Colosseum

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Introduction

Colosseum

Colosseum

© Steve-Kay

The Colosseum, Colosseo or Flavvian Amphitheatre in Latin, can represent the ultimate height of The Roman Empire and the lowest point of The Roman Empire. When construction was completed on the Colosseum in 80 AD it was the largest amphitheatre built in all of Rome and could house over fifty thousand people! The engineering skill and technology of the day was pushed to its limits by its construction and design. The stadium was even designed to flooded in order to provide for mock navel battles. To top it off the structure has a certain elegance and grace that most large stadiums do not generally have and an example is that Doric, Ionic and Corinthian columns are used in the decoration of the exterior of this amphitheatre.

At the same time the Colosseum was built primarily to entertain the masses in brutal and barbaric games. Some were beast on beast combat to the death. Others were people fighting animals to the death, while the most popular was the human on human combat. Most of the gladiators were slaves, often captured in war, others volunteers that were trained in special schools to fight each other to the death. Due to the high value of a gladiator most of the time the battles was not actually to the death although death battles were the most popular, and when a gladiator died the crowds would go wild. Other activities at the Colosseum were reenactment of famous battles, executions and classical plays.

The Colosseum provided entertainment to the citizens of Rome for over 500 years with the last recorded games happening in the 6th century. During medieval times the Colosseum was used for several different things. Large portions were converted into a cemetery and the lower levels on the street were converted into shops, workshops and housing for the natives of Rome. Many areas were still up for rent by the public as late as the 12th century. Around 1200 the Frangipani family turned the Colosseum into their own private castle.

In 1349 a large earthquake did massive damage to the Colosseum resulting in the collapse of the outer south side of the structure. Most of the stone was reused to build new palaces, churches and hospitals around Rome while the Colosseum was largely left to decay. After the earthquake a religious order moved into the Colosseum and remained there till the early 19th century.

R Colosseum 1

R Colosseum 1

© fishitaly


For centuries people had been scavenging for copper lantern holder, marble facing or what ever they could find to reuse in other structures, this scavenging stripped most of the interior of the Colosseum. Pope Benedict XIV made the Colosseum a holy site in 1749 and outlawed the use of the Colosseum as a quarry. He declared this because he believed that the Colosseum had been sanctified by the blood of Christian martyrs who had been executed there during the Roman Empire. The historical event of Christians being executed in the Colosseum is starting to be challenged by present day scholars. Biblical and historical sources say Christians or Christian individuals, were executed in the stadium or the amphitheatre never directly using the name of the Colosseum.

Today the Colosseum has become one of Rome’s major tourist attractions with over a million visitors every year. Between 1993 and 2000 a major restoration program was done costing €20.6 million. The Colosseum is a truly an amazing site and should be the number one site visited by any person in Rome or Italy.

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Opening Hours

  • Regular Days: last Sunday of October-February 15 8:30am-4:30pm, February 16-March 15 8:30am-5:00pm, March 16-last Sunday of March 8:30am-5:30pm, last Sunday of March-August 31 8:30am-7:15pm, September 1-September 30 8:30am-7:00pm, 1 October to last Sunday of October 8:30am-6:30pm.
  • Good Friday: 8:30am to 2:00pm
  • June 2: 1:30pm to 7:45pm
  • Closed: January 1 and December 25

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Cost

Colosseum at night

Colosseum at night

© foltz.45

There are many ways to get a ticket for the Colosseum. Remember if you buy your ticket online at Ticket Clic or use a multi day pass, like the Archaeologia Card, you do not have to wait in the ticket line. Therefore if you have a pass or bought your ticket online go to straight to the entrance line and do not wait in the long ticket buying line. Another way to by pass the line, is to buy a combination ticket at the Roman Forum/Palatine Hill. The nearest entrance is to the right, about 100 metres, behing the Arch of Constantine.

At the entrance to the Colosseum there are usually men dressed as gladiators and will charge you to take a photo with them. Remember to bargain a price before taking the photo as some Asian tourists have been rumored to pay up to a €100 for a photo. Most of the time the gladiators will settle at around €1 to €5.

  • Admission €12; €7 EU citizens ages 18-25, free for visitors under 18. You can purchase tickets in advance online from the official ticket office, which costs an additional €2 booking fee. The tickets include access to the Colosseum, the Roman Forum and Palatine Hill, and are valid for 2 days. Free entry on the first Sunday of the month (no reservation possible).
  • Archaeologia Card: Accepted
  • Roma Pass: Accepted

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Getting There

Colosseo Stop is the metro stop right in front of the Colosseum. The stop is on the A line (red). Be aware that you can only change from line B to A, and vice versa at Termini Station. Several buslines have a stop at the Colosseum.

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Eat

It best to walk a few blocks away from the Colosseum to buy food in order to avoid very high prices.

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Drink

The vending trucks are very overpriced charging €3 for a coke. Bring your own drinks.

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Sleep

There is no need to sleep near the Colosseum due to its central location. For a list of Hotels and Hostels check the section Sleep in the guide for the city of Rome.

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This is version 12. Last edited at 9:21 on Aug 10, 17 by Utrecht. 7 articles link to this page.

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