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  • At a Roman Colosseum, audiences could

  • munch on chickpeas while watching a midday execution

  • or check out the lions--

  • no, not those-- and other exotic animals

  • released through the arena's hidden trap doors

  • from their cramped seats, or even observe

  • Roman elites harvesting actual sweat from gladiators

  • to make themselves sexier.

  • Events held at the Colosseum were so varied

  • and elaborate that the audience never knew what to expect.

  • Today, we're looking at what it was

  • like to be a spectator at the Roman Colosseum.

  • Before we get into it, make sure you subscribe,

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  • Now we go to the Colosseum.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

  • Admission into the Colosseum was free,

  • one of the many perks of being a Roman citizen.

  • But attendees still had assigned seating.

  • The podium and first few rows made up

  • the first and best tier, where the emperor, Vestal virgins,

  • and about 2,000 other Roman athletes

  • who watched the blood sport.

  • Merchants, government toadies, and

  • other well-heeled patricians got to sit in the second tier.

  • Higher up, the third tier was reserved for ordinary Joes.

  • That's where most of the real fans would end up.

  • Going to the games was kind of like going to Disneyland,

  • you know, if Donald and Goofy fought to the death

  • for the edification of Emperor Mickey.

  • On festival days, the Colosseum attracted 50,000 spectators,

  • a gold mine for vendors.

  • Outside the Colosseum, traders and street sellers

  • hawked food and souvenirs to visitors.

  • They may have even sold programs with stats

  • on the gladiator, sort of like Topps baseball

  • cards of the day, that could presumably immediately

  • spike in value thanks to all the sudden athlete death.

  • Let's hope that Mickius Mantle Maximus

  • card is in mint condition.

  • As for street food, the Romans enjoyed sausages, chickpeas,

  • and pastries.

  • Inside the Colosseum, they could grab sweets, wine, and snacks.

  • Got any nuts?

  • I haven't got any nuts, sorry.

  • I've got wren's livers, badger spleens.

  • No, no, no.

  • And of course, there was merchandise-- a wooden ball

  • with a special token inside.

  • The tokens could be cashed in for special prizes from food

  • or cash to their own spot on an island, which, exciting as that

  • sounds, is just what the Romans called

  • their multistory apartment buildings.

  • Once visitors made it inside, they

  • faced the challenge of finding their seats in a stadium

  • big enough to hold 50,000.

  • Depending on a status, a man might

  • settle right into a nice spot at the lowest level,

  • climb 12 to 15 stories to the top

  • to sit with the womenfolk and the poor,

  • who probably have the toughest time climbing

  • 15 freaking stories of stairs.

  • Both the entrances and the staircases

  • were kept separate by iron and marble dividers,

  • and like the seating areas, the passageways

  • were divided by class.

  • Covering about six acres of land and rising

  • 12 to 15 modern stories tall, the Colosseum

  • was and remains the largest amphitheater in the world.

  • But although the building itself was grand,

  • the majority of the audience was as cramped as flying coach

  • on American Airlines.

  • Everyone not in the ancient Roman version

  • of the first class got a 15-inch wide seat

  • with 27.5 inches of leg room.

  • Now subtract air conditioning, add 15 levels of stairs,

  • and you'd be ready to watch some bloody gladiators fight, too.

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

  • Because of the immense size of the structure,

  • spectators in the nosebleed section

  • probably couldn't see or hear much of the action.

  • The highest part of the 15-story stadium

  • sat upon a wall, which extended 16 feet

  • above the other spectators.

  • The crowds at the top, made up of mostly women

  • and the impoverished, strained to see the fights below.

  • And while the roar of the crowd could make it to the top,

  • the spectators in the highest seats

  • probably couldn't hear much else from the fighting ring.

  • This mirrors the living situation in the city.

  • The islands we talked about earlier were

  • about six stories tall with rent mostly

  • determined by the number of decaying stairs

  • a tenant had to climb to get to his apartment.

  • We can imagine what it was like to try and convince

  • your friends to help you move a sofa.

  • A hideaway bed?

  • These haven't even been invented yet.

  • As you'd expect, the emperor got the best seat

  • in the house, the imperial box.

  • Gladiators fought before him and appealed to him for mercy,

  • often successfully.

  • The emperor could order a gladiator's end at any time

  • with only his thumb, and spectators waited and watched

  • for his reactions.

  • Contrary to the movie cliche, forgiveness was the rule, not

  • the exception, and the gladiators

  • were more likely to die from deep wounds

  • than they were from an inverted royal thumb.

  • While the Roman elites might sit close to the emperor,

  • the [INAUDIBLE] ruler was--

  • you guessed it-- separated from the other spectators.

  • He even had dedicated doors to enter and exit the Colosseum,

  • so he never ran into the rabble or slipped on lion droppings

  • and discarded sausage.

  • There's more sense than ego to this.

  • Nothing inflames mob mentality like violence,

  • and Rome was beginning to decay before the Colosseum was

  • even built.

  • The Mediterranean sun can be a real bastard during the summer

  • months, but the Colosseum provided a place of respite,

  • thanks to the velarium, which is a fancy word for a really

  • big curtain.

  • The velarium was the building system of adjustable awnings,

  • similar to a ship's mast and sails.

  • A ship crew stationed near Rome maneuvered the rig.

  • Using ropes and pulleys, the crew

  • could pull a large piece of fabric

  • or smaller separated strips across the top of the structure

  • and block the sun.

  • Ironically, that meant that while they couldn't see or hear

  • much from their seats, the lowest class

  • could enjoy the shadiest part of the Colosseum,

  • while the nobles sweated in the sun.

  • It's basically like going to the movies just

  • to sit in the air conditioning.

  • Fights at the Colosseum often had their own soundtrack.

  • Spectators thrilled to the sounds of trumpets, horns,

  • and water organs, while gladiators

  • tilted at exotic animals and, of course, each other.

  • Music continued even when the emperor

  • was deciding whether a hapless gladiator had shown enough

  • grit to fight another day.

  • The music was more than just entertainment for the audience,

  • though.

  • It also served as a cue for the stagehands.

  • The music might tell them when to release a wild animal

  • into the arena or when the next fight was

  • about to start, sort of like how stone Cold Steve Austin knew it

  • was time to run into the ring.

  • [APPLAUSE]

  • [MUSIC PLAYING]

  • The Colosseum had a wide array of spectacles.

  • Though many depictions of the arena show

  • seats surrounding a sandpit, the floor

  • had a complex layout of walls and chambers

  • underneath a wooden platform.

  • Different pieces of scenery could

  • be elevated through the Colosseum floor,

  • providing new and distinct scenarios for every show,

  • like the Pokemon stadium in Smash Brothers.

  • Among the intricate caverns under the Colosseum,

  • there were even runoff canals to drain the arena

  • after a naval performance, called a naumachia,

  • was performed.

  • The wooden platform in its supports

  • were removed from the Colosseum floor.

  • Water was then diverted from aqueducts into the center,

  • creating an artificial lake of up to five feet deep.

  • Scaled down ships were brought into the stadium

  • to re-enact famous naval battles from history.

  • A lot of people, especially if they've seen

  • the movie, Gladiator, assume gladiators

  • were all slaves or criminals convicted

  • to die in the arena for Rome's entertainment.

  • But that wasn't always the case.

  • Some Romans actually signed up at gladiator schools

  • to become professionals.

  • For those who did, the benefits of being a victorious gladiator

  • outweighed the inherent risks of the work.

  • Gladiators were treated like celebrities in Rome,

  • like modern athletes.

  • Roman children could even buy clay action figures

  • representing famous fighters.

  • Victors sometimes had affairs with aristocratic women.

  • Graffiti from Pompeii even bragged

  • about their supposed prowess.

  • Gladiators' sweat was considered an aphrodisiac,

  • so Romans sometimes mixed it into their face creams.

  • Given this information, it is our duty

  • to assume that LeBron James puts some of his sweat

  • into every bottle of his official Sprite flavor.

  • One of the many shows held within the Colosseum

  • was the animal hunt.

  • The bestiarii, gladiators trained to battle wild animals,

  • squared off against lions, tigers, bears, oh, my,

  • along with hippopotamuses, elephants, deer, giraffe,

  • and allegedly, even whales.

  • The bestiarii fought a combination of both harmless

  • and potentially dangerous animals,

  • but the fighters were rarely at risk.

  • Of the thousands of animals slain in a single day,

  • many were taken out from afar with spears or bows.

  • Presumably, that's how most of the whales

  • were dealt with, because we can't

  • imagine Russell Crowe wrestling with a whale and winning.

  • Mm, actually, maybe we can.

  • Even though it's been highly propagated as fact,

  • and though it is possible, there is no evidence

  • to suggest that Christians were killed and fed

  • to lions at the Colosseum.

  • The association between the Colosseum and Christian

  • suffering was first stated in the fourth century,

  • but then largely forgotten until the 17th century.

  • During the fourth century, CE, Christian and Latin scholar

  • Lactantius and Bishop Caesarea Eusebius

  • wrote of emperors intentionally slaying Christians.

  • Such actions were never imperial policy, but scattered events,

  • which occurred around the empire.

  • The Colosseum did regularly feature punishments referred

  • to as the midday games, where law breakers and POWs, called

  • the damnati, were condemned through a multitude

  • of different and horrible methods.

  • Sometimes the damnati were thrown defenseless

  • into the arena to be torn apart by wild animals,

  • while others were forced to fight one another to the death.

  • Roman Colosseum battles were like the original Battle

  • Royale.

  • After the disastrous reign of Emperor Nero and three

  • other rulers, all within a single year,

  • Emperor Vespasian rose to power and distanced himself

  • from the distasteful image of personal luxury and opulence

  • associated with his predecessors.

  • Through propaganda and great projects around the empire,

  • Vespasian established his vision as a leader

  • who worked for the Roman people, not his own desires.

  • One such project was the Colosseum.

  • Vespasian personally commissioned it

  • as an entertainment venue for the people of Rome.

  • Over the next 10 years, Vespasian

  • demolished Nero's private lake and, in its place,

  • built the enormous Colosseum.

  • At the time, however, no one called it that.

  • It was instead known as the Flavian Amphitheater,

  • after the emperor's family.

  • So why do we call it the Colosseum?

  • The title itself only dates back as far as the 11th century,

  • and most historians believe it is named after the Colossus

  • Neronis, a large bronze statue commissioned

  • by Nero, which was once located near where the Colosseum was

  • built. So essentially, one vanity project

  • was replaced by another, except people actually

  • liked the Colosseum.

  • Used for four centuries to exhibit the heart and soul

  • of an empire, the Colosseum has become

  • the de facto icon of Rome.

  • Its construction alone heralded the beginning

  • of a new political environment.

  • So what do you think of the Colosseum?

  • Would you rather see an event then or now

  • and pay 20 bucks for a beer?

  • Let us know in our comments below, and while you're at it,

  • check out some of these other weird videos

  • from our weird history.

At a Roman Colosseum, audiences could

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