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Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Lives and Contests of the Gladiators :: Papers
The Lives and Contests of the Gladiators          One form of entertainment in the Roman world was gladiatorial     contests. In these, the Roman citizens would go to watch gladiators     fight, often to the death. Today, these contests seem brutal and     cruel, but at the time it was very popular and widely accepted. The     Roman people would quite happily judge over whether a man would live     or die. Why were the contests so entertaining that they would cost a     man his life over it.       There were different types of gladiators and different types of     contests to keep the citizens interested. The gladiators were     traditionally slaves or convicts and therefore very low in the social     hierarchy. We also know that they were low down in the hierarchy     because they were sold and given between masters, for example one     advertisement said: "Twenty pairs of gladiators, given by Lucretius     Satrius Valens, priest of Nero, and ten pairs of gladiators will     fight". However, despite this apparent lack of social standing,     gladiators could become very popular and famous and could eventually     be freed.       Gladiator is taken from the term "gladius", which means sword. They     were originally used during funeral services for dead heroes. Fights     between them would be held during the funeral to celebrate the hero.     This tradition was taken from the Etruscans. Although today we would     see such a custom as cruel, it was in fact made less so than it     originally was. Festus wrote - "it was the custom to sacrifice     prisoners on the tombs of valorous warriors; when the cruelty of this     custom became evident, it was decided to make gladiators fight before     the tomb. It seems strange to modern people that somebody would want     to have people die at their funeral, but then it was seen as     "appeasing the spirit" of the dead man, by honouring them with as big     a thing as the life of a man. The Romans would not have seen the loss     of a gladiator as too much anyway, as the slaves or convicts that     became gladiators were generally considered unimportant anyway.  					    
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