English 3lp17 1trim2 PDF
English 3lp17 1trim2 PDF
English 3lp17 1trim2 PDF
A gladiator was a professional fighter who specialised with particular weapons and fought before the
public in large purpose-built arenas throughout the Roman Empire from 105 BCE to 404 CE (official contests).
As fights were usually to the death, gladiators had a short life expectancy and so, although it was in some
respects a glamorous profession, the majority of fighters were slaves, former slaves or condemned prisoners.
Without doubt, gladiator spectacles were one of the most watched forms of popular entertainment in
the Roman world.
Roman gladiator games were an opportunity for Emperors and rich aristocrats to display their wealth
to the populace, to commemorate military victories, mark visits from important officials, celebrate birthdays or
simply to distract the populace from the political and economic problems of the day. The appeal to the public of
the games was as bloody entertainment and the fascination which came from contests which were literally a
matter of life and death. Hugely popular events were held in massive arenas throughout the Empire, with
the Colosseum (or Flavian Amphitheatre) the biggest of them all. Thirty, forty or even fifty thousand
spectators from all sections of Roman society flocked to be entertained by gory spectacles where wild and
exotic animals were hunted, prisoners were executed, religious martyrs were thrown to the lions and the stars
of the show, symbols of the Roman virtues of honour and courage, the gladiators, employed all their martial
skills in a kill or be killed contest. It is a popular misconception that gladiators saluted their emperor at the
beginning of each show with the line: (Hail emperor, we who are about to die salute you!).
Gladiators most often came from a slave or criminal background but also many prisoners of war were
forced to perform in the arenas. There were also cases of bankrupt aristocrats forced to earn a living by the
sword. It is also of note that until their outlaw in 200 CE, women were permitted to fight as gladiators. There
were special gladiator schools set up throughout the Empire, Rome itself had three such barracks and Capua
was particularly famous for the gladiators produced there. Conditions in the schools were similar to any other
prison, small cells and shackles for all, however, the food was better and trainees received the best possible
medical attention; they were, after all, an expensive investment.
B-Text exploration:
Ex1.Find in the text words or phrases that are opposites in meaning to:
a-certainty(§1) b-domestic(§2) c-volunteered(§3)
Ex5.Fill in each gap with one word from the list:(sacrifice – religious – predecessors –gladiatorial )
3.Written expression:
Topic1: Using the following notes,write a composition of 120 to 150 words to describe the daily
life of the people in ancient Rome.
–Houses:built,clay-brick,stone,more than one room,a courtyard.
–Food:varied,vegetables,fruits,fish,rarely eat meat..only rich people.
-Clothes: home-made,decorated & well-designed.-Entertainment: dance,music, gladiatorial games……
Topic2: Do you think that the study of ancient civilizations is so important?? Justify……