC:

...weapons training was given to soldiers by P. Rutilius, consul with C. Mallis. For he, following the example of no previous general, with teachers summoned from the gladiatorial training school of C. Aurelus Scaurus, implanted in the legions a more sophisticated method of avoiding and dealing a blow and mixed bravery with skill and skill back again with virtue so that skill became stronger by bravery's passion and passion became more wary with the knowledge of this art.[24]

The military were great aficionados of the games, and supervised the schools. Many schools and amphitheatres were sited at or near military barracks, and some provincial army units owned gladiator troupes.[214] As the Republic wore on, the term of military service increased from ten to the sixteen years formalised by Augustus in the Principate. It would rise to twenty, and later, to twenty-five years. Roman military discipline was ferocious; severe enough to provoke mutiny, despite the consequences. A career as a volunteer gladiator may have seemed an attractive option for some.[215]

In AD 69, the Year of the Four Emperors, Otho's troops at Bedriacum included 2000 gladiators. Opposite him on the field, Vitellius's army was swollen by levies of slaves, plebs and gladiators.[216] In 167 AD, troop depletions by plague and desertion may have prompted Marcus Aurelius to draft gladiators at his own expense.[217] During the Civil Wars that led to the Principate, Octavian (later Augustus) acquired the personal gladiator troop of his erstwhile opponent, Mark Antony. They had served their late master with exemplary loyalty but thereafter, they disappear from the record.[68]

Religion, ethics and sentiment

Roman writing as a whole demonstrates a deep ambivalence towards the gladiatoria munera. Even the most complex and sophisticated munera of the Imperial era evoked the ancient, ancestral dii manes of the underworld and were framed by the protective, lawful rites of sacrificium. Their popularity made their co-option by the state inevitable; Cicero acknowledged their sponsorship as a political imperative.[218] Despite the popular adulation of gladiators, they were set apart, despised; and despite Cicero's contempt for the mob, he shared their admiration: "Even when [gladiators] have been felled, let alone when they are standing and fighting, they never disgrace themselves. And suppose a gladiator has been brought to the ground, when do you ever see one twist his neck away after he has been ordered to extend it for the death blow?" His own death would later emulate this example.[219][220] Yet, Cicero could also refer to his popularist opponent Clodius, publicly and scathingly, as a bustuarius—literally, a "funeral-man", implying that Clodius has shown the moral temperament of the lowest sort of gladiator. "Gladiator" could be (and was) used as an insult throughout the Roman period, and "Samnite" doubled the insult, despite the popularity of the Samnite type.[221]

Silius Italicus wrote, as the games approached their peak, that the degenerate Campanians had devised the very worst of precedents, which now threatened the moral fabric of Rome: "It was their custom to enliven their banquets with bloodshed and to combine with their feasting the horrid sight of armed men [(Samnites)] fighting; often the combatants fell dead above the very cups of the revelers, and the tables were stained with streams of blood. Thus demoralised was Capua."[222] Death could be rightly meted out as punishment, or met with equanimity in peace or war, as a gift of fate; but when inflicted as entertainment, with no underlying moral or religious purpose, it could only pollute and demean those who witnessed it.[223]

The munus itself could be interpreted as pious necessity, but its increasing luxury corroded Roman virtue, and created an un-Roman appetite for profligacy and self-indulgence.[224] Caesar's 46 BC ludi were mere entertainment for political gain, a waste of lives and of money that would have been better doled out to his legionary veterans.[225] Yet for Seneca, and for Marcus Aurelius—both professed Stoics—the degradation of gladiators in the munus highlighted their Stoic virtues: their unconditional obedience to their master and to fate, and equanimity in the face of death. Having "neither hope nor illusions", the gladiator could transcend his own debased nature, and disempower death itself by meeting it face to face. Courage, dignity, altruism and loyalty were morally redemptive; Lucian idealised this principle in his story of Sisinnes, who voluntarily fought as a gladiator, earned 10,000 drachmas and used it to buy freedom for his friend, Toxaris.[226] Seneca had a lower opinion of the mob's un-Stoical appetite for ludi meridiani: "Man [is]...now slaughtered for jest and sport; and those whom it used to be unholy to train for the purpose of inflicting and enduring wounds are thrust forth exposed and defenceless."[198]

These accounts seek a higher moral meaning from the munus, but Ovid's very detailed (though satirical) instructions for seduction in the amphitheatre suggest that the spectacles could generate a potent and dangerously sexual atmosphere.[200] Augustan seating prescriptions placed women—excepting the Vestals, who were legally inviolate—as far as possible from the action of the arena floor; or tried to. There remained the thrilling possibility of clandestine sexual transgression by high-caste spectators and their heroes of the arena. Such assignations were a source for gossip and satire but some became unforgivably public:[227]

What was the youthful charm that so fired Eppia? What hooked her? What did she see in him to make her put up with being called "the gladiator's moll"? Her poppet, her Sergius, was no chicken, with a dud arm that prompted hope of early retirement. Besides his face looked a proper mess, helmet-scarred, a great wart on his nose, an unpleasant discharge always trickling from one eye. But he was a gladiator. That word makes the whole breed seem handsome, and made her prefer him to her children and country, her sister, her husband. Steel is what they fall in love with.[228]

Eppia—a senator's wife–and her Sergius eloped to Egypt, where he deserted her. Most gladiators would have aimed lower. Two wall graffiti in Pompeii describe Celadus the Thraex as "the sigh of the girls" and "the glory of the girls"—which may or may not have been Celadus' own wishful thinking.[229]

In the later Imperial era, Servius Maurus Honoratus uses the same disparaging term as Cicero—bustuarius—for gladiators.[230] Tertullian used it somewhat differently—all victims of the arena were sacrificial in his eyes—and expressed the paradox of the arenarii as a class, from a Christian viewpoint:

On the one and the same account they glorify them and they degrade and diminish them; yes, further, they openly condemn them to disgrace and civil degradation; they keep them religiously excluded from council chamber, rostrum, senate, knighthood, and every other kind of office and a good many distinctions. The perversity of it! They love whom they lower; they despise whom they approve; the art they glorify, the artist they disgrace.[231]

In Roman art and culture

In this new Play, I attempted to follow the old custom of mine, of making a fresh trial; I brought it on again. In the first Act I pleased; when in the meantime a rumor spread that gladiators were about to be exhibited; the populace flock together, make a tumult, clamor aloud, and fight for their places: meantime, I was unable to maintain my place.[232]

 
Graffito of a gladiatorial scene from Pompeii, Naples

Images of gladiators were found throughout the Republic and Empire, among all classes. Walls in the 2nd century BC "Agora of the Italians" at Delos were decorated with paintings of gladiators. Mosaics dating from the 2nd through 4th centuries AD have been invaluable in the reconstruction of combat and its rules, gladiator types and the development of the munus. Throughout the Roman world, ceramics, lamps, gems and jewellery, mosaics, reliefs, wall paintings and statuary offer evidence, sometimes the best evidence, of the clothing, props, equipment, names, events, prevalence and rules of gladiatorial combat. Earlier periods provide only occasional, perhaps exceptional examples.[233][234] The Gladiator Mosaic in the Galleria Borghese displays several gladiator types, and the Bignor Roman Villa mosaic from Provincial Britain shows Cupids as gladiators. Souvenir ceramics were produced depicting named gladiators in combat; similar images of higher quality, were available on more expensive articles in high quality ceramic, glass or silver.

Some of the best preserved gladiator graffiti are from Pompeii and Herculaneum, in public areas including Pompeii's Forum and amphitheater, and in the private residences of the upper, middle and lower classes.[235][236] They clearly show how gladiator munera pervaded Pompeiian culture; they provide information pertaining to particular gladiators, and sometimes include their names, status as slaves or freeborn volunteers, and their match records.[237]

Pliny the Elder gives vivid examples of the popularity of gladiator portraiture in Antium and an artistic treat laid on by an adoptive aristocrat for the solidly plebeian citizens of the Roman Aventine:

When a freedman of Nero was giving a gladiatorial show at Antium, the public porticoes were covered with paintings, so we are told, containing life-like portraits of all the gladiators and assistants. This portraiture of gladiators has been the highest interest in art for many centuries now, but it was Gaius Terentius who began the practice of having pictures made of gladiatorial shows and exhibited in public; in honour of his grandfather who had adopted him he provided thirty pairs of Gladiators in the Forum for three consecutive days, and exhibited a picture of the matches in the Grove of Diana.[238]

Modern reconstructions

Some Roman reenactors attempt to recreate Roman gladiator troupes. Some of these groups are part of larger Roman reenactment groups, and others are wholly independent, though they might participate in larger demonstrations of Roman reenacting or historical reenacting in general. These groups usually focus on portraying mock gladiatorial combat in as accurate a manner as possible.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Welch 2007, p. 17; Kyle 1998, p. 82.
  2. ^ Welch 2007, pp. 16–17. Nicolaus cites Posidonius's support for a Celtic origin and Hermippus' for a Mantinean (therefore Greek) origin.
  3. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 4–7. Futrell is citing Livy, 9.40.17.
  4. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 14–15.
  5. ^ Welch 2007, p. 11.
  6. ^ Welch 2007, p. 18; Futrell 2006, pp. 3–5.
  7. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 4; Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 226.
  8. ^ Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 226. Paestum was colonized by Rome in 273 BC.
  9. ^ Welch 2007, pp. 15, 18.
  10. ^ Welch 2007, pp. 18–19. Livy's account (summary 16) places beast-hunts and gladiatorial munera within this single munus.
  11. ^ A single, later source describes the gladiator type involved as Thracian. See Welch 2007, p. 19. Welch is citing Ausanius: Seneca simply says they were "war captives".
  12. ^ Wiedemann 1992, p. 33; Kyle 1998, p. 2; Kyle 2007, p. 273. Evidence of "Samnite" as an insult in earlier writings fades as Samnium is absorbed into the republic.
  13. ^ Livy 9.40. Quoted in Futrell 2006, pp. 4–5.
  14. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 67 (Note #84). Livy's published works are often embellished with illustrative rhetorical detail.
  15. ^ The velutes and later, the provocatores were exceptions, but as "historicised" rather than contemporary Roman types.
  16. ^ Kyle 1998, pp. 80–81.
  17. ^ Welch 2007, p. 21. Welch is citing Livy, 23.30.15. The Aemilii Lepidii were one of the most important families in Rome at the time, and probably owned a gladiator school (ludus).
  18. ^ a b Futrell 2006, pp. 8–9.
  19. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 30.
  20. ^ Livy, 39.46.2.
  21. ^ Silius Italicus quoted in Futrell 2006, pp. 4–5.
  22. ^ Welch 2007, p. 21.
  23. ^ Livy, Annal for the Year 174 BC (cited in Welch 2007, p. 21).
  24. ^ a b Wiedemann 1992, pp. 6–7. Wiedemann is citing Valerius Maximus, 2.3.2.
  25. ^ The games were always referred to in the plural, as ludi. Gladiator schools were also known as ludi when plural; a single school was ludus
  26. ^ a b Lintott 2004, p. 183.
  27. ^ Ball 2016, pp. 153–154
  28. ^ Mouritsen 2001, p. 97; Coleman 1990, p. 50.
  29. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 287; Mouritsen 2001, pp. 32, 109–111. Approximately 12% of Rome's adult male population could actually vote; but these were the wealthiest and most influential among ordinary citizens, well worth cultivation by any politician.
  30. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 285.
  31. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 287; such as Caesar's Capua-based gladiators, brought to Rome as a private army to impress and overawe.
  32. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 24. Gladiator gangs were used by Caesar and others to overawe and "persuade".
  33. ^ Mouritsen 2001, p. 61. Gladiators could be enrolled to serve noble households; some household slaves may have been raised and trained for this.
  34. ^ Mouritsen 2001, p. 97. For more details see Plutarch's Julius Caesar, 5.9.
  35. ^ Kyle 2007, pp. 285–287. See also Pliny's Historia Naturalis, 33.16.53.
  36. ^ Kyle 2007, pp. 280, 287
  37. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 8–10.
  38. ^ Welch 2007, p. 21. Antiochus IV Epiphanes of Greece was keen to upstage his Roman allies, but gladiators were becoming increasingly expensive, and to save costs, all of his were local volunteers.
  39. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 280. Kyle is citing Cicero's Lex Tullia Ambitu.
  40. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death as Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 184.
  41. ^ Wiedemann 1992, p. 45. Wiedemann is citing Cassius Dio, 54.2.3–4.
  42. ^ Prices in denarii cited in "Venationes," Encyclopaedia Romana.
  43. ^ Auguet 1994, p. 30. Each of Augustus's games involved an average of 625 gladiator pairs.
  44. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death as Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 181. Brown is citing Dio Cassius, 68.15.
  45. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 48.
  46. ^ Mattern 2002, pp. 130–131.
  47. ^ Auguet 1994, pp. 30, 32.
  48. ^ Tertullian. De Spectaculis, 22.
  49. ^ Osiek 2006, p. 287.
  50. ^ Saint Augustine, Confessions, 6.8.
  51. ^ Rescript of Constantine quoted by David Potter, "Constantine and the Gladiators", The Classical Quarterly, Vol. 60, No. 2 (December 2010), p. 597
  52. ^ David Potter, "Constantine and the Gladiators", The Classical Quarterly, Vol. 60, No. 2 (December 2010), p. 602
  53. ^ See Tertullian's Apologetics, 49.4 for Tertullian's condemnation of officials who sought their own "glory" by sponsoring the martyrdom of Christians.
  54. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 78. Compared to "pagan" noxii, Christian deaths in the arena would have been few.
  55. ^ Codex Theodosianus, 9.40.8 and 15.9.1; Symmachus. Relatio, 8.3.
  56. ^ Codex Theodosianus, 2.8.19 and 2.8.22.
  57. ^ Telemachus had personally stepped in to prevent the munus. See Theoderet's Historia Ecclesiastica, 5.26.
  58. ^ Codex Justinianus, 3.12.9.
  59. ^ a b Kyle 1998, p. 80.
  60. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 43.
  61. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 440–446.
  62. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 313
  63. ^ Green, Thomas, Martial Arts of the World: R–Z, [1] Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001, pp 45, 149, ISBN 978-1576071502
  64. ^ Josephus. The Jewish War, 6.418, 7.37–40; Kyle 1998, p. 93. noxii were the most obnoxious of criminal categories in Roman law.
  65. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 120–125.
  66. ^ Ludus meant both a game and a school – see entries 1 to 2.C, at Lewis and Short (Perseus Project).
  67. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 124. See also Cassius Dio's accusation of entrapment by informers to provide "arena slaves" under Claudius; Futrell 2006, p. 103. "the best gladiators", Futrell citing Petronius's Satyricon, 45.
  68. ^ a b Futrell 2006, p. 129. Futrell is citing Cassius Dio.
  69. ^ Suetonius. Lives, "Tiberius", 7 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  70. ^ Suetonius. Lives, "Nero", 30 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  71. ^ a b Futrell 2006, pp. 153–156.
  72. ^ Wiedemann 1992, p. 112; Jacobelli 2003, p. 17, citing Cassius Dio, 62.3.1.
  73. ^ Jacobelli 2003, p. 17, citing Juvenal's Saturae, 1.22–1.23.
  74. ^ Jacobelli 2003, p. 18, citing Petronius's Satyricon, 45.7.
  75. ^ Jacobelli 2003, p. 18, citing Dio Cassius 67.8.4, Suetonius's Domitianus 4.2, and Statius's Silvae 1.8.51–1.8.56: see also Brunet (2014) p. 480.
  76. ^ a b Jacobelli 2003, p. 18; Potter 2010, p. 408.
  77. ^ Potter 2010, p. 408.
  78. ^ Potter 2010, p. 407.
  79. ^ Jacobelli 2003, p. 18, citing Dio Cassius 75.16.
  80. ^ Potter 2010, p. 407, citing Dio Cassius 75.16.1.
  81. ^ Barton 1993, p. 66.
  82. ^ Fox 2006, p. 576. Fox is citing Pliny.
  83. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 158.
  84. ^ Cassius Dio. Commodus, 73 (Epitome)
  85. ^ Gibbon & Womersley 2000, p. 118.
  86. ^ Cassius Dio. Commodus, 73 (Epitome). Commodus was assassinated and posthumously declared a public enemy but was later deified.
  87. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 85, 101, 110. Based on fragmentary Pompeian remains and citing of Pliny's Historia Naturalis, 19.23–25.
  88. ^ a b Coleman, Kathleen (17 February 2011). "Gladiators: Heroes of the Roman Amphitheatre". BBC. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  89. ^ Plutarch. Moral Essays, 1099B (fully cited in Futrell 2006, pp. 86–87): "Even among the gladiators, I see those who...find greater pleasure in freeing their slaves, and commending their wives to their friends, than in satisfying their appetites."
  90. ^ a b Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 313.
  91. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 86. Gladiatorial banquet on mosaic, El Djem.
  92. ^ Welch 2007, p. 23; Futrell 2006, p. 84.
  93. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 85. See pompa circensis for the similar procession before games were held in the circus.
  94. ^ Sometimes beasts were simply exhibited, and left unharmed; see Futrell 2006, p. 88.
  95. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 91.
  96. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 94–95. Futrell is citing Seneca's On Providence, 3.4.
  97. ^ Wisdom & McBride 2001, p. 18. Author's drawing.
  98. ^ Carter 2004, pp. 43, 46–49. In the Eastern provinces of the later Empire the state archiereis combined the roles of editor, Imperial cult priest and lanista, giving gladiatoria munera in which the use of sharp weapons seems an exceptional honour.
  99. ^ Marcus Aurelius encouraged the use of blunted weapons: see Cassius Dio's Roman History, 71.29.4.
  100. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 99–100; Wiedemann 1992, p. 14.
  101. ^ Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 313
  102. ^ Kyle 2007, pp. 313–314
  103. ^ Dunkle, Roger, Gladiators: Violence and Spectacle in Ancient Rome, Routledge, 2013, pp. 69–71; Dunkle is discussing the use of a suppositicius (a substitute used only at need, probably to prolong a particular scheduled fight) and a tertiarius, citing Petronius for the latter as offering a poor quality bout.
  104. ^ a b Dunkle, Roger, Gladiators: Violence and Spectacle in Ancient Rome, Routledge, 2013, pp. 70–71
  105. ^ a b Fagan, Garrett (2011). The Lure of the Arena: Social Psychology and the Crowd at the Roman Games. Cambridge University Press. pp. 217–218, 273, 277. ISBN 978-0521196161. Fagan speculates that Nero was perversely defying the crowd's expectations, or perhaps trying to please a different kind of crowd.
  106. ^ Though not always: the gladiator Diodorus blames "murderous Fate and the cunning treachery of the summa rudis" for his death, not his own error in not finishing off his opponent when he had the chance: see Robert, Gladiateurs, no. 79 = SgO 11/02/01
  107. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 101; based on mosaics and a Pompeian tomb relief.
  108. ^ The gravestones of several musicians and gladiators mention such modulations; see Fagan, pp. 225–226, and footnotes.
  109. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 15–16.
  110. ^ Wiedemann 1992, p. 15. Wiedemann is citing Kraus and von Matt's Pompei and Herculaneum, New York, 1975, Fig. 53.
  111. ^ Martial. Liber de Spectaculis, 29.
  112. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 112. Kyle is citing Robert.
  113. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 101
  114. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 141.
  115. ^ M. J. Carter, "Gladiatorial Combat: The Rules of Engagement", The Classical Journal, Vol. 102, No. 2 (Dec. – Jan. 2006/2007), p. 101.
  116. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 144–145. Futrell is citing Suetonius's Lives, "Augustus", 45, "Caligula", 30, "Claudius", 34.
  117. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 85. This is evidenced on a roughly inscribed libellus.
  118. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 101.
  119. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 102 (The evidence is on a stylised mosaic from Symmachus; the spectators praise the editor for "doing the right thing").
  120. ^ a b Barton, Carlin A. (1989). "The Scandal of the Arena". Representations (27): 27, 28, note 33. doi:10.2307/2928482. JSTOR 2928482. (subscription required)
  121. ^ Suetonius. Lives, "Caligula", 30.3.
  122. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 140. Futrell is citing Cicero's Tuscullan Disputations, 2.17.
  123. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 38–39.
  124. ^ Edwards 2007, pp. 66–67.
  125. ^ Curry 2008. Marks on the bones of several gladiators suggest a sword thrust into the base of the throat and down towards the heart.
  126. ^ By Tertullian's time, Mercury was identified with Greek Hermes psychopompos, who led souls into the underworld. Tertullian describes these events as examples of hollow impiety, in which Rome's false deities are acceptably impersonated by low and murderous persons for the purposes of human sacrifice and evil entertainment. See Kyle 1998, pp. 155–168.
  127. ^ Grossschmidt & Kanz 2006, pp. 207–216.
  128. ^ Kyle 1998, pp. 40, 155–168. Dis Pater and Jupiter Latiaris rituals in Tertullian's Ad Nationes, 1.10.47: Tertullian describes the offering of a fallen gladiator's blood to Jupiter Latiaris by an officiating priest—a travesty of the offering of the blood of martyrs—but places this within a munus (or a festival) dedicated to Jupiter Latiaris; no such practice is otherwise recorded, and Tertullian may have mistaken or reinterpreted what he saw.
  129. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 14 (including note #74). Kyle contextualises Juvenal's panem et circenses—bread and games as a sop to the politically apathetic plebs (Satires, 4.10)—within an account of the death and damnatio of Sejanus, whose body was torn to pieces by the crowd and left unburied.
  130. ^ Suetonius. Lives, "Tiberius", 75. Suetonius has the populace wish the same fate on Tiberius's body, a form of damnatio: to be thrown in the Tiber, or left unburied, or "dragged with the hook".
  131. ^ Kyle 1998, pp. 128–159.
  132. ^ Its name was coined in the modern era, by Theodore Mommsen: in the Roman military, it marked the death of a soldier. See Mednikarova, Iveta (2001). "The Use of Θ in Latin Funerary Inscriptions". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 136: 267–276. JSTOR 20190914.
  133. ^ a b Hope, Valerie (January 2000). "Fighting for identity: The funerary commemoration of Italian gladiators". Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. 44 (S73): 93–113. doi:10.1111/j.2041-5370.2000.tb01940.x.
  134. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 133, 149–153. The single name form on a gladiator memorial usually indicates a slave, two a freedman or discharged auctoratus and, very rare among gladiators, three ("tria nomina") a freedman or a full Roman citizen. See also vroma.org 12 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine on Roman names.
  135. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 149. Futrell is citing Robert, #12, #24, and #109.
  136. ^ Nemesis, her devotees and her place in the Roman world are fully discussed, with examples, in Hornum, Michael B., Nemesis, the Roman state and the games, Brill, 1993.
  137. ^ Garrett G. Fagan, Gladiators, combatants at games, Oxford Classical Dictionary online, Jul 2015 doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.2845: "This refusal to concede honest defeat in the face of superior skill again speaks to professional pride and a certain braggadocio that is still operative today in combat sports."[2] (accessed 2 April 2017)
  138. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 149. Futrell is citing Robert, #34.
  139. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 145
  140. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 144
  141. ^ a b Futrell 2006, p. 144. Futrell is citing George Ville.
  142. ^ Junkelmann 2000, p. 145.
  143. ^ Hopkins & Beard 2005, pp. 92–94.
  144. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 238.
  145. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 85, 149; Auguet 1994, p. 31.
  146. ^ Ulpian. Edict, Book 6; Futrell 2006, pp. 137–138. Futrell is citing Digest, 3.1.1.6.
  147. ^ Cicero. Letters, 10.
  148. ^ Kyle 2007, pp. 285–287, 312. This had probably began under Augustus.
  149. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 103. Futrell is citing Petronius's Satyricon, 45.133.
  150. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 133. See also Tiberius's inducement to re-enlist.
  151. ^ a b Petronius. Satyricon, 117: "He vows to endure to be burned, to be bound, to be beaten, and to be killed by the sword."
  152. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 138.
  153. ^ palus: named after the training poles, 6 Roman feet high, erected in the training arena.
  154. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 137. Futrell is citing Quintilian's Oratorical Institute, 5.13.54; Futrell 2006, p. 140. Futrell is citing Cicero's Tuscullan Disputations, 2.17; Futrell 2006, p. 139. Futrell is citing Epictetus's Discourse, 3.15.
  155. ^ Jones 1987, pp. 139–155. Facial stigmata represented extreme social degradation.
  156. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 142. Futrell is citing Juvenal's Satire, 6 [Oxford Fragment 7.13], in the translation of Peter Green.
  157. ^ Welch 2007, p. 17. The burning alive of a soldier who refused to become an auctoratus at a Spanish school in 43 BC is exceptional only because he was a citizen, technically exempt from such compulsion and penalty.
  158. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 148–149.
  159. ^ Longo, Umile Giuseppe; Spiezia, Filippo; Maffulli, Nicola; Denaro, Vincenzo (1 December 2008). "The Best Athletes in Ancient Rome were Vegetarian!". Journal of Sports Science & Medicine. 7 (4): 565. ISSN 1303-2968. PMC 3761927. PMID 24137094.
  160. ^ Kanz, Fabian; Risser, Daniele U.; Grossschmidt, Karl; Moghaddam, Negahnaz; Lösch, Sandra (15 October 2014). "Stable Isotope and Trace Element Studies on Gladiators and Contemporary Romans from Ephesus (Turkey, 2nd and 3rd Ct. AD) – Implications for Differences in Diet". PLOS ONE. 9 (10): e110489. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...9k0489L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0110489. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 4198250. PMID 25333366.
  161. ^ Follain, John (15 December 2002). . Times Online. Archived from the original on 29 April 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2009.
  162. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 141–142; Carter 2004, pp. 41–68.
  163. ^ Borkowski & du Plessis 2005, p. 80
  164. ^ Borkowski & du Plessis 2005. Manumission was seldom absolute. Terms of release were negotiated between master and slave; Digests 28.3.6.5–6 and 48.19.8.11–12.
  165. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 123. Futrell is citing Ulpian's 8th book of Proconsular Functions, CMRL, 11.7.
  166. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death as Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 185.
  167. ^ Borkowski & du Plessis 2005, Preface, p. 81.
  168. ^ Coleman 1990, p. 46.
  169. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 40–46.
  170. ^ Apuleius. Metamorphoses, 4.13; Coleman 1990, p. 71; Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death as Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 185.
  171. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 94. Survival and "promotion" would have been extremely rare for damnati—and unheard of for noxii—notwithstanding Aulus Gellius's moral tale of Androcles.
  172. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death as Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 186.
  173. ^ D.38.1.38 pr in Borkowski & du Plessis 2005, p. 95.
  174. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 157.
  175. ^ Smith, William. A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. London: John Murray, 1875, "Roman Law – Infamia".
  176. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 131. Futrell is citing Tertullian's De Spectaculis, 22.
  177. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 86–87. Futrell is citing Plutarch's Moral Essays, 1099B.
  178. ^ Carter 2004, pp. 52–56.
  179. ^ Barton 1993, p. 25. Barton is citing Cassius Dio, 43.23.4–5; Suetonius, in Caesar 39.1, adds the two Senators.
  180. ^ Barton 1993, p. 25. Barton is citing Cassius Dio, 56.25.7.
  181. ^ David Potter (trans.), "The Senatus Consultum from Larinium 15 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine". Bronze tablet found at Larino, Italy, and published in 1978.
  182. ^ Under Caligula, participation by men and women of senatorial rank may have been encouraged, and sometimes enforced; Cassius Dio, 59.10, 13–14 and Tacitus, Caligula, 15.32.
  183. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 153. Futrell is citing Cassius Dio, 62.17.3; see Cassius Dio, 59.10.13–14 and Tacitus's Caligula, 15.32 for Caligula's extraordinary behaviour as editor; Valentinian/Theodosius, 15.9.1; Symmachus, Relatio, 8.3.
  184. ^ Kyle 1998, pp. 115–116 (Note #102)
  185. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 153, 156
  186. ^ Barton 1993, p. 26. Barton is citing Juvenal, 8.199ff.
  187. ^ Cerutti, Steven M.; Richardson, L. (1989). "The Retiarius Tunicatus of Suetonius, Juvenal, and Petronius". The American Journal of Philology. 110 (4): 589. doi:10.2307/295282. JSTOR 295282.
  188. ^ Plutarch. Caius Gracchus, 12.3–4.
  189. ^ Some Roman writers interpret the earliest attempts to provide permanent venues as populist political graft, rightly blocked by the Senate as morally objectionable; too-frequent, excessively "luxurious" munera would corrode traditional Roman values. The provision of permanent seating was thought a particularly objectionable luxury. See Appian, The Civil Wars, 128; Livy, Perochiae, 48.
  190. ^ Mouritsen 2001, p. 82.
  191. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 136. Futrell is citing Martial's Epigrams, 5.24.
  192. ^ Welch 2007, p. 197. Welch is citing CIL, X.852.
  193. ^ Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 226. Potter and Mattingly are citing Pliny the Elder, 36.117.
  194. ^ Potter & Mattingly 1999, p. 226 (see also Pliny's Natural History, 36.113–115). The amphitheatre was commissioned by T. Statilius Taurus. According to Pliny, its three storeys were marble-clad, housed 3,000 bronze statues and seated 80,000 spectators. It was probably wooden-framed in part.
  195. ^ Mattern 2002, pp. 151–152.
  196. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death As Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", pp. 184–185. Even emperors who disliked munera were thus obliged to attend them.
  197. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 37–42, 105.
  198. ^ a b c Kyle 1998, p. 3.
  199. ^ Suetonius. Lives, "Augustus", 44.
  200. ^ a b Futrell 2006, p. 105
  201. ^ Examples are in Martial's Epigrams 14, 213 and Suetonius's Caligula.
  202. ^ Also scutarii, scutularii, or secutoriani.
  203. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 96, 104–105.
  204. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 111.
  205. ^ Futrell 2006, pp. 107–108. See also Tacitus's Annals, 14.17.
  206. ^ Alison E. Cooley and MGL Cooley, Pompeii, A Sourcebook, Routledge, 2004, p. 218.
  207. ^ Wiedemann 1992, pp. 11–12.
  208. ^ Livy, 45.32–33.
  209. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 81. It was notably fulfilled and celebrated in the battlefield devotio of two consular Decii; firstly by the father and later by his son.
  210. ^ Edwards 2007, pp. 19–45; Livy, 22.51.5–8, has wounded Romans at Cannae stretch out their necks for the death blow by comrades: cf Cicero's death in Seneca's Suasoriae, 6.17.
  211. ^ Welch 2007, p. 17.
  212. ^ Livy, 22.55–57.
  213. ^ Barton 1993, p. 15; Kyle 2007, p. 274.
  214. ^ Wiedemann 1992, p. 45.
  215. ^ Mattern 2002, pp. 126–128. Mattern is citing Tacitus's Annals, 1.17.
  216. ^ Mattern 2002, p. 87. Mattern is citing Cassius Dio, 72, 73.2.3.
  217. ^ Mattern 2002, p. 87.
  218. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 16. Futrell is citing Cicero's Letters to Friends, 2.3.
  219. ^ Cicero's admiration: Tusculan Disputations, 2.41.
  220. ^ Barton 1993, p. 39. Barton is citing Seneca's Suasoriae, 6.17 for Cicero's death.
  221. ^ Kyle 2007, p. 273. For bustuarius, with reference to Clodius's alleged impious disturbance at the funeral of Marius, see Cicero's In Pisonem (Against Piso). See Bagnani 1956, p. 26, for the bustuarius as a lower class of gladiator than one employed in the public munus. Cicero's unflattering references to Marcus Antonius as gladiator are in his 2nd Philippic.
  222. ^ Silius Italicus, 11.51 (cited in Welch 2007, p. 3).
  223. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death As Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 185. Tacitus, in Annals 15.44, describes the public repugnance towards Nero's punishment of Christians, which seemed based on his appetite for cruelty, rather than a desire for the public good.
  224. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 4. Roman commentators associated munera with Capua's proverbial luxury and excess.
  225. ^ Cassius Dio, 43.24.
  226. ^ Barton 1993, p. 16; Futrell 2006, p. 154. Futrell is citing Lucian's Toxaris, 58–59.
  227. ^ Kyle 1998, p. 85. This should be considered scandalous and noteworthy, rather than common.
  228. ^ Juvenal. Satires, 6.102ff.
  229. ^ Futrell 2006, p. 146. Futrell is citing ''CIL IV, 4342 and CIL IV, 4345.
  230. ^ Servius. Commentary on the "Aeneid" of Vergil, 10.519.
  231. ^ Tertullian. De Spectaculis, 22; Kyle 1998, p. 80. Bustuarius is found in Tertullian's De Spectaculis, 11.
  232. ^ Terence. Hecyra, Prologue II.
  233. ^ Richlin 1992, Shelby Brown, "Death As Decoration: Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics", p. 181.
  234. ^ Welch 2007, p. 2.
  235. ^ "Ancient Graffiti Project". ancientgraffiti.org. Retrieved 7 April 2022.
  236. ^ Keegan, Peter (2005). "Writing and drawing on the walls of Pompeii: how the study of graffiti relates to the HSC ancient history core syllabus for 2006". Ancient History: Resources for Teachers. 35 (1): 37–64. ISSN 1032-3686.
  237. ^ Christesen, Paul; Kyle, Donald G. (2014). A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1444339529.
  238. ^ Pliny. Natural History, 30.32 (cited in Welch 2007, p. 21).

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External links

  • "Gladiator". World History Encyclopedia.
  • . Archived from the original on 31 May 2014. Retrieved 7 March 2011.
  • "Gladiators". Archaeology. Archaeological Institute of America. 2007. Retrieved 7 March 2011.

gladiator, other, uses, disambiguation, gladiator, latin, gladiator, swordsman, from, gladius, sword, armed, combatant, entertained, audiences, roman, republic, roman, empire, violent, confrontations, with, other, gladiators, wild, animals, condemned, criminal. For other uses see Gladiator disambiguation A gladiator Latin gladiator swordsman from gladius sword was an armed combatant who entertained audiences in the Roman Republic and Roman Empire in violent confrontations with other gladiators wild animals and condemned criminals Some gladiators were volunteers who risked their lives and their legal and social standing by appearing in the arena Most were despised as slaves schooled under harsh conditions socially marginalized and segregated even in death Part of the Zliten mosaic from Libya Leptis Magna about 2nd century AD It shows left to right a thraex fighting a murmillo a hoplomachus standing with another murmillo who is signaling his defeat to the referee and one of a matched pair Irrespective of their origin gladiators offered spectators an example of Rome s martial ethics and in fighting or dying well they could inspire admiration and popular acclaim They were celebrated in high and low art and their value as entertainers was commemorated in precious and commonplace objects throughout the Roman world The origin of gladiatorial combat is open to debate There is evidence of it in funeral rites during the Punic Wars of the 3rd century BC and thereafter it rapidly became an essential feature of politics and social life in the Roman world Its popularity led to its use in ever more lavish and costly games The gladiator games lasted for nearly a thousand years reaching their peak between the 1st century BC and the 2nd century AD Christians disapproved of the games because they involved idolatrous pagan rituals and the popularity of gladatorial contests declined in the fifth century leading to their disappearance Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Development 1 3 Peak 1 4 Decline 2 Organisation 3 The gladiators 3 1 Women 3 2 Emperors 4 The games 4 1 Preparations 4 2 The ludi and munus 4 3 Armatures 4 4 Combat 4 5 Victory and defeat 4 6 Death and disposal 4 7 Remembrance and epitaphs 4 8 Life expectancy 5 Schools and training 5 1 Diet and medical care 6 Legal and social status 7 Amphitheatres 7 1 Factions and rivals 8 Role in Roman life 8 1 Role in the military 8 2 Religion ethics and sentiment 8 3 In Roman art and culture 9 Modern reconstructions 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Sources 12 External linksHistoryOrigins nbsp Relief of gladiators from Amphitheatre of Merida SpainEarly literary sources seldom agree on the origins of gladiators and the gladiator games 1 In the late 1st century BC Nicolaus of Damascus believed they were Etruscan 2 A generation later Livy wrote that they were first held in 310 BC by the Campanians in celebration of their victory over the Samnites 3 Long after the games had ceased the 7th century AD writer Isidore of Seville derived Latin lanista manager of gladiators from the Etruscan word for executioner and the title of Charon an official who accompanied the dead from the Roman gladiatorial arena from Charun psychopomp of the Etruscan underworld 4 This was accepted and repeated in most early modern standard histories of the games 5 For some modern scholars reappraisal of pictorial evidence supports a Campanian origin or at least a borrowing for the games and gladiators 6 Campania hosted the earliest known gladiator schools ludi 7 Tomb frescoes from the Campanian city of Paestum 4th century BC show paired fighters with helmets spears and shields in a propitiatory funeral blood rite that anticipates early Roman gladiator games 8 Compared to these images supporting evidence from Etruscan tomb paintings is tentative and late The Paestum frescoes may represent the continuation of a much older tradition acquired or inherited from Greek colonists of the 8th century BC 9 Livy places the first Roman gladiator games 264 BC in the early stage of Rome s First Punic War against Carthage when Decimus Junius Brutus Scaeva had three gladiator pairs fight to the death in Rome s cattle market forum Forum Boarium to honor his dead father Brutus Pera Livy describes this as a munus plural munera a gift in this case a commemorative duty owed the manes spirit or shade of a dead ancestor by his descendants 10 11 The development of the gladiator munus and its gladiator types was most strongly influenced by Samnium s support for Hannibal and the subsequent punitive expeditions against the Samnites by Rome and its Campanian allies the earliest most frequently mentioned and probably most popular type was the Samnite 12 The war in Samnium immediately afterwards was attended with equal danger and an equally glorious conclusion The enemy besides their other warlike preparation had made their battle line to glitter with new and splendid arms There were two corps the shields of the one were inlaid with gold of the other with silver The Romans had already heard of these splendid accoutrements but their generals had taught them that a soldier should be rough to look on not adorned with gold and silver but putting his trust in iron and in courage The Dictator as decreed by the senate celebrated a triumph in which by far the finest show was afforded by the captured armour So the Romans made use of the splendid armour of their enemies to do honour to their gods while the Campanians in consequence of their pride and in hatred of the Samnites equipped after this fashion the gladiators who furnished them entertainment at their feasts and bestowed on them the name Samnites 13 Livy s account skirts the funereal sacrificial function of early Roman gladiator combats and reflects the later theatrical ethos of the Roman gladiator show splendidly exotically armed and armoured barbarians treacherous and degenerate are dominated by Roman iron and native courage 14 His plain Romans virtuously dedicate the magnificent spoils of war to the gods Their Campanian allies stage a dinner entertainment using gladiators who may not be Samnites but play the Samnite role Other groups and tribes would join the cast list as Roman territories expanded Most gladiators were armed and armoured in the manner of the enemies of Rome 15 The gladiator munus became a morally instructive form of historic enactment in which the only honourable option for the gladiator was to fight well or else die well 16 Development In 216 BC Marcus Aemilius Lepidus late consul and augur was honoured by his sons with three days of gladiatora munera in the Forum Romanum using twenty two pairs of gladiators 17 Ten years later Scipio Africanus gave a commemorative munus in Iberia for his father and uncle casualties in the Punic Wars High status non Romans and possibly Romans too volunteered as his gladiators 18 The context of the Punic Wars and Rome s near disastrous defeat at the Battle of Cannae 216 BC link these early games to munificence the celebration of military victory and the religious expiation of military disaster these munera appear to serve a morale raising agenda in an era of military threat and expansion 19 The next recorded munus held for the funeral of Publius Licinius in 183 BC was more extravagant It involved three days of funeral games 120 gladiators and public distribution of meat visceratio data 20 a practice that reflected the gladiatorial fights at Campanian banquets described by Livy and later deplored by Silius Italicus 21 The enthusiastic adoption of gladiatoria munera by Rome s Iberian allies shows how easily and how early the culture of the gladiator munus permeated places far from Rome itself By 174 BC small Roman munera private or public provided by an editor of relatively low importance may have been so commonplace and unremarkable they were not considered worth recording 22 Many gladiatorial games were given in that year some unimportant one noteworthy beyond the rest that of Titus Flamininus which he gave to commemorate the death of his father which lasted four days and was accompanied by a public distribution of meats a banquet and scenic performances The climax of the show which was big for the time was that in three days seventy four gladiators fought 23 In 105 BC the ruling consuls offered Rome its first taste of state sponsored barbarian combat demonstrated by gladiators from Capua as part of a training program for the military It proved immensely popular 24 Thereafter the gladiator contests formerly restricted to private munera were often included in the state games ludi 25 that accompanied the major religious festivals Where traditional ludi had been dedicated to a deity such as Jupiter the munera could be dedicated to an aristocratic sponsor s divine or heroic ancestor 26 Peak nbsp A retiarius stabs at a secutor with his trident in this mosaic from the villa at Nennig Germany c 2nd 3rd century AD nbsp Roman glassware decorated with a gladiator dated 52 125 AD and found at Begram Afghanistan a royal city of the Kushan Empire where according to Warwick Ball it was likely on its way to Han dynasty China via the Silk Road along with other glass items 27 Gladiatorial games offered their sponsors extravagantly expensive but effective opportunities for self promotion and gave their clients and potential voters exciting entertainment at little or no cost to themselves 28 Gladiators became big business for trainers and owners for politicians on the make and those who had reached the top and wished to stay there A politically ambitious privatus private citizen might postpone his deceased father s munus to the election season when a generous show might drum up votes those in power and those seeking it needed the support of the plebeians and their tribunes whose votes might be won with the mere promise of an exceptionally good show 29 Sulla during his term as praetor showed his usual acumen in breaking his own sumptuary laws to give the most lavish munus yet seen in Rome for the funeral of his wife Metella 30 In the closing years of the politically and socially unstable Late Republic any aristocratic owner of gladiators had political muscle at his disposal 31 32 33 In 65 BC newly elected curule aedile Julius Caesar held games that he justified as munus to his father who had been dead for 20 years Despite an already enormous personal debt he used 320 gladiator pairs in silvered armour 34 He had more available in Capua but the senate mindful of the recent Spartacus revolt and fearful of Caesar s burgeoning private armies and rising popularity imposed a limit of 320 pairs as the maximum number of gladiators any citizen could keep in Rome 35 Caesar s showmanship was unprecedented in scale and expense 36 he had staged a munus as memorial rather than funeral rite eroding any practical or meaningful distinction between munus and ludi 37 Gladiatorial games usually linked with beast shows spread throughout the republic and beyond 38 Anti corruption laws of 65 and 63 BC attempted but failed to curb the political usefulness of the games to their sponsors 39 Following Caesar s assassination and the Roman Civil War Augustus assumed imperial authority over the games including munera and formalised their provision as a civic and religious duty 40 His revision of sumptuary law capped private and public expenditure on munera claiming to save the Roman elite from the bankruptcies they would otherwise suffer and restricting gladiator munera to the festivals of Saturnalia and Quinquatria 41 Henceforth an imperial praetor s official munus was allowed a maximum of 120 gladiators at a ceiling cost of 25 000 denarii an imperial ludi might cost no less than 180 000 denarii 42 Throughout the empire the greatest and most celebrated games would now be identified with the state sponsored imperial cult which furthered public recognition respect and approval for the emperor s divine numen his laws and his agents 43 26 Between 108 and 109 AD Trajan celebrated his Dacian victories using a reported 10 000 gladiators and 11 000 animals over 123 days 44 The cost of gladiators and munera continued to spiral out of control Legislation of 177 AD by Marcus Aurelius did little to stop it and was completely ignored by his son Commodus 45 Decline The decline of the gladiatorial munus was a far from straightforward process 46 The crisis of the 3rd century imposed increasing military demands on the imperial purse from which the Roman Empire never quite recovered and lesser magistrates found their provision of various obligatory munera an increasingly unrewarding tax on the doubtful privileges of office Still emperors continued to subsidize the games as a matter of undiminished public interest 47 In the early 3rd century AD the Christian writer Tertullian condemned the attendance of Christians the combats he said were murder their witnessing spiritually and morally harmful and the gladiator an instrument of pagan human sacrifice 48 Carolyn Osiek comments The reason we would suppose would be primarily the bloodthirsty violence but his is different the extent of religious ritual and meaning in them which constitutes idolatry Although Tertullian states that these events are forbidden to believers the fact that he writes a whole treatise to convince Christians that they should not attend De Spectaculis shows that apparently not everyone agreed to stay away from them 49 In the next century Augustine of Hippo deplored the youthful fascination of his friend and later fellow convert and bishop Alypius of Thagaste with the munera spectacle as inimical to a Christian life and salvation 50 Amphitheatres continued to host the spectacular administration of Imperial justice in 315 Constantine the Great condemned child snatchers ad bestias in the arena Ten years later he forbade criminals being forced to fight to the death as gladiators Bloody spectacles do not please us in civil ease and domestic quiet For that reason we forbid those people to be gladiators who by reason of some criminal act were accustomed to deserve this condition and sentence You shall rather sentence them to serve in the mines so that they may acknowledge the penalties of their crimes with blood 51 nbsp A 5th century mosaic in the Great Palace of Constantinople depicts two venatores fighting a tigerThis has been interpreted as a ban on gladiatorial combat Yet in the last year of his life Constantine wrote a letter to the citizens of Hispellum granting its people the right to celebrate his rule with gladiatorial games 52 In 365 Valentinian I r 364 375 threatened to fine a judge who sentenced Christians to the arena and in 384 attempted like most of his predecessors to limit the expenses of gladiatora munera 53 54 55 In 393 Theodosius I r 379 395 adopted Nicene Christianity as the state religion of the Roman Empire and banned pagan festivals 56 The ludi continued very gradually shorn of their stubbornly pagan elements Honorius r 395 423 legally ended gladiator games in 399 and again in 404 at least in the Western Roman Empire According to Theodoret the ban was in consequence of Saint Telemachus martyrdom by spectators at a gladiator munus 57 Valentinian III r 425 455 repeated the ban in 438 perhaps effectively though venationes continued beyond 536 58 By this time interest in gladiator contests had waned throughout the Roman world In the Byzantine Empire theatrical shows and chariot races continued to attract the crowds and drew a generous imperial subsidy OrganisationThe earliest munera took place at or near the tomb of the deceased and these were organised by their munerator who made the offering Later games were held by an editor either identical with the munerator or an official employed by him As time passed these titles and meanings may have merged 59 In the republican era private citizens could own and train gladiators or lease them from a lanista owner of a gladiator training school From the principate onwards private citizens could hold munera and own gladiators only with imperial permission and the role of editor was increasingly tied to state officialdom Legislation by Claudius required that quaestors the lowest rank of Roman magistrate personally subsidise two thirds of the costs of games for their small town communities in effect both an advertisement of their personal generosity and a part purchase of their office Bigger games were put on by senior magistrates who could better afford them The largest and most lavish of all were paid for by the emperor himself 60 61 The gladiatorsMain article List of Roman gladiator types nbsp A Cestus boxer and a rooster in a Roman mosaic at the National Archaeological Museum Naples 1st century ADThe earliest types of gladiator were named after Rome s enemies of that time the Samnite Thracian and Gaul The Samnite heavily armed elegantly helmed and probably the most popular type was renamed secutor and the Gaul renamed murmillo once these former enemies had been conquered then absorbed into Rome s Empire In the mid republican munus each type seems to have fought against a similar or identical type In the later Republic and early Empire various fantasy types were introduced and were set against dissimilar but complementary types For example the bareheaded nimble retiarius net man armoured only at the left arm and shoulder pitted his net trident and dagger against the more heavily armoured helmeted Secutor 62 Most depictions of gladiators show the most common and popular types Passing literary references to others has allowed their tentative reconstruction Other novelties introduced around this time included gladiators who fought from chariots or carts or from horseback At an unknown date cestus fighters were introduced to Roman arenas probably from Greece armed with potentially lethal boxing gloves 63 The trade in gladiators was empire wide and subjected to official supervision Rome s military success produced a supply of soldier prisoners who were redistributed for use in State mines or amphitheatres and for sale on the open market For example in the aftermath of the Jewish Revolt the gladiator schools received an influx of Jews those rejected for training would have been sent straight to the arenas as noxii lit hurtful ones 64 The best the most robust were sent to Rome In Rome s military ethos enemy soldiers who had surrendered or allowed their own capture and enslavement had been granted an unmerited gift of life Their training as gladiators would give them opportunity to redeem their honour in the munus 65 nbsp Pollice Verso With a Turned Thumb an 1872 painting by Jean Leon GeromeTwo other sources of gladiators found increasingly during the Principate and the relatively low military activity of the Pax Romana were slaves condemned to the arena damnati to gladiator schools or games ad ludum gladiatorium 66 as punishment for crimes and the paid volunteers auctorati who by the late Republic may have comprised approximately half and possibly the most capable half of all gladiators 67 The use of volunteers had a precedent in the Iberian munus of Scipio Africanus but none of those had been paid 18 For the poor and for non citizens enrollment in a gladiator school offered a trade regular food housing of sorts and a fighting chance of fame and fortune Mark Antony chose a troupe of gladiators to be his personal bodyguard 68 Gladiators customarily kept their prize money and any gifts they received and these could be substantial Tiberius offered several retired gladiators 100 000 sesterces each to return to the arena 69 Nero gave the gladiator Spiculus property and residence equal to those of men who had celebrated triumphs 70 Women Main article Gladiatrix From the 60s AD female gladiators appear as rare and exotic markers of exceptionally lavish spectacle 71 In 66 AD Nero had Ethiopian women men and children fight at a munus to impress the King Tiridates I of Armenia 72 Romans seem to have found the idea of a female gladiator novel and entertaining or downright absurd Juvenal titillates his readers with a woman named Mevia hunting boars in the arena with spear in hand and breasts exposed 73 and Petronius mocks the pretensions of a rich low class citizen whose munus includes a woman fighting from a cart or chariot 74 A munus of 89 AD during Domitian s reign featured a battle between female gladiators described as Amazons 75 In Halicarnassus a 2nd century AD relief depicts two female combatants named Amazon and Achillia their match ended in a draw 76 In the same century an epigraph praises one of Ostia s local elite as the first to arm women in the history of its games 76 Female gladiators probably submitted to the same regulations and training as their male counterparts 77 Roman morality required that all gladiators be of the lowest social classes and emperors who failed to respect this distinction earned the scorn of posterity Cassius Dio takes pains to point out that when the much admired emperor Titus used female gladiators they were of acceptably low class 71 Some regarded female gladiators of any type or class as a symptom of corrupted Roman appetites morals and womanhood Before he became emperor Septimius Severus may have attended the Antiochene Olympic Games which had been revived by the emperor Commodus and included traditional Greek female athletics Septimius attempt to give Rome a similarly dignified display of female athletics was met by the crowd with ribald chants and cat calls 78 Probably as a result he banned the use of female gladiators in 200 AD 79 80 Emperors Caligula Titus Hadrian Lucius Verus Caracalla Geta and Didius Julianus were all said to have performed in the arena either in public or private but risks to themselves were minimal 81 Claudius characterised by his historians as morbidly cruel and boorish fought a whale trapped in the harbor in front of a group of spectators 82 Commentators invariably disapproved of such performances 83 Commodus was a fanatical participant at the ludi and compelled Rome s elite to attend his performances as gladiator bestiarius or venator Most of his performances as a gladiator were bloodless affairs fought with wooden swords he invariably won He was said to have restyled Nero s colossal statue in his own image as Hercules Reborn dedicated to himself as Champion of secutores only left handed fighter to conquer twelve times one thousand men 84 He was said to have killed 100 lions in one day almost certainly from an elevated platform surrounding the arena perimeter which allowed him to safely demonstrate his marksmanship On another occasion he decapitated a running ostrich with a specially designed dart carried the bloodied head and his sword over to the Senatorial seats and gesticulated as though they were next 85 As reward for these services he drew a gigantic stipend from the public purse 86 The gamesPreparations nbsp A duel using whip cudgel and shields mosaic from a Roman villa at Nennig GermanyGladiator games were advertised well beforehand on billboards that gave the reason for the game its editor venue date and the number of paired gladiators ordinarii to be used Other highlighted features could include details of venationes executions music and any luxuries to be provided for the spectators such as an awning against the sun water sprinklers food drink sweets and occasionally door prizes For enthusiasts and gamblers a more detailed program libellus was distributed on the day of the munus showing the names types and match records of gladiator pairs and their order of appearance 87 Left handed gladiators were advertised as a rarity they were trained to fight right handers which gave them an advantage over most opponents and produced an interestingly unorthodox combination 88 The night before the munus the gladiators were given a banquet and opportunity to order their personal and private affairs Futrell notes its similarity to a ritualistic or sacramental last meal 89 These were probably both family and public events which included even the noxii sentenced to die in the arena the following day and the damnati who would have at least a slender chance of survival The event may also have been used to drum up more publicity for the imminent game 90 91 The ludi and munus Official munera of the early Imperial era seem to have followed a standard form munus legitimum 92 A procession pompa entered the arena led by lictors who bore the fasces that signified the magistrate editor s power over life and death They were followed by a small band of trumpeters tubicines playing a fanfare Images of the gods were carried in to witness the proceedings followed by a scribe to record the outcome and a man carrying the palm branch used to honour victors The magistrate editor entered among a retinue who carried the arms and armour to be used the gladiators presumably came in last 93 nbsp Musicians with trumpet tuba water organ hydraulis and horns cornua from the Nennig gladiator mosaicThe entertainments often began with venationes beast hunts and bestiarii beast fighters 94 Next came the ludi meridiani which were of variable content but usually involved executions of noxii some of whom were condemned to be subjects of fatal re enactments based on Greek or Roman myths 95 Gladiators may have been involved in these as executioners though most of the crowd and the gladiators themselves preferred the dignity of an even contest 96 There were also comedy fights some may have been lethal A crude Pompeian graffito suggests a burlesque of musicians dressed as animals named Ursus tibicen flute playing bear and Pullus cornicen horn blowing chicken perhaps as accompaniment to clowning by paegniarii during a mock contest of the ludi meridiani 97 Armatures The gladiators may have held informal warm up matches using blunted or dummy weapons some munera however may have used blunted weapons throughout 98 The editor his representative or an honoured guest would check the weapons probatio armorum for the scheduled matches 99 These were the highlight of the day and were as inventive varied and novel as the editor could afford Armatures could be very costly some were flamboyantly decorated with exotic feathers jewels and precious metals Increasingly the munus was the editor s gift to spectators who had come to expect the best as their due 100 nbsp Murmillo gladiator helmet with relief depicting scenes from the Trojan War from Herculaneum nbsp Helmet found in the gladiator barracks in Pompeii nbsp Iron gladiator helmet from Herculaneum nbsp Gladiator helmet found in Pompeii with scenes from Greek Mythology nbsp Helmet from 1st 3rd century nbsp Ornate gladiator shin guards from Pompeii nbsp Shin guard depicting the goddess Athena nbsp Shin guard depicting Venus Euploia Venus of the fair voyage on a ship shaped like a dolphin nbsp Heart shaped spear head found in the gladiator barracks in PompeiiCombat Lightly armed and armoured fighters such as the retiarius would tire less rapidly than their heavily armed opponents most bouts would have lasted 10 to 15 minutes or 20 minutes at most 101 In late Republican munera between 10 and 13 matches could have been fought on one day this assumes one match at a time in the course of an afternoon 90 Spectators preferred to watch highly skilled well matched ordinarii with complementary fighting styles these were the most costly to train and to hire A general melee of several lower skilled gladiators was far less costly but also less popular Even among the ordinarii match winners might have to fight a new well rested opponent either a tertiarius third choice gladiator by prearrangement or a substitute gladiator suppositicius who fought at the whim of the editor as an unadvertised unexpected extra 102 This yielded two combats for the cost of three gladiators rather than four such contests were prolonged and in some cases more bloody Most were probably of poor quality 103 but the emperor Caracalla chose to test a notably skilled and successful fighter named Bato against first one supposicitius whom he beat and then another who killed him 104 At the opposite level of the profession a gladiator reluctant to confront his opponent might be whipped or goaded with hot irons until he engaged through sheer desperation 105 nbsp Mosaic at the National Archaeological Museum in Madrid showing a retiarius named Kalendio shown surrendering in the upper section fighting a secutor named Astyanax The O sign by Kalendio s name implies he was killed after surrendering Combats between experienced well trained gladiators demonstrated a considerable degree of stagecraft Among the cognoscenti bravado and skill in combat were esteemed over mere hacking and bloodshed some gladiators made their careers and reputation from bloodless victories Suetonius describes an exceptional munus by Nero in which no one was killed not even noxii enemies of the state 105 Trained gladiators were expected to observe professional rules of combat Most matches employed a senior referee summa rudis and an assistant shown in mosaics with long staffs rudes to caution or separate opponents at some crucial point in the match Referees were usually retired gladiators whose decisions judgement and discretion were for the most part respected 106 they could stop bouts entirely or pause them to allow the combatants rest refreshment and a rub down 107 Ludi and munera were accompanied by music played as interludes or building to a frenzied crescendo during combats perhaps to heighten the suspense during a gladiator s appeal blows may have been accompanied by trumpet blasts 108 88 The Zliten mosaic in Libya circa 80 100 AD shows musicians playing an accompaniment to provincial games with gladiators bestiarii or venatores and prisoners attacked by beasts Their instruments are a long straight trumpet tubicen a large curved horn Cornu and a water organ hydraulis 109 Similar representations musicians gladiators and bestiari are found on a tomb relief in Pompeii 110 Victory and defeat See also Pollice verso A match was won by the gladiator who overcame his opponent or killed him outright Victors received the palm branch and an award from the editor An outstanding fighter might receive a laurel crown and money from an appreciative crowd but for anyone originally condemned ad ludum the greatest reward was manumission emancipation symbolised by the gift of a wooden training sword or staff rudis from the editor Martial describes a match between Priscus and Verus who fought so evenly and bravely for so long that when both acknowledged defeat at the same instant Titus awarded victory and a rudis to each 111 Flamma was awarded the rudis four times but chose to remain a gladiator His gravestone in Sicily includes his record Flamma secutor lived 30 years fought 34 times won 21 times fought to a draw 9 times defeated 4 times a Syrian by nationality Delicatus made this for his deserving comrade in arms 112 A gladiator could acknowledge defeat by raising a finger ad digitum in appeal to the referee to stop the combat and refer to the editor whose decision would usually rest on the crowd s response 113 In the earliest munera death was considered a righteous penalty for defeat later those who fought well might be granted remission at the whim of the crowd or the editor During the Imperial era matches advertised as sine missione usually understood to mean without reprieve for the defeated suggest that missio the sparing of a defeated gladiator s life had become common practice The contract between editor and his lanista could include compensation for unexpected deaths 114 this could be some fifty times higher than the lease price of the gladiator 115 Under Augustus rule the demand for gladiators began to exceed supply and matches sine missione were officially banned an economical pragmatic development that happened to match popular notions of natural justice When Caligula and Claudius refused to spare defeated but popular fighters their own popularity suffered In general gladiators who fought well were likely to survive 116 At a Pompeian match between chariot fighters Publius Ostorius with previous 51 wins to his credit was granted missio after losing to Scylax with 26 victories 117 By common custom the spectators decided whether or not a losing gladiator should be spared and chose the winner in the rare event of a standing tie 118 Even more rarely perhaps uniquely one stalemate ended in the killing of one gladiator by the editor himself 119 120 In any event the final decision of death or life belonged to the editor who signalled his choice with a gesture described by Roman sources as pollice verso meaning with a turned thumb a description too imprecise for reconstruction of the gesture or its symbolism Whether victorious or defeated a gladiator was bound by oath to accept or implement his editor s decision the victor being nothing but the instrument of his editor s will 120 Not all editors chose to go with the crowd and not all those condemned to death for putting on a poor show chose to submit Once a band of five retiarii in tunics matched against the same number of secutores yielded without a struggle but when their death was ordered one of them caught up his trident and slew all the victors Caligula bewailed this in a public proclamation as a most cruel murder 121 Death and disposal A gladiator who was refused missio was despatched by his opponent To die well a gladiator should never ask for mercy nor cry out 122 A good death redeemed the gladiator from the dishonourable weakness and passivity of defeat and provided a noble example to those who watched 123 For death when it stands near us gives even to inexperienced men the courage not to seek to avoid the inevitable So the gladiator no matter how faint hearted he has been throughout the fight offers his throat to his opponent and directs the wavering blade to the vital spot Seneca Epistles 30 8 Some mosaics show defeated gladiators kneeling in preparation for the moment of death Seneca s vital spot seems to have meant the neck 124 Gladiator remains from Ephesus confirm this 125 nbsp A flask depicting the final phase of the fight between a murmillo winning and a thraexThe body of a gladiator who had died well was placed on a couch of Libitina and removed with dignity to the arena morgue where the corpse was stripped of armour and probably had its throat cut as confirmation of death The Christian author Tertullian commenting on ludi meridiani in Roman Carthage during the peak era of the games describes a more humiliating method of removal One arena official dressed as the brother of Jove Dis Pater god of the underworld strikes the corpse with a mallet Another dressed as Mercury tests for life signs with a heated wand once confirmed as dead the body is dragged from the arena 126 Whether these victims were gladiators or noxii is unknown Modern pathological examination confirms the probably fatal use of a mallet on some but not all the gladiator skulls found in a gladiators cemetery 127 Kyle 1998 proposes that gladiators who disgraced themselves might have been subjected to the same indignities as noxii denied the relative mercies of a quick death and dragged from the arena as carrion Whether the corpse of such a gladiator could be redeemed from further ignominy by friends or familia is not known 128 The bodies of noxii and possibly some damnati were thrown into rivers or dumped unburied 129 Denial of funeral rites and memorial condemned the shade manes of the deceased to restless wandering upon the earth as a dreadful larvaorlemur 130 Ordinary citizens slaves and freedmen were usually buried beyond the town or city limits to avoid the ritual and physical pollution of the living professional gladiators had their own separate cemeteries The taint of infamia was perpetual 131 nbsp Part of the Gladiator Mosaic displayed at the Galleria Borghese It dates from approximately 320 AD The O symbol is the theta nigrum black theta or theta infelix unlucky theta a symbol of death in Greek and Latin epigraphy 132 Remembrance and epitaphs Gladiators could subscribe to a union collegia which ensured their proper burial and sometimes a pension or compensation for wives and children Otherwise the gladiator s familia which included his lanista comrades and blood kin might fund his funeral and memorial costs and use the memorial to assert their moral reputation as responsible respectful colleagues or family members Some monuments record the gladiator s career in some detail including the number of appearances victories sometimes represented by an engraved crown or wreath defeats career duration and age at death Some include the gladiator s type in words or direct representation for example the memorial of a retiarius at Verona included the engraving of a trident and sword 133 134 A wealthy editor might commission artwork to celebrate a particularly successful or memorable show and include named portraits of winners and losers in action the Borghese Gladiator Mosaic is a notable example According to Cassius Dio the emperor Caracalla gave the gladiator Bato a magnificent memorial and State funeral 104 more typical are the simple gladiator tombs of the Eastern Roman Empire whose brief inscriptions include the following The familia set this up in memory of Saturnilos For Nikepharos son of Synetos Lakedaimonian and for Narcissus the secutor Titus Flavius Satyrus set up this monument in his memory from his own money For Hermes Paitraeites with his cell mates set this up in memory 135 Very little evidence survives of the religious beliefs of gladiators as a class or their expectations of an afterlife Modern scholarship offers little support for the once prevalent notion that gladiators venatores and bestiarii were personally or professionally dedicated to the cult of the Graeco Roman goddess Nemesis Rather she seems to have represented a kind of Imperial Fortuna who dispensed Imperial retribution on the one hand and Imperially subsidised gifts on the other including the munera One gladiator s tomb dedication clearly states that her decisions are not to be trusted 136 Many gladiator epitaphs claim Nemesis fate deception or treachery as the instrument of their death never the superior skills of the flesh and blood adversary who defeated and killed them Having no personal responsibility for his own defeat and death the losing gladiator remains the better man worth avenging 137 I Victor left handed lie here but my homeland was in Thessalonica Doom killed me not the liar Pinnas No longer let him boast I had a fellow gladiator Polyneikes who killed Pinnas and avenged me Claudius Thallus set up this memorial from what I left behind as a legacy 138 Life expectancy A gladiator might expect to fight in two or three munera annually and an unknown number would have died in their first match Few gladiators survived more than 10 contests though one survived an extraordinary 150 bouts 139 and another died at 90 years of age presumably long after retirement 140 A natural death following retirement is also likely for three individuals who died at 38 45 and 48 years respectively 133 George Ville using evidence from 1st century gladiator headstones calculated an average age at death of 27 and mortality among all who entered the arena at 19 100 141 Marcus Junkelmann disputes Ville s calculation for average age at death the majority would have received no headstone and would have died early in their careers at 18 25 years of age 142 Between the early and later Imperial periods the risk of death for defeated gladiators rose from 1 5 to 1 4 perhaps because missio was granted less often 141 Hopkins and Beard tentatively estimate a total of 400 arenas throughout the Roman Empire at its greatest extent with a combined total of 8 000 deaths per annum from executions combats and accidents 143 Schools and trainingSee also History of physical training and fitness The earliest named gladiator school singular ludus plural ludi is that of Aurelius Scaurus at Capua He was lanista of the gladiators employed by the state circa 105 BC to instruct the legions and simultaneously entertain the public 144 Few other lanistae are known by name they headed their familia gladiatoria and had lawful power over life and death of every family member including servi poenae auctorati and ancillaries Socially they were infames on a footing with pimps and butchers and despised as price gougers 145 No such stigma was attached to a gladiator owner munerarius or editor of good family high status and independent means 146 Cicero congratulated his friend Atticus on buying a splendid troop if he rented them out he might recover their entire cost after two performances 147 The Spartacus revolt had originated in a gladiator school privately owned by Lentulus Batiatus and had been suppressed only after a protracted series of costly sometimes disastrous campaigns by regular Roman troops In the late Republican era a fear of similar uprisings the usefulness of gladiator schools in creating private armies and the exploitation of munera for political gain led to increased restrictions on gladiator school ownership siting and organisation By Domitian s time many had been more or less absorbed by the State including those at Pergamum Alexandria Praeneste and Capua 148 The city of Rome itself had four the Ludus Magnus the largest and most important housing up to about 2 000 gladiators Ludus Dacicus Ludus Gallicus and the Ludus Matutinus which trained bestiarii 59 In the Imperial era volunteers required a magistrate s permission to join a school as auctorati 149 If this was granted the school s physician assessed their suitability Their contract auctoramentum stipulated how often they were to perform their fighting style and earnings A condemned bankrupt or debtor accepted as novice novicius could negotiate with his lanista or editor for the partial or complete payment of his debt Faced with runaway re enlistment fees for skilled auctorati Marcus Aurelius set their upper limit at 12 000 sesterces 150 All prospective gladiators whether volunteer or condemned were bound to service by a sacred oath sacramentum 151 Novices novicii trained under teachers of particular fighting styles probably retired gladiators 152 They could ascend through a hierarchy of grades singular palus in which primus palus was the highest 153 Lethal weapons were prohibited in the schools weighted blunt wooden versions were probably used Fighting styles were probably learned through constant rehearsal as choreographed numbers An elegant economical style was preferred Training included preparation for a stoical unflinching death Successful training required intense commitment 154 Those condemned ad ludum were probably branded or marked with a tattoo stigma plural stigmata on the face legs and or hands These stigmata may have been text slaves were sometimes thus marked on the forehead until Constantine banned the use of facial stigmata in 325 AD Soldiers were routinely marked on the hand 155 Gladiators were typically accommodated in cells arranged in barrack formation around a central practice arena Juvenal describes the segregation of gladiators according to type and status suggestive of rigid hierarchies within the schools even the lowest scum of the arena observe this rule even in prison they re separate Retiarii were kept away from damnati and fag targeteers from armoured heavies As most ordinarii at games were from the same school this kept potential opponents separate and safe from each other until the lawful munus 156 Discipline could be extreme even lethal 157 Remains of a Pompeian ludus site attest to developments in supply demand and discipline in its earliest phase the building could accommodate 15 20 gladiators Its replacement could have housed about 100 and included a very small cell probably for lesser punishments and so low that standing was impossible 158 Diet and medical care nbsp Gladiators after the fight Jose Moreno Carbonero 1882 Despite the harsh discipline gladiators represented a substantial investment for their lanista and were otherwise well fed and cared for Their daily high energy vegetarian diet consisted of barley boiled beans oatmeal ash and dried fruit 159 160 Gladiators were sometimes called hordearii eaters of barley Romans considered barley inferior to wheat a punishment for legionaries replaced their wheat ration with it but it was thought to strengthen the body 161 Regular massage and high quality medical care helped mitigate an otherwise very severe training regimen Part of Galen s medical training was at a gladiator school in Pergamum where he saw and would later criticise the training diet and long term health prospects of the gladiators 162 Legal and social status He vows to endure to be burned to be bound to be beaten and to be killed by the sword The gladiator s oath as cited by Petronius Satyricon 117 Modern customs and institutions offer few useful parallels to the legal and social context of the gladiatoria munera 163 In Roman law anyone condemned to the arena or the gladiator schools damnati ad ludum was a servus poenae slave of the penalty and was considered to be under sentence of death unless manumitted 164 A rescript of Hadrian reminded magistrates that those sentenced to the sword execution should be despatched immediately or at least within the year and those sentenced to the ludi should not be discharged before five years or three years if granted manumission 165 Only slaves found guilty of specific offences could be sentenced to the arena however citizens found guilty of particular offenses could be stripped of citizenship formally enslaved then sentenced and slaves once freed could be legally reverted to slavery for certain offences 166 Arena punishment could be given for banditry theft and arson and for treasons such as rebellion census evasion to avoid paying due taxes and refusal to swear lawful oaths 167 Offenders seen as particularly obnoxious to the state noxii received the most humiliating punishments 168 By the 1st century BC noxii were being condemned to the beasts damnati ad bestias in the arena with almost no chance of survival or were made to kill each other 169 From the early Imperial era some were forced to participate in humiliating and novel forms of mythological or historical enactment culminating in their execution 170 Those judged less harshly might be condemned ad ludum venatorium or ad gladiatorium combat with animals or gladiators and armed as thought appropriate These damnati at least might put on a good show and retrieve some respect and very rarely survive to fight another day Some may even have become proper gladiators 171 nbsp Merida amphitheatre Spain mural of beast hunt showing a venator or bestiarius and lionessAmong the most admired and skilled auctorati were those who having been granted manumission volunteered to fight in the arena 172 Some of these highly trained and experienced specialists may have had no other practical choice open to them Their legal status slave or free is uncertain Under Roman law a freed gladiator could not offer such services as those of a gladiator after manumission because they cannot be performed without endangering his life 173 All contracted volunteers including those of equestrian and senatorial class were legally enslaved by their auctoratio because it involved their potentially lethal submission to a master 174 All arenarii those who appeared in the arena were infames by reputation a form of social dishonour which excluded them from most of the advantages and rights of citizenship Payment for such appearances compounded their infamia 175 The legal and social status of even the most popular and wealthy auctorati was thus marginal at best They could not vote plead in court nor leave a will and unless they were manumitted their lives and property belonged to their masters 176 Nevertheless there is evidence of informal if not entirely lawful practices to the contrary Some unfree gladiators bequeathed money and personal property to wives and children possibly via a sympathetic owner or familia some had their own slaves and gave them their freedom 177 One gladiator was even granted citizenship to several Greek cities of the Eastern Roman world 178 Caesar s munus of 46 BC included at least one equestrian son of a Praetor and two volunteers of possible senatorial rank 179 Augustus who enjoyed watching the games forbade the participation of senators equestrians and their descendants as fighters or arenarii but in 11 AD he bent his own rules and allowed equestrians to volunteer because the prohibition was no use 180 Under Tiberius the Larinum decree 181 19 AD reiterated Augustus original prohibitions Thereafter Caligula flouted them and Claudius strengthened them 182 Nero and Commodus ignored them Even after the adoption of Christianity as Rome s official religion legislation forbade the involvement of Rome s upper social classes in the games though not the games themselves 183 Throughout Rome s history some volunteers were prepared to risk loss of status or reputation by appearing in the arena whether for payment glory or as in one recorded case to revenge an affront to their personal honour 184 185 In one extraordinary episode an aristocratic descendant of the Gracchi already infamous for his marriage as a bride to a male horn player appeared in what may have been a non lethal or farcical match His motives are unknown but his voluntary and shameless arena appearance combined the womanly attire of a lowly retiarius tunicatus adorned with golden ribbons with the apex headdress that marked him out as a priest of Mars In Juvenal s account he seems to have relished the scandalous self display applause and the disgrace he inflicted on his more sturdy opponent by repeatedly skipping away from the confrontation 186 187 AmphitheatresMain article List of Roman amphitheatres nbsp The Amphitheatre of Pompeii built around 70 BC and buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius 79 AD once hosted spectacles with gladiators As munera grew larger and more popular open spaces such as the Forum Romanum were adapted as the Forum Boarium had been as venues in Rome and elsewhere with temporary elevated seating for the patron and high status spectators they were popular but not truly public events A show of gladiators was to be exhibited before the people in the market place and most of the magistrates erected scaffolds round about with an intention of letting them for advantage Caius commanded them to take down their scaffolds that the poor people might see the sport without paying anything But nobody obeying these orders of his he gathered together a body of labourers who worked for him and overthrew all the scaffolds the very night before the contest was to take place So that by the next morning the market place was cleared and the common people had an opportunity of seeing the pastime In this the populace thought he had acted the part of a man but he much disobliged the tribunes his colleagues who regarded it as a piece of violent and presumptuous interference 188 189 Towards the end of the Republic Cicero Murena 72 73 still describes gladiator shows as ticketed their political usefulness was served by inviting the rural tribunes of the plebs not the people of Rome en masse but in Imperial times poor citizens in receipt of the corn dole were allocated at least some free seating possibly by lottery 190 Others had to pay Ticket scalpers Locarii sometimes sold or let out seats at inflated prices Martial wrote that Hermes a gladiator who always drew the crowds means riches for the ticket scalpers 191 nbsp The Colosseum in Rome ItalyThe earliest known Roman amphitheatre was built at Pompeii by Sullan colonists around 70 BC 192 The first in the city of Rome was the extraordinary wooden amphitheatre of Gaius Scribonius Curio built in 53 BC 193 The first part stone amphitheatre in Rome was inaugurated in 29 30 BC in time for the triple triumph of Octavian later Augustus 194 Shortly after it burned down in 64 AD Vespasian began its replacement later known as the Amphitheatrum Flavium Colosseum which seated 50 000 spectators and would remain the largest in the Empire It was inaugurated by Titus in 80 AD as the personal gift of the Emperor to the people of Rome paid for by the imperial share of booty after the Jewish Revolt 195 nbsp Arles Amphitheatre inside viewAmphitheatres were usually oval in plan Their seating tiers surrounded the arena below where the community s judgments were meted out in full public view From across the stands crowd and editor could assess each other s character and temperament For the crowd amphitheatres afforded unique opportunities for free expression and free speech theatralis licentia Petitions could be submitted to the editor as magistrate in full view of the community Factiones and claques could vent their spleen on each other and occasionally on Emperors The emperor Titus s dignified yet confident ease in his management of an amphitheatre crowd and its factions were taken as a measure of his enormous popularity and the rightness of his imperium The amphitheatre munus thus served the Roman community as living theatre and a court in miniature in which judgement could be served not only on those in the arena below but on their judges 196 197 198 Amphitheatres also provided a means of social control Their seating was disorderly and indiscriminate until Augustus prescribed its arrangement in his Social Reforms To persuade the Senate he expressed his distress on behalf of a senator who could not find seating at a crowded games in Puteoli In consequence of this the senate decreed that whenever any public show was given anywhere the first row of seats should be reserved for senators and at Rome he would not allow the envoys of the free and allied nations to sit in the orchestra since he was informed that even freedmen were sometimes appointed He separated the soldiery from the people He assigned special seats to the married men of the commons to boys under age their own section and the adjoining one to their preceptors and he decreed that no one wearing a dark cloak should sit in the middle of the house He would not allow women to view even the gladiators except from the upper seats though it had been the custom for men and women to sit together at such shows Only the Vestal virgins were assigned a place to themselves opposite the praetor s tribunal 199 These arrangements do not seem to have been strongly enforced 200 Factions and rivals nbsp The Amphitheatre at Pompeii depicting the riot between the Nucerians and the PompeiansPopular factions supported favourite gladiators and gladiator types 201 Under Augustan legislation the Samnite type was renamed Secutor chaser or pursuer The secutor was equipped with a long heavy large shield called a scutum Secutores their supporters and any heavyweight secutor based types such as the Murmillo were secutarii 202 Lighter types such as the Thraex were equipped with a smaller lighter shield called a parma from which they and their supporters were named parmularii small shields Titus and Trajan preferred the parmularii and Domitian the secutarii Marcus Aurelius took neither side Nero seems to have enjoyed the brawls between rowdy enthusiastic and sometimes violent factions but called in the troops if they went too far 203 204 There were also local rivalries At Pompeii s amphitheatre during Nero s reign the trading of insults between Pompeians and Nucerian spectators during public ludi led to stone throwing and riot Many were killed or wounded Nero banned gladiator munera though not the games at Pompeii for ten years as punishment The story is told in Pompeian graffiti and high quality wall painting with much boasting of Pompeii s victory over Nuceria 205 Role in Roman lifeIt is not known how many gladiatoria munera were given throughout the Roman period Many if not most involved venationes and in the later empire some may have been only that In 165 BC at least one munus was held during April s Megalesia In the early imperial era munera in Pompeii and neighbouring towns were dispersed from March through November They included a provincial magnate s five day munus of thirty pairs plus beast hunts 206 A single late primary source the Calendar of Furius Dionysius Philocalus for 354 shows how seldom gladiators featured among a multitude of official festivals Of the 176 days reserved for spectacles of various kinds 102 were for theatrical shows 64 for chariot races and just 10 in December for gladiator games and venationes A century before this the emperor Alexander Severus r 222 235 may have intended a more even redistribution of munera throughout the year but this would have broken with what had become the traditional positioning of the major gladiator games at the year s ending As Wiedemann points out December was also the month for the Saturnalia Saturn s festival in which death was linked to renewal and the lowest were honoured as the highest 207 Role in the military According to Livy A man who knows how to conquer in war is a man who knows how to arrange a banquet and put on a show 208 Rome was essentially a landowning military aristocracy From the early days of the Republic ten years of military service were a citizen s duty and a prerequisite for election to public office Devotio willingness to sacrifice one s life to the greater good was central to the Roman military ideal and was the core of the Roman military oath It applied from highest to lowest alike in the chain of command 209 As a soldier committed his life voluntarily at least in theory to the greater cause of Rome s victory he was not expected to survive defeat 210 The Punic Wars of the late 3rd century BC in particular the near catastrophic defeat of Roman arms at Cannae had long lasting effects on the Republic its citizen armies and the development of the gladiatorial munera In the aftermath of Cannae Scipio Africanus crucified Roman deserters and had non Roman deserters thrown to the beasts 211 The Senate refused to ransom Hannibal s Roman captives instead they consulted the Sibylline books then made drastic preparations In obedience to the Books of Destiny some strange and unusual sacrifices were made human sacrifices amongst them A Gaulish man and a Gaulish woman and a Greek man and a Greek woman were buried alive under the Forum Boarium They were lowered into a stone vault which had on a previous occasion also been polluted by human victims a practice most repulsive to Roman feelings When the gods were believed to be duly propitiated Armour weapons and other things of the kind were ordered to be in readiness and the ancient spoils gathered from the enemy were taken down from the temples and colonnades The dearth of freemen necessitated a new kind of enlistment 8 000 sturdy youths from amongst the slaves were armed at the public cost after they had each been asked whether they were willing to serve or no These soldiers were preferred as there would be an opportunity of ransoming them when taken prisoners at a lower price 212 nbsp Late 3rd century gladiator mosaic from a private residence in Kourion Cyprus All the participants are named The central figure Darios is positioned as a referee but wears a citizen s high status toga or tunic with broad stripesThe account notes uncomfortably the bloodless human sacrifices performed to help turn the tide of the war in Rome s favour While the Senate mustered their willing slaves Hannibal offered his dishonoured Roman captives a chance for honourable death in what Livy describes as something very like the Roman munus The munus thus represented an essentially military self sacrificial ideal taken to extreme fulfillment in the gladiator s oath 198 By the devotio of a voluntary oath a slave might achieve the quality of a Roman Romanitas become the embodiment of true virtus manliness or manly virtue and paradoxically be granted missio while remaining a slave 151 The gladiator as a specialist fighter and the ethos and organization of the gladiator schools would inform the development of the Roman military as the most effective force of its time 213 Following defeat at the Battle of Arausio in 105 BC weapons training was given to soldiers by P Rutilius consul with C Mallis For he following the example of no previous general with teachers summoned from the gladiatorial training school of C Aurelus Scaurus implanted in the legions a more sophisticated method of avoiding and dealing a blow and mixed bravery with skill and skill back again with virtue so that skill became stronger by bravery s passion and passion became more wary with the knowledge of this art 24 The military were great aficionados of the games and supervised the schools Many schools and amphitheatres were sited at or near military barracks and some provincial army units owned gladiator troupes 214 As the Republic wore on the term of military service increased from ten to the sixteen years formalised by Augustus in the Principate It would rise to twenty and later to twenty five years Roman military discipline was ferocious severe enough to provoke mutiny despite the consequences A career as a volunteer gladiator may have seemed an attractive option for some 215 In AD 69 the Year of the Four Emperors Otho s troops at Bedriacum included 2000 gladiators Opposite him on the field Vitellius s army was swollen by levies of slaves plebs and gladiators 216 In 167 AD troop depletions by plague and desertion may have prompted Marcus Aurelius to draft gladiators at his own expense 217 During the Civil Wars that led to the Principate Octavian later Augustus acquired the personal gladiator troop of his erstwhile opponent Mark Antony They had served their late master with exemplary loyalty but thereafter they disappear from the record 68 Religion ethics and sentiment Roman writing as a whole demonstrates a deep ambivalence towards the gladiatoria munera Even the most complex and sophisticated munera of the Imperial era evoked the ancient ancestral dii manes of the underworld and were framed by the protective lawful rites of sacrificium Their popularity made their co option by the state inevitable Cicero acknowledged their sponsorship as a political imperative 218 Despite the popular adulation of gladiators they were set apart despised and despite Cicero s contempt for the mob he shared their admiration Even when gladiators have been felled let alone when they are standing and fighting they never disgrace themselves And suppose a gladiator has been brought to the ground when do you ever see one twist his neck away after he has been ordered to extend it for the death blow His own death would later emulate this example 219 220 Yet Cicero could also refer to his popularist opponent Clodius publicly and scathingly as a bustuarius literally a funeral man implying that Clodius has shown the moral temperament of the lowest sort of gladiator Gladiator could be and was used as an insult throughout the Roman period and Samnite doubled the insult despite the popularity of the Samnite type 221 Silius Italicus wrote as the games approached their peak that the degenerate Campanians had devised the very worst of precedents which now threatened the moral fabric of Rome It was their custom to enliven their banquets with bloodshed and to combine with their feasting the horrid sight of armed men Samnites fighting often the combatants fell dead above the very cups of the revelers and the tables were stained with streams of blood Thus demoralised was Capua 222 Death could be rightly meted out as punishment or met with equanimity in peace or war as a gift of fate but when inflicted as entertainment with no underlying moral or religious purpose it could only pollute and demean those who witnessed it 223 The munus itself could be interpreted as pious necessity but its increasing luxury corroded Roman virtue and created an un Roman appetite for profligacy and self indulgence 224 Caesar s 46 BC ludi were mere entertainment for political gain a waste of lives and of money that would have been better doled out to his legionary veterans 225 Yet for Seneca and for Marcus Aurelius both professed Stoics the degradation of gladiators in the munus highlighted their Stoic virtues their unconditional obedience to their master and to fate and equanimity in the face of death Having neither hope nor illusions the gladiator could transcend his own debased nature and disempower death itself by meeting it face to face Courage dignity altruism and loyalty were morally redemptive Lucian idealised this principle in his story of Sisinnes who voluntarily fought as a gladiator earned 10 000 drachmas and used it to buy freedom for his friend Toxaris 226 Seneca had a lower opinion of the mob s un Stoical appetite for ludi meridiani Man is now slaughtered for jest and sport and those whom it used to be unholy to train for the purpose of inflicting and enduring wounds are thrust forth exposed and defenceless 198 These accounts seek a higher moral meaning from the munus but Ovid s very detailed though satirical instructions for seduction in the amphitheatre suggest that the spectacles could generate a potent and dangerously sexual atmosphere 200 Augustan seating prescriptions placed women excepting the Vestals who were legally inviolate as far as possible from the action of the arena floor or tried to There remained the thrilling possibility of clandestine sexual transgression by high caste spectators and their heroes of the arena Such assignations were a source for gossip and satire but some became unforgivably public 227 What was the youthful charm that so fired Eppia What hooked her What did she see in him to make her put up with being called the gladiator s moll Her poppet her Sergius was no chicken with a dud arm that prompted hope of early retirement Besides his face looked a proper mess helmet scarred a great wart on his nose an unpleasant discharge always trickling from one eye But he was a gladiator That word makes the whole breed seem handsome and made her prefer him to her children and country her sister her husband Steel is what they fall in love with 228 Eppia a senator s wife and her Sergius eloped to Egypt where he deserted her Most gladiators would have aimed lower Two wall graffiti in Pompeii describe Celadus the Thraex as the sigh of the girls and the glory of the girls which may or may not have been Celadus own wishful thinking 229 In the later Imperial era Servius Maurus Honoratus uses the same disparaging term as Cicero bustuarius for gladiators 230 Tertullian used it somewhat differently all victims of the arena were sacrificial in his eyes and expressed the paradox of the arenarii as a class from a Christian viewpoint On the one and the same account they glorify them and they degrade and diminish them yes further they openly condemn them to disgrace and civil degradation they keep them religiously excluded from council chamber rostrum senate knighthood and every other kind of office and a good many distinctions The perversity of it They love whom they lower they despise whom they approve the art they glorify the artist they disgrace 231 In Roman art and culture In this new Play I attempted to follow the old custom of mine of making a fresh trial I brought it on again In the first Act I pleased when in the meantime a rumor spread that gladiators were about to be exhibited the populace flock together make a tumult clamor aloud and fight for their places meantime I was unable to maintain my place 232 nbsp Graffito of a gladiatorial scene from Pompeii NaplesImages of gladiators were found throughout the Republic and Empire among all classes Walls in the 2nd century BC Agora of the Italians at Delos were decorated with paintings of gladiators Mosaics dating from the 2nd through 4th centuries AD have been invaluable in the reconstruction of combat and its rules gladiator types and the development of the munus Throughout the Roman world ceramics lamps gems and jewellery mosaics reliefs wall paintings and statuary offer evidence sometimes the best evidence of the clothing props equipment names events prevalence and rules of gladiatorial combat Earlier periods provide only occasional perhaps exceptional examples 233 234 The Gladiator Mosaic in the Galleria Borghese displays several gladiator types and the Bignor Roman Villa mosaic from Provincial Britain shows Cupids as gladiators Souvenir ceramics were produced depicting named gladiators in combat similar images of higher quality were available on more expensive articles in high quality ceramic glass or silver Some of the best preserved gladiator graffiti are from Pompeii and Herculaneum in public areas including Pompeii s Forum and amphitheater and in the private residences of the upper middle and lower classes 235 236 They clearly show how gladiator munera pervaded Pompeiian culture they provide information pertaining to particular gladiators and sometimes include their names status as slaves or freeborn volunteers and their match records 237 Pliny the Elder gives vivid examples of the popularity of gladiator portraiture in Antium and an artistic treat laid on by an adoptive aristocrat for the solidly plebeian citizens of the Roman Aventine When a freedman of Nero was giving a gladiatorial show at Antium the public porticoes were covered with paintings so we are told containing life like portraits of all the gladiators and assistants This portraiture of gladiators has been the highest interest in art for many centuries now but it was Gaius Terentius who began the practice of having pictures made of gladiatorial shows and exhibited in public in honour of his grandfather who had adopted him he provided thirty pairs of Gladiators in the Forum for three consecutive days and exhibited a picture of the matches in the Grove of Diana 238 Modern reconstructionsFurther information Roman era historical reenactment Combat reenactment and Historical European martial arts Antiquity Some Roman reenactors attempt to recreate Roman gladiator troupes Some of these groups are part of larger Roman reenactment groups and others are wholly independent though they might participate in larger demonstrations of Roman reenacting or historical reenacting in general These groups usually focus on portraying mock gladiatorial combat in as accurate a manner as possible nbsp Gladiator show fight in Trier in 2005 nbsp Nimes 2005 nbsp Carnuntum Austria 2007 source source source source source source Video of a show fight at the Roman Villa Borg Germany in 2011 Retiarius vs Secutor Thraex vs Murmillo See alsoSpectacles in ancient RomeReferencesCitations Welch 2007 p 17 Kyle 1998 p 82 Welch 2007 pp 16 17 Nicolaus cites Posidonius s support for a Celtic origin and Hermippus for a Mantinean therefore Greek origin Futrell 2006 pp 4 7 Futrell is citing Livy 9 40 17 Futrell 2006 pp 14 15 Welch 2007 p 11 Welch 2007 p 18 Futrell 2006 pp 3 5 Futrell 2006 p 4 Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 226 Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 226 Paestum was colonized by Rome in 273 BC Welch 2007 pp 15 18 Welch 2007 pp 18 19 Livy s account summary 16 places beast hunts and gladiatorial munera within this single munus A single later source describes the gladiator type involved as Thracian See Welch 2007 p 19 Welch is citing Ausanius Seneca simply says they were war captives Wiedemann 1992 p 33 Kyle 1998 p 2 Kyle 2007 p 273 Evidence of Samnite as an insult in earlier writings fades as Samnium is absorbed into the republic Livy 9 40 Quoted in Futrell 2006 pp 4 5 Kyle 1998 p 67 Note 84 Livy s published works are often embellished with illustrative rhetorical detail The velutes and later the provocatores were exceptions but as historicised rather than contemporary Roman types Kyle 1998 pp 80 81 Welch 2007 p 21 Welch is citing Livy 23 30 15 The Aemilii Lepidii were one of the most important families in Rome at the time and probably owned a gladiator school ludus a b Futrell 2006 pp 8 9 Futrell 2006 p 30 Livy 39 46 2 Silius Italicus quoted in Futrell 2006 pp 4 5 Welch 2007 p 21 Livy Annal for the Year 174 BC cited in Welch 2007 p 21 a b Wiedemann 1992 pp 6 7 Wiedemann is citing Valerius Maximus 2 3 2 The games were always referred to in the plural as ludi Gladiator schools were also known as ludi when plural a single school was ludus a b Lintott 2004 p 183 Ball 2016 pp 153 154 Mouritsen 2001 p 97 Coleman 1990 p 50 Kyle 2007 p 287 Mouritsen 2001 pp 32 109 111 Approximately 12 of Rome s adult male population could actually vote but these were the wealthiest and most influential among ordinary citizens well worth cultivation by any politician Kyle 2007 p 285 Kyle 2007 p 287 such as Caesar s Capua based gladiators brought to Rome as a private army to impress and overawe Futrell 2006 p 24 Gladiator gangs were used by Caesar and others to overawe and persuade Mouritsen 2001 p 61 Gladiators could be enrolled to serve noble households some household slaves may have been raised and trained for this Mouritsen 2001 p 97 For more details see Plutarch s Julius Caesar 5 9 Kyle 2007 pp 285 287 See also Pliny s Historia Naturalis 33 16 53 Kyle 2007 pp 280 287 Wiedemann 1992 pp 8 10 Welch 2007 p 21 Antiochus IV Epiphanes of Greece was keen to upstage his Roman allies but gladiators were becoming increasingly expensive and to save costs all of his were local volunteers Kyle 2007 p 280 Kyle is citing Cicero s Lex Tullia Ambitu Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death as Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 184 Wiedemann 1992 p 45 Wiedemann is citing Cassius Dio 54 2 3 4 Prices in denarii cited in Venationes Encyclopaedia Romana Auguet 1994 p 30 Each of Augustus s games involved an average of 625 gladiator pairs Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death as Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 181 Brown is citing Dio Cassius 68 15 Futrell 2006 p 48 Mattern 2002 pp 130 131 Auguet 1994 pp 30 32 Tertullian De Spectaculis 22 Osiek 2006 p 287 Saint Augustine Confessions 6 8 Rescript of Constantine quoted by David Potter Constantine and the Gladiators The Classical Quarterly Vol 60 No 2 December 2010 p 597 David Potter Constantine and the Gladiators The Classical Quarterly Vol 60 No 2 December 2010 p 602 See Tertullian s Apologetics 49 4 for Tertullian s condemnation of officials who sought their own glory by sponsoring the martyrdom of Christians Kyle 1998 p 78 Compared to pagan noxii Christian deaths in the arena would have been few Codex Theodosianus 9 40 8 and 15 9 1 Symmachus Relatio 8 3 Codex Theodosianus 2 8 19 and 2 8 22 Telemachus had personally stepped in to prevent the munus See Theoderet s Historia Ecclesiastica 5 26 Codex Justinianus 3 12 9 a b Kyle 1998 p 80 Futrell 2006 p 43 Wiedemann 1992 pp 440 446 Kyle 2007 p 313 Green Thomas Martial Arts of the World R Z 1 Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 pp 45 149 ISBN 978 1576071502 Josephus The Jewish War 6 418 7 37 40 Kyle 1998 p 93 noxii were the most obnoxious of criminal categories in Roman law Futrell 2006 pp 120 125 Ludus meant both a game and a school see entries 1 to 2 C at Lewis and Short Perseus Project Futrell 2006 p 124 See also Cassius Dio s accusation of entrapment by informers to provide arena slaves under Claudius Futrell 2006 p 103 the best gladiators Futrell citing Petronius s Satyricon 45 a b Futrell 2006 p 129 Futrell is citing Cassius Dio Suetonius Lives Tiberius 7 Archived 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine Suetonius Lives Nero 30 Archived 10 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b Futrell 2006 pp 153 156 Wiedemann 1992 p 112 Jacobelli 2003 p 17 citing Cassius Dio 62 3 1 Jacobelli 2003 p 17 citing Juvenal s Saturae 1 22 1 23 Jacobelli 2003 p 18 citing Petronius s Satyricon 45 7 Jacobelli 2003 p 18 citing Dio Cassius 67 8 4 Suetonius s Domitianus 4 2 and Statius s Silvae 1 8 51 1 8 56 see also Brunet 2014 p 480 a b Jacobelli 2003 p 18 Potter 2010 p 408 Potter 2010 p 408 Potter 2010 p 407 Jacobelli 2003 p 18 citing Dio Cassius 75 16 Potter 2010 p 407 citing Dio Cassius 75 16 1 Barton 1993 p 66 Fox 2006 p 576 Fox is citing Pliny Futrell 2006 p 158 Cassius Dio Commodus 73 Epitome Gibbon amp Womersley 2000 p 118 Cassius Dio Commodus 73 Epitome Commodus was assassinated and posthumously declared a public enemy but was later deified Futrell 2006 pp 85 101 110 Based on fragmentary Pompeian remains and citing of Pliny s Historia Naturalis 19 23 25 a b Coleman Kathleen 17 February 2011 Gladiators Heroes of the Roman Amphitheatre BBC Retrieved 21 April 2017 Plutarch Moral Essays 1099B fully cited in Futrell 2006 pp 86 87 Even among the gladiators I see those who find greater pleasure in freeing their slaves and commending their wives to their friends than in satisfying their appetites a b Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 313 Futrell 2006 p 86 Gladiatorial banquet on mosaic El Djem Welch 2007 p 23 Futrell 2006 p 84 Futrell 2006 p 85 See pompa circensis for the similar procession before games were held in the circus Sometimes beasts were simply exhibited and left unharmed see Futrell 2006 p 88 Futrell 2006 p 91 Futrell 2006 pp 94 95 Futrell is citing Seneca s On Providence 3 4 Wisdom amp McBride 2001 p 18 Author s drawing Carter 2004 pp 43 46 49 In the Eastern provinces of the later Empire the state archiereis combined the roles of editor Imperial cult priest and lanista giving gladiatoria munera in which the use of sharp weapons seems an exceptional honour Marcus Aurelius encouraged the use of blunted weapons see Cassius Dio s Roman History 71 29 4 Futrell 2006 pp 99 100 Wiedemann 1992 p 14 Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 313 Kyle 2007 pp 313 314 Dunkle Roger Gladiators Violence and Spectacle in Ancient Rome Routledge 2013 pp 69 71 Dunkle is discussing the use of a suppositicius a substitute used only at need probably to prolong a particular scheduled fight and a tertiarius citing Petronius for the latter as offering a poor quality bout a b Dunkle Roger Gladiators Violence and Spectacle in Ancient Rome Routledge 2013 pp 70 71 a b Fagan Garrett 2011 The Lure of the Arena Social Psychology and the Crowd at the Roman Games Cambridge University Press pp 217 218 273 277 ISBN 978 0521196161 Fagan speculates that Nero was perversely defying the crowd s expectations or perhaps trying to please a different kind of crowd Though not always the gladiator Diodorus blames murderous Fate and the cunning treachery of the summa rudis for his death not his own error in not finishing off his opponent when he had the chance see Robert Gladiateurs no 79 SgO 11 02 01 Futrell 2006 p 101 based on mosaics and a Pompeian tomb relief The gravestones of several musicians and gladiators mention such modulations see Fagan pp 225 226 and footnotes Wiedemann 1992 pp 15 16 Wiedemann 1992 p 15 Wiedemann is citing Kraus and von Matt s Pompei and Herculaneum New York 1975 Fig 53 Martial Liber de Spectaculis 29 Kyle 2007 p 112 Kyle is citing Robert Futrell 2006 p 101 Futrell 2006 p 141 M J Carter Gladiatorial Combat The Rules of Engagement The Classical Journal Vol 102 No 2 Dec Jan 2006 2007 p 101 Futrell 2006 pp 144 145 Futrell is citing Suetonius s Lives Augustus 45 Caligula 30 Claudius 34 Futrell 2006 p 85 This is evidenced on a roughly inscribed libellus Futrell 2006 p 101 Futrell 2006 p 102 The evidence is on a stylised mosaic from Symmachus the spectators praise the editor for doing the right thing a b Barton Carlin A 1989 The Scandal of the Arena Representations 27 27 28 note 33 doi 10 2307 2928482 JSTOR 2928482 subscription required Suetonius Lives Caligula 30 3 Futrell 2006 p 140 Futrell is citing Cicero s Tuscullan Disputations 2 17 Wiedemann 1992 pp 38 39 Edwards 2007 pp 66 67 Curry 2008 Marks on the bones of several gladiators suggest a sword thrust into the base of the throat and down towards the heart By Tertullian s time Mercury was identified with Greek Hermes psychopompos who led souls into the underworld Tertullian describes these events as examples of hollow impiety in which Rome s false deities are acceptably impersonated by low and murderous persons for the purposes of human sacrifice and evil entertainment See Kyle 1998 pp 155 168 Grossschmidt amp Kanz 2006 pp 207 216 Kyle 1998 pp 40 155 168 Dis Pater and Jupiter Latiaris rituals in Tertullian s Ad Nationes 1 10 47 Tertullian describes the offering of a fallen gladiator s blood to Jupiter Latiaris by an officiating priest a travesty of the offering of the blood of martyrs but places this within a munus or a festival dedicated to Jupiter Latiaris no such practice is otherwise recorded and Tertullian may have mistaken or reinterpreted what he saw Kyle 1998 p 14 including note 74 Kyle contextualises Juvenal s panem et circenses bread and games as a sop to the politically apathetic plebs Satires 4 10 within an account of the death and damnatio of Sejanus whose body was torn to pieces by the crowd and left unburied Suetonius Lives Tiberius 75 Suetonius has the populace wish the same fate on Tiberius s body a form of damnatio to be thrown in the Tiber or left unburied or dragged with the hook Kyle 1998 pp 128 159 Its name was coined in the modern era by Theodore Mommsen in the Roman military it marked the death of a soldier See Mednikarova Iveta 2001 The Use of 8 in Latin Funerary Inscriptions Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 136 267 276 JSTOR 20190914 a b Hope Valerie January 2000 Fighting for identity The funerary commemoration of Italian gladiators Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 44 S73 93 113 doi 10 1111 j 2041 5370 2000 tb01940 x Futrell 2006 pp 133 149 153 The single name form on a gladiator memorial usually indicates a slave two a freedman or discharged auctoratus and very rare among gladiators three tria nomina a freedman or a full Roman citizen See also vroma org Archived 12 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine on Roman names Futrell 2006 p 149 Futrell is citing Robert 12 24 and 109 Nemesis her devotees and her place in the Roman world are fully discussed with examples in Hornum Michael B Nemesis the Roman state and the games Brill 1993 Garrett G Fagan Gladiators combatants at games Oxford Classical Dictionary online Jul 2015 doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 2845 This refusal to concede honest defeat in the face of superior skill again speaks to professional pride and a certain braggadocio that is still operative today in combat sports 2 accessed 2 April 2017 Futrell 2006 p 149 Futrell is citing Robert 34 Futrell 2006 p 145 Futrell 2006 p 144 a b Futrell 2006 p 144 Futrell is citing George Ville Junkelmann 2000 p 145 Hopkins amp Beard 2005 pp 92 94 Kyle 2007 p 238 Futrell 2006 pp 85 149 Auguet 1994 p 31 Ulpian Edict Book 6 Futrell 2006 pp 137 138 Futrell is citing Digest 3 1 1 6 Cicero Letters 10 Kyle 2007 pp 285 287 312 This had probably began under Augustus Futrell 2006 p 103 Futrell is citing Petronius s Satyricon 45 133 Futrell 2006 p 133 See also Tiberius s inducement to re enlist a b Petronius Satyricon 117 He vows to endure to be burned to be bound to be beaten and to be killed by the sword Futrell 2006 p 138 palus named after the training poles 6 Roman feet high erected in the training arena Futrell 2006 p 137 Futrell is citing Quintilian s Oratorical Institute 5 13 54 Futrell 2006 p 140 Futrell is citing Cicero s Tuscullan Disputations 2 17 Futrell 2006 p 139 Futrell is citing Epictetus s Discourse 3 15 Jones 1987 pp 139 155 Facial stigmata represented extreme social degradation Futrell 2006 p 142 Futrell is citing Juvenal s Satire 6 Oxford Fragment 7 13 in the translation of Peter Green Welch 2007 p 17 The burning alive of a soldier who refused to become an auctoratus at a Spanish school in 43 BC is exceptional only because he was a citizen technically exempt from such compulsion and penalty Futrell 2006 pp 148 149 Longo Umile Giuseppe Spiezia Filippo Maffulli Nicola Denaro Vincenzo 1 December 2008 The Best Athletes in Ancient Rome were Vegetarian Journal of Sports Science amp Medicine 7 4 565 ISSN 1303 2968 PMC 3761927 PMID 24137094 Kanz Fabian Risser Daniele U Grossschmidt Karl Moghaddam Negahnaz Losch Sandra 15 October 2014 Stable Isotope and Trace Element Studies on Gladiators and Contemporary Romans from Ephesus Turkey 2nd and 3rd Ct AD Implications for Differences in Diet PLOS ONE 9 10 e110489 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 9k0489L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0110489 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 4198250 PMID 25333366 Follain John 15 December 2002 The dying game How did the gladiators really live Times Online Archived from the original on 29 April 2011 Retrieved 24 March 2009 Futrell 2006 pp 141 142 Carter 2004 pp 41 68 Borkowski amp du Plessis 2005 p 80 Borkowski amp du Plessis 2005 Manumission was seldom absolute Terms of release were negotiated between master and slave Digests 28 3 6 5 6 and 48 19 8 11 12 Futrell 2006 p 123 Futrell is citing Ulpian s 8th book of Proconsular Functions CMRL 11 7 Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death as Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 185 Borkowski amp du Plessis 2005 Preface p 81 Coleman 1990 p 46 Wiedemann 1992 pp 40 46 Apuleius Metamorphoses 4 13 Coleman 1990 p 71 Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death as Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 185 Kyle 1998 p 94 Survival and promotion would have been extremely rare for damnati and unheard of for noxii notwithstanding Aulus Gellius s moral tale of Androcles Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death as Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 186 D 38 1 38 pr in Borkowski amp du Plessis 2005 p 95 Futrell 2006 p 157 Smith William A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities London John Murray 1875 Roman Law Infamia Futrell 2006 p 131 Futrell is citing Tertullian s De Spectaculis 22 Futrell 2006 pp 86 87 Futrell is citing Plutarch s Moral Essays 1099B Carter 2004 pp 52 56 Barton 1993 p 25 Barton is citing Cassius Dio 43 23 4 5 Suetonius in Caesar 39 1 adds the two Senators Barton 1993 p 25 Barton is citing Cassius Dio 56 25 7 David Potter trans The Senatus Consultum from Larinium Archived 15 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bronze tablet found at Larino Italy and published in 1978 Under Caligula participation by men and women of senatorial rank may have been encouraged and sometimes enforced Cassius Dio 59 10 13 14 and Tacitus Caligula 15 32 Futrell 2006 p 153 Futrell is citing Cassius Dio 62 17 3 see Cassius Dio 59 10 13 14 and Tacitus s Caligula 15 32 for Caligula s extraordinary behaviour as editor Valentinian Theodosius 15 9 1 Symmachus Relatio 8 3 Kyle 1998 pp 115 116 Note 102 Futrell 2006 pp 153 156 Barton 1993 p 26 Barton is citing Juvenal 8 199ff Cerutti Steven M Richardson L 1989 The Retiarius Tunicatus of Suetonius Juvenal and Petronius The American Journal of Philology 110 4 589 doi 10 2307 295282 JSTOR 295282 Plutarch Caius Gracchus 12 3 4 Some Roman writers interpret the earliest attempts to provide permanent venues as populist political graft rightly blocked by the Senate as morally objectionable too frequent excessively luxurious munera would corrode traditional Roman values The provision of permanent seating was thought a particularly objectionable luxury See Appian The Civil Wars 128 Livy Perochiae 48 Mouritsen 2001 p 82 Futrell 2006 p 136 Futrell is citing Martial s Epigrams 5 24 Welch 2007 p 197 Welch is citing CIL X 852 Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 226 Potter and Mattingly are citing Pliny the Elder 36 117 Potter amp Mattingly 1999 p 226 see also Pliny s Natural History 36 113 115 The amphitheatre was commissioned by T Statilius Taurus According to Pliny its three storeys were marble clad housed 3 000 bronze statues and seated 80 000 spectators It was probably wooden framed in part Mattern 2002 pp 151 152 Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death As Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics pp 184 185 Even emperors who disliked munera were thus obliged to attend them Futrell 2006 pp 37 42 105 a b c Kyle 1998 p 3 Suetonius Lives Augustus 44 a b Futrell 2006 p 105 Examples are in Martial s Epigrams 14 213 and Suetonius s Caligula Also scutarii scutularii or secutoriani Futrell 2006 pp 96 104 105 Kyle 1998 p 111 Futrell 2006 pp 107 108 See also Tacitus s Annals 14 17 Alison E Cooley and MGL Cooley Pompeii A Sourcebook Routledge 2004 p 218 Wiedemann 1992 pp 11 12 Livy 45 32 33 Kyle 1998 p 81 It was notably fulfilled and celebrated in the battlefield devotio of two consular Decii firstly by the father and later by his son Edwards 2007 pp 19 45 Livy 22 51 5 8 has wounded Romans at Cannae stretch out their necks for the death blow by comrades cf Cicero s death in Seneca s Suasoriae 6 17 Welch 2007 p 17 Livy 22 55 57 Barton 1993 p 15 Kyle 2007 p 274 Wiedemann 1992 p 45 Mattern 2002 pp 126 128 Mattern is citing Tacitus s Annals 1 17 Mattern 2002 p 87 Mattern is citing Cassius Dio 72 73 2 3 Mattern 2002 p 87 Futrell 2006 p 16 Futrell is citing Cicero s Letters to Friends 2 3 Cicero s admiration Tusculan Disputations 2 41 Barton 1993 p 39 Barton is citing Seneca s Suasoriae 6 17 for Cicero s death Kyle 2007 p 273 For bustuarius with reference to Clodius s alleged impious disturbance at the funeral of Marius see Cicero s In Pisonem Against Piso See Bagnani 1956 p 26 for the bustuarius as a lower class of gladiator than one employed in the public munus Cicero s unflattering references to Marcus Antonius as gladiator are in his 2nd Philippic Silius Italicus 11 51 cited in Welch 2007 p 3 Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death As Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 185 Tacitus in Annals 15 44 describes the public repugnance towards Nero s punishment of Christians which seemed based on his appetite for cruelty rather than a desire for the public good Futrell 2006 p 4 Roman commentators associated munera with Capua s proverbial luxury and excess Cassius Dio 43 24 Barton 1993 p 16 Futrell 2006 p 154 Futrell is citing Lucian s Toxaris 58 59 Kyle 1998 p 85 This should be considered scandalous and noteworthy rather than common Juvenal Satires 6 102ff Futrell 2006 p 146 Futrell is citing CIL IV 4342 and CIL IV 4345 Servius Commentary on the Aeneid of Vergil 10 519 Tertullian De Spectaculis 22 Kyle 1998 p 80 Bustuarius is found in Tertullian s De Spectaculis 11 Terence Hecyra Prologue II Richlin 1992 Shelby Brown Death As Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics p 181 Welch 2007 p 2 Ancient Graffiti Project ancientgraffiti org Retrieved 7 April 2022 Keegan Peter 2005 Writing and drawing on the walls of Pompeii how the study of graffiti relates to the HSC ancient history core syllabus for 2006 Ancient History Resources for Teachers 35 1 37 64 ISSN 1032 3686 Christesen Paul Kyle Donald G 2014 A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1444339529 Pliny Natural History 30 32 cited in Welch 2007 p 21 Sources Auguet Roland 1994 Cruelty and Civilization The Roman Games New York Routledge ISBN 0415104521 Bagnani Gilbert January 1956 Encolpius Gladiator Obscenus Classical Philology 51 1 24 27 doi 10 1086 363980 S2CID 162196829 Ball Warwick 2016 Rome in the East Transformation of an Empire 2nd ed London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 72078 6 Barton Carlin A 1993 The Sorrows of the Ancient Romans The Gladiator and the Monster Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 069105696X Borkowski J Andrew du Plessis Paul J 2005 Textbook on Roman Law Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0199276072 permanent dead link Brunet Stephen 2014 Women with swords female gladiators in the Roman world In Paul Christesen Donald G Kyle eds A Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity Chichester West Sussex Wiley Blackwell pp 478 491 doi 10 1002 9781118609965 ISBN 978 1444339529 Carter Michael 2004 Archiereis and Asiarchs A Gladiatorial Perspective PDF Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 44 41 68 Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2009 Coleman K M 1990 Fatal Charades Roman Executions Staged as Mythological Enactments The Journal of Roman Studies 80 44 73 doi 10 2307 300280 JSTOR 300280 S2CID 163071557 Curry Andrew November December 2008 The Gladiator Diet Archaeology 61 6 Retrieved 21 March 2009 Edwards Catherine 2007 Death in Ancient Rome New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300112085 Everitt Anthony 2001 Cicero The Life and Times of Rome s Greatest Politician New York Random House ISBN 0375507469 Fagan Garrett G The Lure of the Arena Social Psychology and the Crowd at the Roman Games Cambridge University Press 2011 ISBN 978 0521196161 Fox Robin Lane 2006 The Classical World An Epic History from Homer to Hadrian New York Basic Books ISBN 0465024963 Futrell Alison 2006 A Sourcebook on the Roman Games Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 1405115688 Gibbon Edward Womersley David 2000 The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire New York Penguin ISBN 0140437649 Grant Michael 2000 Gladiators London Penguin Books ISBN 0140299343 Grossschmidt K Kanz Fabian July 2006 Head Injuries of Roman Gladiators Forensic Science International 160 2 3 Vienna Center of Anatomy and Cell biology Medical University of Vienna and Austrian Archaeological Institute 207 216 doi 10 1016 j forsciint 2005 10 010 PMID 16289900 Hopkins Keith Beard Mary 2005 The Colosseum Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 0674018958 Jacobelli Luciana 2003 Gladiators at Pompeii Los Angeles Getty Publications ISBN 0892367318 Jones C P 1987 Stigma Tattooing and Branding in Graeco Roman Antiquity Journal of Roman Studies 77 139 155 doi 10 2307 300578 JSTOR 300578 S2CID 162719864 Junkelmann Marcus 2000 Das Spiel mit dem Tod So Kampften Roms Gladiatoren Mainz Verlag Philipp von Zabern ISBN 3805325630 Kohne Eckart Ewigleben Cornelia Jackson Ralph 2000 Gladiators and Caesars The Power of Spectacle in Ancient Rome Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 0520227980 Kyle Donald G 1998 Spectacles of Death in Ancient Rome London Routledge ISBN 0415096782 Kyle Donald G 2007 Sport and Spectacle in the Ancient World Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0631229704 Lintott Andrew 2004 The Constitution of the Roman Republic Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 0199261083 Mattern Susan P 2002 Rome and the Enemy Imperial Strategy in the Principate Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0520236831 Millar Fergus 1998 The Crowd in Rome in the Late Republic Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472108921 Mouritsen Henrik 2001 Plebs and Politics in the Late Roman Republic Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521791006 Osiek Carolyn 2006 The Self Defining Praxis of the Developing Ecclesia In Mitchell Margaret M Young Frances M eds Origins to Constantine The Cambridge History of Christianity Vol 1 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 274 292 ISBN 978 1107423619 Potter David Stone 2010 A Companion to the Roman Empire West Sussex UK Blackwell Publishing Limited John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1405199186 Potter David Stone Mattingly D J 1999 Life Death and Entertainment in the Roman Empire Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472109243 Richlin Amy 1992 Death As Decoration Scenes of the Arena on Roman Domestic Mosaics Shelby Brown Pornography and Representation in Greece and Rome New York Oxford University Press pp 180 211 ISBN 0195067231 Welch Katherine E 2007 The Roman Amphitheatre From Its Origins to the Colosseum Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521809443 Wiedemann Thomas 1992 Emperors and Gladiators London Routledge ISBN 0415121647 Wisdom Stephen McBride Angus 2001 Gladiators 100 BC AD 200 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 1841762997 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Roman gladiators Gladiator World History Encyclopedia Britannia Gladiators Archived from the original on 31 May 2014 Retrieved 7 March 2011 Gladiators Archaeology Archaeological Institute of America 2007 Retrieved 7 March 2011 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