Eight Interesting Facts about the Colosseum
The Colosseum (Coliseum) is one of the great Roman’s architectures that survive for 2,000 years, even after several natural disaster attacks. It becomes a monument of inhuman games tradition for people’s satisfaction, but as well as a monument of how impressive the Roman engineering was. After my recent visit to Rome (Italy) last week, I noted there were eight interesting facts about the Colosseum.
1. Flavian amphitheater was the initial name of the Colosseum.
2. It took ten years to finish the amphitheater, using slaves as manpower. It was initiated by Emperor Vespasian in AD 70 but his son and successor, Titus who finished the amphitheater. Titus opened the amphitheater by holding 100 days of games.
3. The Colosseum was estimated to be able to hold up to 80,000 spectacors.
4. There were four levels of seating. The first level called as the Podium, and for important Romans like the priests, the government officials and senators. The second level called as Maenianum Primum and for important Romans as well but non senatorial like the knights. The third level aimed for regular Roman people – usually called as the plebeians, and divided into the wealthy and the poor. The fourth level aimed for women. Slaves and ex gladiators were not allowed to enter Colosseum.
5. Gladiators who played in Colosseum were generally wars prisoners, criminals condemned to death but later due to popularity of the games, the free men also participated in the games and they were called as auctorati.
6. There were several type of games played in Colosseum, and that includes the naval battle and wild animals hunts. The games in Colosseum aimed to distract the working class and the elites from important political issue and changes in the Roman Empire.
If you are curious about the naval battle picture looked like, please check this blog post.
7. Wild animal hunts usually started at the beginning of the spectacle. The wild animals were varied from giraffe, lions, crocodiles and even dogs. They were captured in Africa and Mediterranean regions. According to some articles, during the 100 days of games by Titus, the Romans used 9,000 wild animals. Additionally, during Julius Caesar’s ruling, when the Romans did not have enough meat to fed the wild animals, Julius Caesar gave order to threw the inmates to the starving wild animals. Some inmates preferred to commit suicide rather than being eaten alive by the wild animals.
8. The Colosseum has survived from fires and natural disasters included earthquakes. In year 2012, the Colosseum was slanting lower on one side down to 40 cm. An Italian shoe billionaire, Diego Della Valle, put 25 millions Euro to restore and save the Colosseum. After all, there was a popular quote by Venerable Bede: “While the Coliseum stands, Rome shall stand; when the Coliseum falls, Rome shall fall; when Rome falls, the world shall fall.” Keep the Colosseum stands still, and the world shall not fall.

Group of “selfie stick” sellers in front of Colosseum
Tips when visiting Colosseum
Colosseum is a very popular monument in Rome with (roughly) 10,000 visitors per day. It is advised to buy the ticket online and bring the printed ticket to avoid long queue. The Colosseum ticket also include an entrance to the Roman Forum.
It took me less than 15 minutes to enter Colosseum with printed online tickets.

Have been there *ya iyalah namanya juga tinggal di Roma* 🙂
Oh iya..aduh, maafkan aku yang tidak sempat berjumpa. Aku pergi ke Roma menemani Ibuku. Beliau punya misi rohani dalam kunjungan ke Roma. Jadi jadwal-nya termasuk misa di gereja. Sulit sekali aku atur jadwal luang karena mesti mastiin Ibuku gak kesasar. Semoga lain waktu pas aku mampir ke Roma lagi aku bisa ketemuan ya 🙂
gak apa kok, liat foto2 mbak indah yg cantik2 aja udah senang, fotonya seindah namanya 🙂
Terimakasih banyak 🙂 duh jadi malu 🙂 moga-moga bisa ketemuan yaa..kalau ke Rotterdam juga bisa mampir loh 🙂
Wow, it’s so old ya Mbak :)).
What a magnificent structure. Its history and its appearance are awesome! And the pictures displayed here really show the building’s magnificent aura, Mbak :hehe. But by the way, if I may ask, what camera did you use to capture the beauty of this place, Mbak?
Terimakasih banyak ya Gara. Aku bales pakai bahasa Indonesia aja ya, capek juga pakai bhs Inggris mulu…hahahaha…itu aku pakai kamera mirrorless-nya Olympus dengan lensa special – lensanya Fisheye lens 🙂 ada kok daftar peralatan fotografi-nya aku: https://indahs.com/about/photo-gear/
Siap Mbak!
Impressive shots Indah 🙂
Thank you so much Sreejith!
Beautiful shots of the Colesseum. Love how you use your fisheye lens, magnificent work. Those fights in the past sound very exciting to watch, but at the same time very brutal too. I really hope to visit this historic place one day and will take your advice of buying tickets online. Less time spent queuing, more time spent exploring the monument. I think I could spend a whole day there 😀
Thank you so much Mabel. I hope you will visit Rome someday. It is a city full of historical places and unique. The food and drinks were delicious too. I guess these make the city so popular for travelers and tourists 🙂
This made me miss Rome! How long were you there for Indah? It’s such a beautiful city isn’t it! Having ruins in the middle of the city is such a surreal experience! I love Rome 🙂
Rome is fascinating, isn’t it? I was there only for four days, not long enough to visit all places, unfortunately. Rome has too many interesting places to visit! Did you stay long in Rome?
Yes, I fell in love with Rome! 😀 Me too, I was there for only 4 days and I did spent almost a day in the Vatican City. So that’s left about 3 days in Rome – definitely not enough!
Same here! I thought the list of places to visit was endless 😀
this is such a great post about the Colosseum Indah – I knew tidbits but you filled in some gaps for me – and thanks for the tip about buying tickets in advance – it is the same way when you visit certain places in NYC (like statue of liberty) buying ahead of time can save HOURS!
Many thanks Yvette! Great tips on NYC! I will certainly buy tickets online. I love planning travel trips, trying to avoid the tourist queuing lines especially. It is a waste of holiday time!!
I agree – and traveling is hard enough so anything we can do to lighten the load can really help. And again, your photos here are so nice
wide and beautiful 🙂
Thank you so much Joshi!