Preview

Interview with a Gladiator

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
687 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Interview with a Gladiator
THE LIFE OF A GLADIATOR
By Aquilinus Caelinus

All of us love a gory Gladiator match from time to time, but what goes on behind the scenes? Where do they get all the heroic champions, and pitiful losers? The hardships they face, the rewards they earn; all will be revealed. This is the story of a true Gladiator’s life, Rome’s one and only Flavius Aclimus!

As I talked to Flavius, he gradually began to emerge from his shell, and soon opened up, telling the story of his epic life in spectacular detail, something that has never been heard before. He started off life as an uncivilised Gaul, born to a poor, lower-class family, although, looking at him now you can probably barely believe it! Flavius then began to describe vividly how, as a small boy, he had been captured by a mighty Roman solider while out picking berries. As one might guess, he then stated that it was one of the best things that had ever happened in his miserable childhood. I went on to ask him how he felt on the tedious journey from Gaul to his new home, Rome. Flavius told me even though he was young, he had heard stories about the power of our great city and the of course, the terrific gladiators. He had no clue what his future would hold, and was undecided whether this sudden change of his life was good or not. The whole experience had exhausted him, and he had woken up days later, dazed and hungry, tied to a stand in the black market. For days it seemed he stood, keeping going only because of sheer willpower. More time past and Flavius soon got into a squabble with another captive, that soon turned violent in which he severely injured the other boy. Luckily, a man watching this recognised his novice talent in fighting and immediately brought him. Flavius found himself in Gladiator School in a matter of hours, where he was handed over to a Butcher (an old Gladiator) to be trained into shape, ready for the arena. He was weak from the trauma in the market, but knew that Flavius

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Spartacus was an important leader in Rome. He was born in 109 BC and died in 71 BC on a battlefield near Petelia Italy. His occupation was a Gladiator. He is best known for leading a slave uprising against Rome. Spartacus was of the the Thracian nationality. He joined the Roman army when he was young. When he tried to leave the army, he was caught and sold into slavery. He was then forced to be a gladiator. A gladiator was a man trained to fight wild animals and other gladiators in an arena. In 73 BC seventy gladiators with Spartacus as their leader, escaped the gladiator school. They fled to Mount Vesuvius near the city of Pompeii gathering slaves and weapons. Rome sent an army of 3,000 men led by Claudius Glaber. Spartacus surprised the…

    • 252 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    When reading about the Roman gladiator games as well as the chariot races and theater events, it can be quite difficult to truly envision what it was like for the participants and the spectators of such events. The participants in such activities were overall viewed as low-class citizens. Gladiators, charioteers and actors in the theater all “had little more status than slaves.” The participants of the games were meant to entertain the spectators, and nothing else. Besides the fact that the participants were seen as low class, they also faced very brutal conditions in the games. The gladiators and charioteers were susceptible to violent, gory deaths. For gladiators, often times their throats were cut and the knives eventually made their way to the gladiator’s hearts. Another possible outcome for gladiators, was being ripped to pieces by various animals. Whether their death came by combat with another gladiator or by animal, it was nothing short of gruesome. This gruesomeness though, was enjoyed by many. Chariot…

    • 1517 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gladiator Movie Analysis

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages

    By currently taking this History & Philosophy of Sports class, this film “Gladiator” establishes the whole scenery during the time period of ancient Rome. In the film, it introduced Gladiator battles. These Gladiator battles reflected as entertainment to society, as well as, being a survival setting between life and death. Not only they would compete for survival, but they would compete to become the best. By this time, Commodus, is the new Roman emperor and he fears that Maximus could use his heroic ability to dethrone him and become emperor himself. Maximus would use his fame and popularity as a gladiator to invoke further damage to Commodus' insecure dominance of the devoted Roman people, hoping to influence them to restore their lost values and overcome the corruption that…

    • 506 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A gladiator was a trained warrior who fought bloody battles to entertain the ancient romans. According to tradition, gladiators were introduced to Rome in 264 B.C., when Decimus Junius Brutus had three pairs of gladiators fight during his father's funeral. The games soon became very popular soon after. The gladiatorial games could be compared to that of a present day circus. Gladiators were usually prisoners of wars, prisoners who committed serious crimes, or slaves. The Romans built many structures and amphitheaters such as the Colosseum. The Colosseum could seat up to fifty thousand to eighty thousand, but usually had an average audience of approximately fifty thousand. The amphitheater had the most updated technology of the time. For…

    • 417 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Roman Gladiators were a unique example of competition in Roman Empire. During the period of the Roman Republic the newly recruited Gladiators were at first conscripted to the gladiator schools from slaves, criminals and prisoners of war. They had no choice, they were forced to take the role as a gladiator. The life a gladiator was strict and harsh.…

    • 60 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Hunger Games, directed by Gary Ross, is linked to the Roman gladiator combats. This is shown through the use of Panem audience experience being alluded to the audience experience of Roman upper and lower class at the gladiatorial games, comparing the Hunger Games arena to the Roman Colosseum and contrasting the tributes to the Roman gladiators.…

    • 1198 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gladiator Research Paper

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Not only did the crowds of hungry citizens but the Caesars also took part in watching the deadly dances of men, this shows just how important the gladiators…

    • 560 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The practice of armed men fighting to the death originated in Etruria, in central Italy, probably as a funeral sacrifice. The first gladiatorial exhibition in Rome was in 264BC, when three pairs of gladiators fought as part of a funeral celebration. By 174BC, at a 3-day spectacle, 37 pairs participated. Julius Caesar's large-scale exhibitions (300 pairs on one occasion) prompted the Roman Senate to limit the number of contestants. The largest contest of gladiators was given by the emperor Trajan as part of a victory celebration in AD107 and included 5000 pairs of fighters. The emperor Domitian in AD90 presented combats between women and between dwarfs. Mostly males, gladiators were slaves, condemned criminals, prisoners of war, and sometimes Christians. Forced to become swordsmen, they were trained in schools called ludi, and special measures were taken to discipline them and prevent them from committing suicide. One gladiator, Spartacus, avenged his captivity by escaping and leading an insurrection that terrorized southern Italy from 73 to 71BC. A successful gladiator received great acclaim; he was praised by poets, his portrait appeared on gems and vases, and patrician ladies pampered him. A gladiator who survived many combats might be relieved from further obligation. Occasionally, freedmen and Roman citizens entered the arena, as did the insane Emperor…

    • 637 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    11). For the Roman populous, blood offerings were an intrinsic aspect of funeral gatherings, a fact acknowledged by sociologist Keith Hopkins, who states that they acted as a, “reconciliation for the deceased with the living.” Expanding on from this idea the text ‘Gladiator – Rome’s Bloody Spectacle’ explores the concept that, in the hope to placate the deceased with human blood, the Romans sacrificed prisoners of war and slaves, and decided to, “add pleasure through Gladiatorial fighting” (Nossov 2009, p. 12). Oft Cited historian, Konstantin Nossov suggests that, by the end of the Third Century B.C, Rome controlled the “entire Mediterranean along…

    • 1023 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie’s plotline still loosely follows the series of events that actually took place but has changed quite a lot of the facts. Gladiator warps the facts here because Marcus Aurelius supposedly was murdered by Commodus on the eve of this victory but Aurelius in fact passed away before going out to claim another land. Marcus did conquer many tribes and lands as emperor but did not in fact have a legendary general named “Maximus Decimus Meridius”. The events that actually took place in our historical timeline involve Marcus Aurelius passing away but not at the hand of his son Commodus. The official story states that Aurelius died from plague but some suspect that he was in fact murdered by Commodus. According to historical sources, Commodus was in fact a man of ill worth but Aurelius did give Commodus succession to the…

    • 708 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Roman Gladiators

    • 397 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Rome started in 753 B.C. and ended in 476 A.D. Rome is most likely the reason why the United States is like today. Trade was vital to Rome and the city of Rome itself has tremendous environmental advantages. They had Gladiators, horse racing and theater. Rome’s government was the most helpful.…

    • 397 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Modern Gladiators

    • 3975 Words
    • 16 Pages

    Football is an inherently flawed sport. It calls upon men to sacrifice their bodies and minds by using their heads as battering rams over and over again. In his Offensive Play, a 2009 article in the New Yorker, Malcolm Gladwell explains “much of the attention in the football world, in the past few years, has been on concussions—on diagnosing, managing, and preventing them—and on figuring out how many concussions a player can have before he should call it quits. But a football player’s real issue isn’t simply with repetitive concussive trauma. It is, as the concussion specialist Robert Cantu argues, with repetitive subconcussive trauma. It’s not just the handful of big hits that matter. It’s lots of little hits, too (Gladwell).” There is no extricating the thousands of little hits from football.…

    • 3975 Words
    • 16 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the Roman Empire they had gladiator fights. And those brave warriors fought for their lives. The people cheered in the crowd watching this brutal battle. Tens of people came into the Colosseum at a time, and only one of those people came out. Chariot races were almost as brutal. On the Circus Maximus charioteers tried to stay on their four horses. With 180 degree turns it was not easy. How bad and brutal all of this was it was still their Entertainment…

    • 266 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay On Gladiators

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Gladiators were put up against each other to fights to the death. The winning gladiator waited for a sign from the crowd on whether to kill or not to kill the other gladiator; if the gladiator put up a good fight then his life just might be spared (“Gladiators, Chariots, and the Roman Games”.) All Gladiators swore a solemn oath, “I will endure to be burned, to be bound, to be beaten, and to be killed by the sword” (McManus, “Gladiator Games”.)…

    • 558 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “What a slave of about 200 A.D. had to do in order to save himself from constant cuffs and stripes is here set forth somewhat humorously, but with a serious undercurrent of grim truth.” 6 “There was no high motive for a slave to behave himself, simply a fear of cruel punishment if he did not”6 “There might be a hope of ultimate freedom, but that depended entirely on the caprice of the master.”6 During that time there was no true hope that slavery would end or that these slaves would ever receive any type of civil rights under the Roman Empire. It was there choice to choose their own destiny and the only way to grant freedom was escape. For instance Spartacus fighting had led him to his death but he was very successful many times throughout their journey. “Grown confident in their numbers, and puffed up with their success, would give no obedience to him, but went about and ravaged Italy; so that now the senate was not only moved at the indignity and baseness , both of the enemy and of the insurrection, but, looking upon it as a matter of alarm and of dangerous consequences sent out both consoles to it, as to a great and difficult enterprise.”7 Spartacus played an important role to the slaves, they looked up to him as a leader and as a leader that gave them hope. He was smart with tragedies and created a difference in the end for the Roman Empire.Escaping seemed to be better for Spartacus and his troops then to be treated like anything less than human. His courage is what made others look up to him as a hero and a true freedom…

    • 942 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics