Gladiator

views updated May 08 2018

GLADIATOR

GLADIATOR , professional fighter in Roman public games. Little information is available about the gladiatorial contests held in the Middle East under Roman imperial rule. The performances were arranged by the authorities of cities with a predominantly Hellenistic culture; in Judea, for instance, they were sponsored by *Herod in *Caesarea. The Jewish sources make mention of Jews in this connection, and it was common knowledge that gladiators were bought for "large sums" (tj, Git. 4:9, 46a–b). Rabbinical opinion was in general opposed to providing a ransom for a man who had sold himself as a gladiator, although an opinion is expressed that he should be ransomed since his life was in danger (Git. 46b–47a). "It is the accepted custom that a gladiator does not make a will," since he might be killed at any moment (Gen. R. 49:1, ed. by Theodor and Albeck, 1200). Some Jewish gladiators deliberately infringed the dietary laws to annoy their coreligionists and lived in Roman style (Git., loc. cit.). Others, however, were obliged to sell themselves out of financial stress "in order to exist" (tj, loc. cit.). The expression "meal for gladiators" denoted an early repast consisting of an enriched diet (Pes. 12b; Shab. 10a). It is related of the amora Resh Lakish (see *Simeon b. Lakish) that he sold himself as a gladiator but that by combining courage with guile he managed to outwit the promoters of the contest and kill them all (Git. 47a). The rabbinical attitude toward the gladiatorial contests is clear from their association in the Midrash with brothels, gaming, and sorcery (Tanh. B., Gen. 24).

bibliography:

Schuerer, Gesch, 2 (19074), 60f.; Krauss, Tal Arch, 3 (1912), 114f.; S. Lieberman, Greek in Jewish Palestine (1942), 148f.

[Haim Hillel Ben-Sasson]

gladiator

views updated May 17 2018

glad·i·a·tor / ˈgladēˌātər/ • n. 1. (in ancient Rome) a man trained to fight with weapons against other men or wild animals in an arena.2. a person defending or opposing a cause; a controversialist: he chose not to be a gladiator in the presidential arena.DERIVATIVES: glad·i·a·to·ri·al / ˌgladēəˈtôrēəl/ adj.

gladiator

views updated Jun 11 2018

gladiator in ancient Rome, a man trained to fight with weapons against other men or wild animals in an arena; usually a slave or prisoner trained for the purpose. The word is Latin, and comes from gladius ‘sword’; it was used by Cicero as a term of abuse in his denunciation of Catiline.

gladiator

views updated May 29 2018

gladiator In ancient Rome, volunteer, prisoner of war, slave or condemned convict trained to fight humans or wild animals in public arenas. Gladiatorial contests were officially abolished by Constantine I in ad 325, but persisted into the 5th century.

gladiator

views updated May 21 2018

gladiator XV. — L. gladiātor, f. gladius sword; see -ATOR.
So gladiatorial XVIII. f. L. gladiātōrius.