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Authors: Keith Hopkins,Mary Beard

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It is also well worth exploring a little more widely beyond the monument itself. Towards the east are the five remaining bollards which once acted (we guess) as some kind of boundary marker or crowd control; immediately around them the Roman pavement surface has been preserved. Further in this direction, across the main road, lie the remains of one of the gladiatorial training camps, the Ludus Magnus (
p. 136
). The distinctive outline of part of its practice arena can be seen from the Via S. Giovanni in Laterano (in an excavation visible from the left-hand side of the street as you walk away
from the Colosseum); the rest of the complex is still buried under the nearby modern buildings.

At the west end, the most impressive monument has no direct connection with the Colosseum. It is the arch dedicated in
AD
315 in honour of the emperor Constantine. Less striking, but more closely related to the story of the amphitheatre, are the foundations of two other monuments. Closest to the Via dei Fori Imperiali is the roughly square base on which the Colossus itself stood from the early second century
AD
. Between that and the arch of Constantine are the now scanty remains of what was once a famous landmark, put up in the late first century
AD
by the emperor Domitian – presumably partly to leave his own mark near the amphitheatre of his father and brother (Vespasian and Titus). This was a monumental fountain, known as the Meta Sudans. Its central feature was conical in shape, like the turning post used for races in the circus (
meta
);
sudans
means that it ‘sweated’ or ‘dripped’ (see illustration 16,
p. 95
).

THE VIEW FROM INSIDE

The plan of the Colosseum may be simple, but it is nevertheless very easy to lose your bearings once inside (especially as the methods used to channel the crowds mean that you emerge into the arena itself some distance around the circumference from the point at which you entered the outer corridors of the monument). The best advice is to keep your eye on where the main outer wall is preserved (that is obvious from most parts of the building) and to remember that that is the north!

Apart from special tours to the third level and hypogeum, visitors generally have access to two floors of the monument, the ground and first floors, and parts of both of these are regularly closed off to allow repair work. The first floor gives an excellent view of the whole structure (as well as offering wonderful vistas out over the surrounding area) and is the best place to start. Although this is less than half way up the original height of the monument, it is a steep climb up the stairs on a hot day. Most visitors prefer to use the lifts which have been neatly tucked in behind the nineteenth-century buttress at the east end. From the walkway around the edge of the arena at this level (which is just above the vault of the ‘third corridor’ on our cross-section,
figure 3
) you can look down into substructures beneath the level of the arena floor; and there is an excellent view of the reconstructed seating (which may help envisage the original appearance of the monument, even though it is in detail entirely wrong). Away from the arena’s edge, near the entrance to the lifts, is a small display of material found in the building – balustrades from where the stairways came out into the seating area, late-Roman inscriptions designating the occupants of particular sections of the elite seating and some vivid graffiti (illustration 17,
p. 97
) – plus some puzzling models of the machinery used to bring the animals up from the basements. Much of the space of the outer corridors on the north side is now usually given over to temporary exhibitions.

The ground floor is rather more confusing: parts of it (including sometimes even the section of wooden flooring built to replicate the original arena floor) are often closed to visitors; many of the vaults are used as deposits for quantities of stray masonry from the original structure. But there are
also more details to look at here than on the first floor, especially near the north and south entrances. At the north, Mussolini’s cross (
pp. 175
–6) still stands at the arena’s edge and on the vault of one of the main passages leading into the building (immediately to the left of the central entranceway) is the best surviving piece of the stucco decoration that would once have adorned much of the structure. Moving towards the arena from the main south entrance (the modern day exit of the monument), which originally led to the imperial box, is the so-called ‘passageway of Commodus’ (p.134), visible on the right. Away from the arena itself, in the corridor between the south and west entrances, is the tantalising shape of a crucifix in the wall: nothing to do with Christians, but the setting for one of the fountains that serviced the building. In the original western entrance two inscriptions have been placed, celebrating one of the late-Roman repairs to the building.

AMENITIES

There are far fewer fountains and other services in the building now than there were in antiquity: no café and the queues for the (few) lavatories sometimes almost equal those at the ticket office. There are public toilets outside the east side of the building, but queues there can be off-putting too. (If buying your ticket from the nearby Palatine ticket office, you would do well to make use of the conveniences at that point). There is, however, an excellent book and souvenir shop on the first floor, and another smaller one on the ground. For refreshments, the modern ‘gladiators’ usually
make for the stand-up coffee bar in the adjacent Metro station (it is a strangely picturesque sight to watch them mingling with the commuters, helmets on the counter). For anything more substantial, or for a seat, the restaurants and cafés nearest to the Colosseum are best avoided, over-priced and decidedly uninspiring in cuisine. Better fare is to be had as you walk down the Via S Giovanni in Laterano and the Via Santi Quattri Coronati to the east; or, a little further away to the west, up the Via della Madonna dei Monti off the Via dei Fori Imperiali, turning right at the Hotel Forum … whose famous roof terrace is reputed to be the setting for the conversation between Mrs Slade and Mrs Ansley in Edith Wharton’s ‘Roman Fever’ (
p. 10
).

Revised (2010) by Debbie Whittaker

FURTHER READING

GENERAL AND INTRODUCTORY

The most comprehensive recent introduction to all aspects of the Colosseum is A. Gabucci (ed.),
The Colosseum
(Getty Museum, Los Angeles, 2001), though be warned that the English translation of the original Italian edition (Milan, 2000) is sometimes inaccurate and occasionally misleading. Also useful are P. Connolly,
Colosseum: Rome’s Arena of Death
(London, 2003) – especially good for its careful reconstruction drawings and its explanations of the basement areas; L. Abbondanza,
The Valley of the Colosseum
(Rome, 1997), the site-guide produced by the Italian archaeological service, but widely available; and P. Quennell,
The Colosseum
(New York, 1971), which is excellent on the medieval and later history of the building (though sadly out of print). Other important studies, available only in Italian, include M. L. Conforto et al.,
Anfiteatro Flavio: immagine, testimonianze, spettacoli
(Rome, 1988), and R. Rea,
Rota Colisei
(Milan, 2002).

Amphitheatres in general are the subject of D. L-Bomgardner,
The Story of the Roman Amphitheatre
(London, 2000), and of an important book by K. Welch,
The Roman Amphitheatre from its Origins to the Colosseum
(Cambridge, 2005). The main work of reference on amphitheatres is the
two-volume study by J.-C. Golvin,
L’Amphithéâtre Romain: essai sur la théorisation de sa forme et de ses fonctions
(Paris, 1988), but note that a printing error on Golvin’s definitive plan of the Colosseum reversed the points of the compass, marking south as north. This error has crept into later books (including Bomgardner’s), causing considerable confusion.

There has been an enormous amount of recent writing on gladiators and other forms of Roman spectacle (some, but not all, prompted by the movie
Gladiator
). Particularly influential have been K. Hopkins’ chapter ‘Murderous Games’, in his
Death and Renewal
(Cambridge, 1983), and C. Barton,
Sorrows of the Ancient Romans: the gladiator and the monster
(Princeton, 1993). Good general surveys of the phenomenon include R. Auguet,
Cruelty and Civilization: the Roman games
(London, 1972); D. Kyle,
Spectacles and Death in Ancient Rome
(London, 1998); F. Meijer,
The Gladiators: history’s most deadly sport
(London, 2007); and T. Wiedemann,
Emperors and Gladiators
(London & New York, 1992). G. Ville,
La Gladiature en occident des origines à la mort de Domitien
(Rome, 1981) is a rigorously detailed account. Two exhibition catalogues provide useful illustration of the material evidence (including surviving gladiatorial armour): E. Köhne and C. Ewigleben (eds.),
Gladiators and Caesars
(London, 2000) and – a magnificently illustrated book, though only available in Italian – A. La Regina (ed.),
Sangue e arena
(Milan, 2001). M. M. Winkler (ed.),
Gladiator: film and history
(Malden, MA, & Oxford, 2004) is a lively collection of essays on modern popular representation of gladiators and the ancient context.

The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Roman World
, edited by G. Woolf (Cambridge, 2003), is an excellent, up-to-the-minute introduction to the historical and cultural
background of the Colosseum. The best on-site guide to the ancient monuments of the city of Rome is A. Claridge,
Rome: an Oxford archaeological guide
(2nd ed., Oxford, 2010).

ANCIENT TEXTS

The main ancient texts which underpin our account of gladiatorial shows and the world of the Colosseum are:

Cassius Dio,
Roman History
(a narrative – now surviving only in parts – written in Greek in the third century
AD
, covering Rome’s history from its foundation to the writer’s own lifetime)

Martial,
The Book of the Shows
(or
On Spectacles
, as it is often called, a collection of poetry written to celebrate the opening of the Colosseum in
AD
80)

Pliny (the Elder),
Natural History
(a vast encyclopaedia of the natural world, written in the mid first century
AD
)

‘Scriptores Historiae Augustae’ (a mysterious – and often unbelievably lurid – collection of lives of emperors and usurpers from Hadrian to the end of the third century
AD
, probably written at the end of the fourth; usually abbreviated as SHA)

Suetonius,
Lives of the Caesars
(a series of twelve biographies of Roman dictators and emperors from Julius Caesar to Domitian, written in the early second century
AD
)

Tacitus,
Annals
(an account of Roman history from the death of the first emperor Augustus probably – though the end does not survive – to the death of Nero, written in the early second century
AD
)

Translations of all these – and most other classical writers we have referred to – are available in the Loeb Classical Library. Reliable English versions of Suetonius and Tacitus (and of portions of Dio, Pliny and SHA) are also to be found in the Penguin Classics series. A selection of Martial’s verses from
The Book of the Shows
is included in the Penguin Classics volume
Martial in English
(eds. J. P. Sullivan and A. J. Boyle).

CHAPTER
1

Nineteenth-century tourism to Rome, as well as literary and artistic responses, are acutely discussed in C. Edwards (ed.),
Roman Presences: receptions of Rome in European culture, 1789–1945
(Cambridge, 1999); the chapters by C. Chard and J. Lyon are especially relevant. The appeal of the mid-nineteenth-century Colosseum is captured by C. Woodward,
In Ruins
(London, 2001),
Chapter 1
, ‘Who Killed Daisy Miller?’, and (with an American focus) W. L. Vance,
America’s Rome
(New Haven & London, 1989), Volume 1,
Chapter 2
(‘The Colosseum: ambiguities of empire’). Amongst an enormous bibliography which explores more generally the northern European engagement with Italy and the Mediterranean, note J. Pemble,
The Mediterranean Passion: Victorians and Edwardians in the South
(Oxford, 1987); M. Liversidge and C. Edwards,
Imagining Rome: British artists and Rome in the nineteenth century
(London,
1996); and C. Hornsby (ed.),
The Impact of Italy: the Grand Tour and beyond
(London, British School at Rome, 2000).

In addition to the literary references sourced in the text, Charles Dickens’ effusion on the Colosseum is from his
Pictures from Italy
(London, 1846) and Byron’s famous lines in
Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
are from Canto IV.

CHAPTER
2

The Colosseum’s ancient literary fame depends heavily on Martial’s poems in
The Book of the Shows
, discussed by W. Fitzgerald in
Martial: the wonder of the epigram
(Chicago, 2007) and the subject of a definitive commentary by K. Coleman,
Martial: Liber Spectaculorum
(Oxford, 2006). The reactions of the emperor Constantius to the city can be found in Book 16 of Ammianus’ multi-volume history of Rome (translated in the Loeb Classical Library and Penguin Classics). The archaeological impact of the building is straightforwardly reviewed in Bomgardner’s
Story of the Roman Amphitheatre.
The description of El Jem as a ‘shrunken Colosseum’ is from an architectural study by M. Wilson-Jones, ‘Designing amphitheatres’, in
Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaelogischen Instituts (Römische Abteilung)
, 100 (1993). Amphitheatres in Britain include a newly discovered example in London, which is explored in N. Bateman,
Gladiators at the Guildhall: the story of London’s Roman amphitheatre and medieval Guildhall
(London, 2002).

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