Secrets of the Colosseum
A German archaeologist has finally deciphered the Roman amphitheater's amazing underground labyrinth
- By Tom Mueller
- Photographs by Dave Yoder
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Beste says the hypogeum itself had a lot in common with a huge sailing ship. The underground staging area had “countless ropes, pulleys and other wood and metal mechanisms housed in very limited space, all requiring endless training and drilling to run smoothly during a show. Like a ship, too, everything could be disassembled and stored neatly away when it was not being used.” All that ingenuity served a single purpose: to delight spectators and ensure the success of shows that both celebrated and embodied the grandeur of Rome.
Beyond the thin wooden floor that separated the dark, stifling hypogeum from the airy stadium above, the crowd of 50,000 Roman citizens sat according to their place in the social hierarchy, ranging from slaves and women in the upper bleachers to senators and vestal virgins—priestesses of Vesta, goddess of the hearth—around the arena floor. A place of honor was reserved for the editor, the person who organized and paid for the games. Often the editor was the emperor himself, who sat in the imperial box at the center of the long northern curve of the stadium, where his every reaction was scrutinized by the audience.
The official spectacle, known as the munus iustum atque legitimum (“a proper and legitimate gladiator show”), began, like many public events in Classical Rome, with a splendid morning procession, the pompa. It was led by the editor’s standard-bearers and typically featured trumpeters, performers, fighters, priests, nobles and carriages bearing effigies of the gods. (Disappointingly, gladiators appear not to have addressed the emperor with the legendary phrase, “We who are about to die salute you,” which is mentioned in conjunction with only one spectacle—a naval battle held on a lake east of Rome in A.D. 52—and was probably a bit of inspired improvisation rather than a standard address.)
The first major phase of the games was the venatio, or wild beast hunt, which occupied most of the morning: creatures from across the empire appeared in the arena, sometimes as part of a bloodless parade, more often to be slaughtered. They might be pitted against each other in savage fights or dispatched by venatores (highly trained hunters) wearing light body armor and carrying long spears. Literary and epigraphic accounts of these spectacles dwell on the exotic menagerie involved, including African herbivores such as elephants, rhinoceroses, hippopotamuses and giraffes, bears and elk from the northern forests, as well as strange creatures like onagers, ostriches and cranes. Most popular of all were the leopards, lions and tigers—the dentatae (toothed ones) or bestiae africanae (African beasts)—whose leaping abilities necessitated that spectators be shielded by barriers, some apparently fitted with ivory rollers to prevent agitated cats from climbing. The number of animals displayed and butchered in an upscale venatio is astonishing: during the series of games held to inaugurate the Colosseum, in A.D. 80, the emperor Titus offered up 9,000 animals. Less than 30 years later, during the games in which the emperor Trajan celebrated his conquest of the Dacians (the ancestors of the Romanians), some 11,000 animals were slaughtered.
The hypogeum played a vital role in these staged hunts, allowing animals and hunters to enter the arena in countless ways. Eyewitnesses describe how animals appeared suddenly from below, as if by magic, sometimes apparently launched high into the air. “The hypogeum allowed the organizers of the games to create surprises and build suspense,” Beste says. “A hunter in the arena wouldn’t know where the next lion would appear, or whether two or three lions might emerge instead of just one.” This uncertainty could be exploited for comic effect. Emperor Gallienus punished a merchant who had swindled the empress, selling her glass jewels instead of authentic ones, by setting him in the arena to face a ferocious lion. When the cage opened, however, a chicken walked out, to the delight of the crowd. Gallienus then told the herald to proclaim: “He practiced deceit and then had it practiced on him.” The emperor let the jeweler go home.
During the intermezzos between hunts, spectators were treated to a range of sensory delights. Handsome stewards passed through the crowd carrying trays of cakes, pastries, dates and other sweetmeats, and generous cups of wine. Snacks also fell from the sky as abundantly as hail, one observer noted, along with wooden balls containing tokens for prizes—food, money or even the title to an apartment—which sometimes set off violent scuffles among spectators struggling to grab them. On hot days, the audience might enjoy sparsiones (“sprinklings”), mist scented with balsam or saffron, or the shade of the vela, an enormous cloth awning drawn over the Colosseum roof by sailors from the Roman naval headquarters at Misenum, near Naples.
No such relief was provided for those working in the hypogeum. “It was as hot as a boiler room in the summer, humid and cold in winter, and filled all year round with strong smells, from the smoke, the sweating workmen packed in the narrow corridors, the reek of the wild animals,” says Beste. “The noise was overwhelming—creaking machinery, people shouting and animals growling, the signals made by organs, horns or drums to coordinate the complex series of tasks people had to carry out, and, of course, the din of the fighting going on just overhead, with the roaring crowd.”
At the ludi meridiani, or midday games, criminals, barbarians, prisoners of war and other unfortunates, called damnati, or “condemned,” were executed. (Despite numerous accounts of saints’ lives written in the Renaissance and later, there is no reliable evidence that Christians were killed in the Colosseum for their faith.) Some damnati were released in the arena to be slaughtered by fierce animals such as lions, and some were forced to fight one another with swords. Others were dispatched in what a modern scholar has called “fatal charades,” executions staged to resemble scenes from mythology. The Roman poet Martial, who attended the inaugural games, describes a criminal dressed as Orpheus playing a lyre amid wild animals; a bear ripped him apart. Another suffered the fate of Hercules, who burned to death before becoming a god.
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Related topics: Archaeology Renovation and Restoration Historic and Cultural Monuments
Additional Sources
The Colosseum, by Filippo Coarelli et al., English translation by Mary Becker, The J. Paul Getty Trust, 2001









Comments (26)
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Concerning the Coloseum I just read somewhere that in Roman times the "thumbs up" was the sign to kill the defeated gladiator, while "thumbs down" was the sign to let them continue to live. It would thus be the exact opposite of what it means today and what is stated in the otherwise very interesting article. Is this correct?
Posted by Bruce K. Steuer on November 5,2012 | 07:44 PM
Saint Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, was an early Christian martyr sentenced to die in the Colosseum--his own writings at the time, around 108 A.D. (not accounts by others in the Renaissance--the author of this article hasn't researched this aspect of history well), describe his journey as a prisoner to meet his death there, and he was recognized as a martyr by the early church following his death in the Colosseum, eaten by lions. I hope the author, Tom Mueller, who has written this incredible historical description of the workings of the Colosseum, can understand why his denial of historical accounts from the time (again, not the Renaissance) of Christian martyrs meeting horrible deaths in the Colosseum (and throughout the Roman Empire during persecutions by Trajan, Nero and others), feels a little like hearing from people who deny the Holocaust in Germany. It was long ago, but it was real. I wouldn't take offense at omitting it from the article, but to imply that it didn't happen is not what I would expect from an article published by a society of the caliber of the Smithsonian. Here is a link regarding St. Ignatius of Antioch and his writings: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ignatius_of_Antioch
Posted by Greg Wrenn on June 30,2012 | 01:46 PM
Well you guys are just amazing, dissing the artical, calling for spell checks. It's not an amphitheater that's stupid, it's an ampitheater. And who cares about the thumbs?! It's ancient history. Literally!!! And if you all are so smart why don't you go study the same building for 14 years, post a veary entertaining and usefull artical about it, (that might not even get hits!) Then get dissed by some idiots who don't even know what they're talking about,(and frankely no one cares) who just want to feel supirior against evryone else by claiming they know more. But you know what? If you don't like the artical.....DON'T READ IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by Gaby on April 24,2012 | 09:54 PM
(Yes I am a girl, it's like Gabby, but with one B, it's french.) I thought the artical was amazing and veary well written. I especially liked findinng out all the new info aboout the levies and pullys and such. I guess the Romans were more advanced then thouhgt. (at least by a sixth grader.) It is so amazing what was entertaaing back then,but scary how close some of our movies and even books are to that. Does this call for something that may happen in the futer? One can only imagen.
Posted by Gaby L. on April 24,2012 | 09:34 PM
exceptional. Highly impressed. Very vivid. Thank you.
Posted by Juliet Miyabo on April 7,2012 | 08:14 PM
Reading comprehension is clearly not your thing, Chappy. There is no reliable evidence that Christians were killed *in the Colosseum*.
Posted by Squiggle on October 19,2011 | 07:42 AM
Contrary to the statement in this article, there is in fact a great deal of history attesting to the death of christians at the behest of emporers who had declared themselves god, and to whom some christians would not worship.
It is just become unpopular to state the truth in certain circles.
Posted by chappy on October 2,2011 | 03:41 AM
I could not bring up "What Gladiators saw"...
help me out please
Posted by judy telechowski on May 5,2011 | 07:41 AM
I could not bring up "What Gladiators saw"...can you give me more direction? Intriguing article...I am amazed at the fact that the stadium held so many spectators and must have been filled...so many people observing other people battle beautiful beasts...to the death. A re=enactment of the beginning of man destroying our planet?? The determination, expertise, logistics required for the construction aspect is mind boggling... WOW!
Posted by Barb Gregoire on March 26,2011 | 10:38 AM
I couldn"t get "What the Gladiators Saw" picture.
Posted by Travis Smith on March 8,2011 | 02:42 PM
how can one visit the hypogeum? Is there a tour? Ihave people in rome the week of June 21 to June 24 2011.
Thank you very much
Paula Mark
Posted by Paula Mark on February 24,2011 | 06:39 PM
they kill animals, yes..... but im trying to get the point across to my friend that it cant be changed now....yeah, it wasnt right what they did was infact for fun, and it was fair game at times, but we cant change it. i wish i could change it,maybe i'll be in the stands chearing the gladiater on, who knows....and who really cares. i hope i got my point across!!!! :P haha! boo yaa!!!
Posted by Maxy woman on February 17,2011 | 01:19 PM
it killes me to know that they fought and sometimes killed animals for the fun of it didnt they sit an think about it at all and if they did how cruel
Posted by Kyles girl on February 17,2011 | 01:16 PM
When Heinz-Jürgen Beste and a team of German and Italian archaeologists first began exploring the hypogeum in 1996, they were baffled by the intricacy and sheer size of its structures.Unraveling the site’s tangled history, Beste identified four major building phases and numerous modifications over nearly 400 years of continuous use. Colosseum architects made some changes to allow new methods of stagecraft. Other changes were accidental; a fire sparked by lightning in A.D. 217 gutted the stadium and sent huge blocks of travertine plunging into the hypogeum. Beste also began to decipher the odd marks and incisions in the masonry, having had a solid grounding in Roman mechanical engineering from excavations in southern Italy, where he learned about catapults and other Roman war machines. He also studied the cranes that the Romans used to move large objects, such as 18-foot-tall marble blocks.
i love how u guys put, all this info.
Posted by maxy girl on February 17,2011 | 01:12 PM
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