The Flavian Amphitheater
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Transcript The Flavian Amphitheater
HISTORY 4130 6.0
The Inauguration of the Flavian Amphitheater,
AD 80
Genevieve Durigon
Selected Bibliography
Martialis de spectaculus liber. Shakelton Bailey, trans & ed
(1993) Epigrams Volume I (Harvard Unviersity Press) pp 1239.
Cassius Dio Cocceianus LXVI. E Cay & H Foster, trans
(1925) Roman History: Volume III Books 61-70 (Harvard
University Press) pp 311-313.
Suetonius Titus
Kathleen Coleman (1997) ‘The contagion of the throng’:
absorbing violence in the Roman world. Eur Rev 5: 401-417.
Alison Futrell (1997) Blood in the arena (Austin, Texas:
University of Texas Press).
CIL, vol XIV, no 3,014 (=Dessau no 6,252)
N Lewis & M Reinhold (2000) Roman Civilizations Volume II
3rd Ed. (New York: Columbia University Press) p 274.
William J Slater, ed. (1997) Roman theatre and society. (Ann
Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press) pp 68-112.
Chapter by J Edmondson
Brief History of
the Amphitheater
Concept of Amphitheater
Curio, 53 BC
http://int.tourisme.ville-arles.fr/UK/a2/a2a1.htm
Wooden amphitheaters built shortly thereafter
First stone amphitheater in Rome
Built by Statilius Taurus, 29 BC.
Provided venue for Roman Spectacle
Previously held in temporary structures in
open field or in the Forum
amphitheatrum Caesareum
Vespasian
Domitian
Titus
http://www.accla.org/images/vespasian.jpg
http://www.accla.org/actaaccla/domitian.html
AD 85
AD 75
http://www.accla.org/actaaccla/titus.html
AD 80
The Flavian Amphitheater
http://www.legionxxiv.org/colosseum/
http://depthome.brooklyn.cuny.edu/classics/gladiatr/colcoin.htm
The Flavian Amphitheater
http://www.legionxxiv.org/colosseum/
The Flavian Amphitheater
http://www.legionxxiv.org/colosseum/
The Flavian Amphitheater
http://subject.jccssyl.edu.hk/subjects/history/subhtml/library/images/Rome/COLOSSEUM.jpg
The Flavian Amphitheater
Enormous capacity
40-60,000
people
Architectural model
for all other
amphitheaters
Symbol of Roman
culture
http://www.gardkarlsen.com/rome/colosseum_from_Via_dei_fori_imperiali.jpg
The Inauguration of the Colosseum
Cassius Dio Cocceianus (Book LXVI), Suetonius
(Titus, 7) & Martialis (de spectaculis liber)
100-day festival
Marcus Valerius Martialis
AD 43-117
Naval battles (artificial lake)
Infantry battles
Gladiatorial Shows (munera)
Wild beast hunts (venationes)
http://www.hermetic.com/sabazius/martial.htm
http://www.roman-empire.net/articles/pics/gladiators-colosseum/StoraxRelief.jpg
Function of the Amphitheater
Venue for Roman
Spectacle
Particularly
bloodsport
munera
(gladitorial
shows) &
venationes
(wild beast
hunts)
http://www.vroma.org/images/mcmanus_images/bestiarii.jpg
Symbolism of Bloodsport
http://www.nashfordpublishing.co.uk/archaeology/images/bignor_gladiators.jpg
Origins
Mythic & Religious Associations
virtus (Coleman 1997, Futrell 1997, Edmondson 1997)
Spectacle & Social Relations
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rgls/ho_81.10.245.htm
Promotes social unity
Spectators vs. participants
(Futrell, 1997 &
Edmondson, 1997)
Crime & Punishment
Reinforces Social
Demarcations (Edmondson,
1997)
Vertical
Horizontal
Political Propaganda
Provide entertainment
Reassure the masses
Reenact historical events
and/or recent battles
Social identity
Self-validating
Distraction from bad
government
http://www.indiana.edu/~c494troy/Empire/tomb_gladiator_frieze.jpg
Gift Giving & Reciprocity for the
Politically Ambitious
Gauge/sway public
opinion (Coleman, 1997 &
Edmondson, 1997)
Give gift of entertainment
to the masses and gain
favour
Place in social order is
maintained or elevated
Or is it?
http://www.fotosearch.com/thumb/ICL/ICL154/BIM_092.jpg
Thoughts to the Contrary:
Potential Theme of Essay
Bloodsport became an industry integral to the Roman
bureaucracy
Spectacle became part of tradition
Effectiveness as a political tool is questionable
Amphitheater as arena for social politics
Over-stated
The End
Any comments? Thoughts?
Concerns? Questions?