
The Colosseum in Rome |
1.15: Commodus gladiator
The Senate removed this statue of
Commodus after his death and replaced it with a statue of Freedom. [192] Now
the emperor, casting aside all restraint, took part in the public
shows, promising to kill with his own hands wild animals of all kinds
and to fight in gladiatorial combat against the bravest of the youths.
When this news became known, people hastened to Rome from all over
Italy and from the neighboring provinces to
see what they had neither seen nor even heard of before. Special
mention was made of the skill of his hands and the fact that he never
missed when hurling javelins or shooting arrows.
His instructors were
the most skillful
of the Parthian bowmen and the most accurate of the Moroccan javelin
men, but he surpassed them all in marksmanship. When the days for the
show arrived, the amphitheater [1] was completely filled. A terrace
encircling the arena had been constructed for Commodus, enabling him to
avoid risking his life by fighting the animals at close quarters;
rather, by hurling his javelins down from a safe place, he offered a
display of skill rather than of courage.
Deer, roebuck, and
horned animals of all kinds, except bulls, he struck down, running with
them in pursuit, anticipating their dashes, and killing them with
deadly blows. Lions, leopards, and other animals of the nobler sort he
killed from above, running around on his terrace. And on no occasion
did anyone see a second javelin used, nor any wound except the death
wound.
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A gladiators fighting against ostrichs (Villa Dar Buc Ammera, Libya) |
For at the very
moment the animal started up, it received the blow on its forehead or
in its heart, and it bore no other wound, nor did the javelin pierce
any other part of its body: the beast was wounded and killed in the
same instant. Animals were collected for him from all over the world.
Then we saw in the flesh animals that we had previously marveled at in
paintings.
From India and
Ethiopia, from lands to the north and to the south, any animals
hitherto unknown he displayed to the Romans and then dispatched them.
On one occasion he shot arrows with crescent-shaped heads at Moroccan
ostrichs, birds that move with great speed, both because of their
swiftness afoot and the sail-like nature of their wings. He cut off
their heads at the very top of the neck; so, after their heads had been
severed by the edge of the arrow, they continued to run around as if
they had not been injured.
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Commodus as Hercules
(Musei Capitolini, Roma)
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Once when a leopard, with a lightning dash, seized a condemned criminal, he
thwarted the leopard with his javelin as it was about to close its
jaws; he killed the beast and rescued the man, the point of the javelin
anticipating the points of the leopard's teeth. Again, when a hundred
lions appeared in one group as if from beneath the earth, he killed the
entire hundred with exactly one hundred javelins, and all the bodies
lay stretched out in a straight line for some distance; they could thus
be counted with no difficulty, and no one saw a single extra javelin.
As far as these
activities are concerned, however, even if his conduct was hardly
becoming for an emperor, he did win the approval of the mob for his
courage and his marksmanship. But when he came into the amphitheater
naked, took up arms, and fought as a gladiator, the people saw a
disgraceful spectacle, a nobly born emperor of the Romans, whose
fathers and forebears had won many victories, not taking the field
against barbarians or opponents worthy of the Romans, but disgracing
his high position by degrading
and disgusting exhibitions.
In
his gladiatorial combats, he defeated his opponents with ease, and he
did no more than wound them, since they all submitted to him, but only
because they knew he was the emperor, not because he was truly a
gladiator. At last he became so demented that he was unwilling to live
in the imperial palace, but wished to change his residence to the
gladiatorial barracks. He gave orders that he was no longer to be
called Hercules, but by the name
of a famous gladiator then dead.
He removed the head of a huge Colossus which the Romans worship and which bears the likeness of the Sun,
replacing it with his own head, and inscribed on the base not the usual
imperial and family titles; instead of "Germanicus" he wrote:
"Conqueror of a Thousand Gladiators."
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