Overview of colosseum

So, you are coming to Rome and of course you want to visit the Colosseum. The Colosseum is the ultimate icon of the power and might of the ancient Roman Empire. For that very reason it is the MOST visited site in Rome and Italy with 7.5 million visitors in 2019. There are a number of different options for visiting the colosseum; there is the standard ticket, arena entrance and the underground – it can be confusing – so what is the difference in these parts of the colosseum and are they worth it? All tickets to the Colosseum include access to the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill – the city centre and Beverly hills of ancient Rome.

Colosseum

The Colosseum as we call it today was the largest amphitheater (double theatre) in the Roman empire. It hosted some of the most exciting and lavish games including animal hunts, public executions turned into spectacles and the famous gladiator combat we know from the film Gladiator. Spectators once crowded into this stadium for an entire day of events at the expense of the emperor. The Colosseum is the largest and most complicated building the Romans achieved and is still a wonder of architecture, engineering and ingenuity. Our stadiums today are not unlike the Colosseum, we could even call it a blue print for our modern buildings; there were tickets, numbered entrances, seats graded according to social status (like our private boxes and cheap seats today). There were plenty of services and amenities: a retractable awning or canopy for the sun and rain, toilets, food stalls, betting shops and souvenir stands and like today before the games there would have been posters on display listing who was performing.

Highlights

Looking over the arena from behind the cross (ground level)

Ludus Magnus from above (second level)

Exhibition – machine reconstructions, statues, graffiti, food items and animal skulls

Colosseum Model – reconstruction in wood

Viewing platforms above the two-long axis with views over the arena

Viewpoint over Arch of Constantine and Temple of Venus and Roma

History

The Colosseum was conceived by the Emperor Vespasian who followed after Nero, he wanted to make his mark and so constructed the first permanent amphitheatre in Rome. The ‘Flavian Amphitheatre’ as it was known was built on the site of the lake of the golden house of Nero. It took 10 years to build from lake to stadium, two years to drain the lake and dig foundations and a further 8 to mostly complete the superstructure. Vespasian died in 79 A.D. and his son Titus completed and inaugurated the building in 80 A.D. with 100 days of games. Over the next three hundred years the building was added to, damaged and repaired and then in the 6th century abandoned. Rome could no longer afford the lavish games.

What to expect

Today the Colosseum is a major tourist attraction and can be very busy. It is advisable to book your tickets ahead of time or take a guided tour.The building has been ravaged by time, only part of the original outer ring still survives but it is enough to get a sense of the enormity and complexity of the building. Two levels are accessible with the standard ticket, you can explore the first level (ground floor) on the most complete side and the second level allows you to look over onto the arena and into the underground from above. Here you can appreciate how large this stadium was as the remaining walls tower above on the north side of the building. From the outside ring of the second floor you can look over at the Ludus Magnus (gladiator barracks). On the inside is the permanent exhibition space which a number of interesting items: reconstructions of the machinery used in the underground, graffiti of gladiators left by spectators and artefacts found in the sewers of the colosseum remains of food (chicken bones, clam shells, oyster shells, fruit and vegetable seeds and husks of nuts) and souvenir oil lamps with different animals and gladiators on. You shouldn’t miss the huge wooden replica of the colosseum made in the 1800s which shows the building complete with seating, the internal corridors and stairwells. From the platform by the shop (the destroyed side you will have a great view of the Arch of Constantine and the Temple of Venus and Roma.

Interesting facts

The Colosseum is the largest amphitheatre ever built in the Roman empire. It is 48.5m high, 188m long and 156m wide.

Over 100,000 cubic metres of travertine were used in the Colosseum, mostly for the outside and the arches. This equates to 300 carts a day for 6 years driving to Tivoli and back (33km).

Over 300 tonnes of iron were removed from the colosseum leaving it looking look a Swiss cheese.

It is estimated around 250,000 people worked on the Colosseum. They were certainly not all slaves but skilled tradesmen like engineers, architects, carpenters, scaffolders, stonemasons and sculptors, brick layers, brick makers and basket weavers to name just a few.

The Colosseum metro built in 1937 curves around the colosseum. It runs along the south-west end of the colosseum between the Colosseum and the Arch of Constantine. Sometimes you can feel the vibrations underground.

In 2018 Beyoncé and Jay-Z were denied permission to film a music video inside the colosseum for their ‘On the Run’ tour.

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