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 What Does Gladiator Mean?
 20 Dec 2006 14:23
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 Gladiator means a person or an individual who is an expert combatant or a fighter, an imprisoned, or a slave, skilled to amuse the communal by appealing in worldly combat with a different person or an untamed animal in the early Roman ground. He is a person occupied in a disagreement or discussion, especially in public. They were the expert combatant in ancient Rome who occupied in fights to the bereavement as sport.

Gladiators in the beginning were executed at Etruscan memorial service, with the intention to provide the dead man equipped followers in the next humanity. At Rome gladiator contest were passionately popular from 264 BC. By the instant of Julius Caesar, 300 pairs would clash at a particular show. By the time when Trajan came, 5,000 warriors of various classes would fight.
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by   lovikca
  20 Dec 2006 14:23
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 The most brutal sport that has ever existed in the history of the world was the fights of the gladiators in ancient Rome. They had their roots in an old custom among the Etruscan people of setting slaves to fight each other264 B.C. At first the fights were confined only to funeral ceremonies, but gradually they became the chief amusement of the Roman people and were held in huge arenas.

In the beginning, the contestants were slaves and condemned criminals. Later on, schools were formed to train the gladiators, and all kinds of citizens became gladiators, hoping to win fame and fortune. Great amphitheatres were built especially for this purpose.
The spectacle usually began with a parade of the gladiators, who often wore splendid armour of gold or silver. After the parade, there was a mock battle with wooden weapons to build up the appetite of the spectators. Then the trumpets sounded a signal, the men threw aside their harmless weapons for real ones, they separated into pairs, and the bloody battles began.

They used a variety of weapons. The gladiators fought in pairs, and when one fell wounded, it was the rule for the people in the stands to decide his fate. If they wanted to spare his life, they waved their handkerchiefs in the air. If they held their thumbs down, the victim had to be slain.

In time, the Romans grew bored with even these bloody battles and invented new spectacles. They set gladiators to battle with lions, tigers, and other wild beasts.
There were many efforts to stop these bloodthirsty spectacles, but they did not end until the year A.D. 500, when the Emperor Theodoric suppressed them.
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  27 May 2007 23:38
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