| > The Roman empire didn't have television or powered transportation that allowed millions of people across the empire to visit the capitol for a weekend. That's where you are wrong. Roman empire was as globalized as ours today, if not more, given the means of transport of their times. > This wasn't entertainment broadcast to the entire empire, it was a single arena with a little more than 50,000 seats 2 thousands year ago. still there. a building in Miami collapsed few days ago. Built in 20th century. Maybe it isn't simply "an arena with little more than 50,000 seats" but a marvel of human history... Anyway, shows went on for days, sometimes weeks, all day long, so that anyone could attend them. So counting the seats in the Colosseum is not the right way to measure how popular the shows were. > 400,000 deaths among a city of 1,000,000 in 4 hundred years (actually the games lasted for a thousands year, but the peak period is shorter). mostly slaves brought back to Rome from countries defeated in war. I've specifically talked about police killings because police is supposed to protect people, not kill them. What will future historian think of that in your opinion? If you wanna talk about fatalities in ancient history, you should also take into account the general mortality rate. Of course in a battle arena people died, but it was probably much less dangerous to fight in the Colosseum than living in Caledonia, on the other side of the Hadrian's wall. We shouldn't argue of what we don't know. It's an exercise in futility. «the only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history» edit: to make it clearer why counting bodies is misleading: gladiators became freemen after 6 years on average, 15-20 fights in total. They earned a lot of money and were popular figures, some of them were immensely popular (think about Spartacus). As free men many of them had enough saved to become owners and trainers and earned a respected position in the society. It wasn't uncommon for a gladiator to stay on the job after becoming a free man because it was an highly rewarding activity. They knew their fate, but they decided to keep fighting anyway. Now fast forward to 2021 and think about Mike Tyson going back on the ring at the age of 54, even though it could kill him. Would you consider the people watching the match savages because they are paying to watch 2 men punching each other in the face? |