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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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Gladiators<br />

Although Rome deserves credit for developing much of what we know as<br />

Western society, many aspects of Roman life were brutal and harsh, even<br />

by contemporary standards. <strong>The</strong> great gladiatorial games, where participants,<br />

the gladiators (Latin; “sword men”), fought to the death in hand-tohand<br />

combat, are the primary example of this brutality.<br />

<strong>The</strong> origin of the games (called circuses in Rome) is unknown. <strong>The</strong><br />

Romans themselves believed that the concept of fighting to the death for<br />

spectators came from the Etruscans, the rulers of Italy before the Romans,<br />

who would allow slaves to fight for their freedom once their master died.<br />

<strong>The</strong> first recorded instance of gladiatorial games was in the third century<br />

B.C. By A.D. 100, however, the great Colosseum had been constructed, and<br />

the well-known principle of “bread and circuses” to keep the masses happy<br />

was a core feature of Roman life. Many public holidays featured gladiatorial<br />

contests. At such events, sometimes thousands of gladiators were<br />

paired against one another in grisly duels.<br />

Unlike the combat arts of the Roman military, which emphasized<br />

group fighting and mass combat, gladiator training emphasized individual<br />

combat and fighting for a spectator audience. This focus did not diminish<br />

the fighting skills of the gladiators, but did give them a different experience<br />

from that of a soldier. <strong>The</strong> gladiators were excellent fighters, and during<br />

some of the revolts against the Romans, most notably the Spartacan Revolt<br />

of 70 B.C., they proved themselves well against the famous Roman legions.<br />

Unlike the Roman soldier, who might never see combat, a gladiator was<br />

sure of either killing or being killed in the arena.<br />

Gladiators were usually slaves, sentenced to the arena by their masters,<br />

although there are many instances of Roman citizens and even noblemen<br />

pursuing this dangerous profession. <strong>The</strong>re was even female gladiatorial<br />

combat until it was outlawed around A.D. 200. Once a person was<br />

forced into (or chose) the gladiator’s life, training began in a professional<br />

school. It is estimated that a gladiator training school existed, at one point,<br />

G<br />

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