INTRODUCTION
The art exhibition ‘All Capitals’ by Swiss designer Julia Born, held from 21 June to 9 October 2022 at Rome's Museo d'Arte Contemporanea (MACRO), offers modern viewers a unique perspective on the graphic panorama of the city of Rome, a creative reflection on and immersion in the conflicting and intersecting messages that today's wanderers consume across the streets of the capital.Footnote 1 By collecting written fragments which span a range of different eras, styles and techniques, Born transforms the exhibition walls into a visual snapshot of the interplay between monumental words and extemporary texts composed in the here and now, problematizing the tension between official letters squarely sculpted out of marble and ephemeral, un-authorized graffiti, between public and private forms of communication which characterize the writing culture of today as much as that of ancient Rome. Official inscriptions engraved on Trajan's Column, dedications on the Arch of Titus and the Roman Pantheon, as well as monumental epitaphs and names of contemporary brands, intermingle with gladiatorial graffiti, footprints, scribbles, money tags and the so-called ‘scratchiti’, messages incised on the windows of public transport. Born investigates the value of capital letters and power relations, the bodily experience of viewers embedded in a written landscape, shedding new light on the complex interactions between public spaces and authority, the monumental and the temporary, the official and the un-authorized. Ultimately, as Born perceptively suggests, words incised on stone and extemporary forms of writing share the paradoxical idea of surviving the ephemeral present and become, to an extent, ‘monumental’.
Born's exhibition of fragments composed in capital letters and her take on the contradictory concept of monumentality constitute a timely premise for this article. In particular, the presence of a gladiatorial graffito alongside official inscriptions in this artistic exhibition deserves special attention. Carved on the marble slabs of the steps of the Flavian Amphitheatre's cavea by spectators of the arena shows, the graffito depicts two gladiators, a retiarius, armed with a trident and a weighted net, and a secutor, armed with a shield and a rounded helmet, engaging in a combat. Born's strategic inclusion of a gladiatorial graffito in her exhibition closely responds to my own agenda in this article. Despite its ephemeral form and extemporary nature, the gladiatorial graffito has left an indelible mark on the marble surfaces of the Flavian Amphitheatre, by capturing the momentary spectacle in a visual snapshot, which functions as a mnemonic aid for a public of vicarious viewers. Graffiti writing, as I will argue, embeds a paradoxical idea of monumentality and enacts crucial commemorative functions which are traditionally associated with monumental inscriptions (Cooley, Reference Cooley2012: 119). While graffiti are hastily composed as ephemeral divertissements, they eternally memorialize the arena shows, offering a unique perspective on imperial munera and on the ways in which spectators experienced gladiatorial combats.
The Flavian Amphitheatre constitutes a privileged site from which to investigate gladiatorial graffiti in context. Exceptional examples of gladiatorial graffiti have been found scratched onto the marble surfaces of the Flavian Amphitheatre. Prompted by the arena shows, spectators depicted in the here-and-now the highlights of gladiatorial spectacles, either as endorsements of their favourites, or as impromptu memorials. The graffiti disseminated across the Flavian Amphitheatre raise crucial questions about the culture of graffiti-writing, urging us to investigate the extent to which the monumental context in which they survive challenges scholarly perceptions of graffiti as ‘ephemeral, informal and unsophisticated’ (Baird and Taylor, Reference Baird and Taylor2011: 5).Footnote 2 Via a comparison with contemporary graffiti-writing culture, often targeted as expression of political transgression and violence, twentieth-century scholarship has interpreted ancient graffiti as ‘evidence of the less educated’, a subversive expression from lower strata of society.Footnote 3 The archaeological context in which graffiti have been found, however, demonstrates that graffiti writing transcends educational, class and geographical boundaries (Benefiel, Reference Benefiel, Baird and Taylor2011).
Recent scholarship has set solid foundations for investigating the role and nature of gladiatorial graffiti. Inscriptions relating to the amphitheatre and gladiators have been collected in the volumes entitled Epigrafia anfiteatrale dell'occidente romano (EAOR). Studies on the epigraphic representations of gladiators from the Graeco-Roman world have significantly advanced our understanding of the social position, juridical status and constructed identities of gladiators and have offered new details on the organization of munera.Footnote 4 Yet, despite the renewed focus on gladiatorial graffiti, this epigraphic category still seeks critical reappraisal. Orlandi (2004–EAOR VI) has recently included gladiatorial graffiti in her landmark work about the Amphitheatre's epigraphic record (EAOR VI), examining textual aspects and chronology, while Langner (Reference Langner2001) has offered a well-documented catalogue of ancient graffiti drawings, including a substantial variety of gladiatorial graffiti from across the empire. Yet, a systematic analysis of gladiatorial graffiti within the monumental feat of the Amphitheatre, their interaction with the epigraphic environment and their specificity qua visual and material media with which to capture the arena performances represent a major desideratum, which will add a missing chapter in the flourishing field of studies on gladiators.
In this paper I offer a new interpretation of the gladiatorial graffiti currently preserved in the Flavian Amphitheatre from a contextual perspective. I shall investigate the official epigraphic record of the Amphitheatre and explore the ways in which monumental inscriptions and graffiti intermingle in the same writing space, articulating dissonant epigraphic voices and performing different kinds of authority (Section 1). Discussion will then move on to the examination of gladiatorial graffiti from Pompeii, which will support the hypothesis that the culture of graffiti-writing was active in the Flavian Amphitheatre as early as its inauguration and will reveal key strategies of memorialization and techniques of temporality which graffiti implement as a medium. Analysis of Pompeian epigraphic evidence will shed light on the prominent question of visibility and iconography and invite reflection on ancient perceptions of and engagement with the act of inscribing graffiti (Section 2). Finally I will investigate gladiatorial graffiti preserved in the Amphitheatre, arguing for their distinctiveness as a writing form with which to perpetuate the memory of the arena spectacles in comparison with and contrast to further visual and material media, which miniaturize amphitheatrical games (gladiatorial munera) into exchangeable munera, souvenirs to be taken away (Section 3).
1. ARTICULATING THE OFFICIAL VOICE OF THE FLAVIAN AMPHITHEATRE – THE ORIGINAL DEDICATION AND THE LOCA INSCRIPTIONS
The tension displayed by graffiti between, on the one hand, impermanent nature and, on the other, a concern with inscriptional durability is problematized when considered in unison with the dissonant epigraphic voices of the Flavian Amphitheatre: that of official inscriptions, which respond to political and ideological needs; and that of graffiti, which survive as impromptu memories of the imperial games. The numerous official inscriptions of the Flavian Amphitheatre offer insights into the building phases of the monument, its political significance and the organization of munera. Examination of the dedication of the monument and of the inscriptions engraved on the risers of the cavea steps relating to the loca is central to understanding the monumental context in which gladiatorial graffiti survive.
Upon his return from the campaign in Judaea in AD 71, Vespasian greeted a Rome ravaged by the Great Fire of AD 64, the civil conflicts of the years AD 68–69 and marked by Nero's architectural exaggerations.Footnote 5 Rome's new monuments, which acted as visual reminders of the Flavian recovery of the empire from its momentary collapse, were imbued with a spirit of renewal.Footnote 6 Inaugurated by Titus in AD 80, the Amphitheatre stood at the heart of Rome as a message of imperial euergetism and was carefully presented as the material outcome of the Flavian victory in Judaea.
The original dedicatory inscription of the Amphitheatre, which Alföldy (Reference Alföldy1995) restored, responds to the Flavian propagandistic manoeuvre:Footnote 7
I[mp(erator)] T(itus) Caes(ar) Vespasi[anus Aug(ustus)]
amphitheatru[m novum (?)]
[ex] manubIs [fieri iussit (?)].
CIL VI 40454bFootnote 8
The emperor Titus Caesar Vespasianus Augustus ordered the new amphitheatre to be constructed out of the spoils of war.Footnote 9
The epigraphic text identifies the spoils of the Judean war, brought to Rome in a triumphal procession in AD 71, as the financial resource for the monument (Orlandi, Reference Orlandi and La Regina2001: 100–1).Footnote 10 The dedication in bronze letters has been reconstructed from the peg-holes still visible on the surface of a fifth-century inscription engraved on a marble block which commemorates the restoration of the Amphitheatre by the urban praefect Rufius Caecina Felix Lampadius during the reign of Theodosius II and Valentinian III.Footnote 11 As Coleman (Reference Coleman2006: lxvi) argues, the inscription constitutes a ‘double palimpsest’.Footnote 12 The dedication of the monument was first ascribed to Vespasian. It was later credited to Titus through the insertion of the praenomen T(itus) between Vespasian's official titles, Imperator and Caesar. Placed physically and ideologically within the urban fabric of Rome, the Amphitheatre signified the political superimposition of the Flavians on Nero's Golden House and fostered (the desired) connections with the Julio-Claudian dynasty. A profound sense of impermanence pervades the Amphitheatre, a (monumental) meeting place between the dying and the living.Footnote 13 By preserving the memory of gladiatorial fights through pictorial and verbal graffiti, the Amphitheatre becomes itself a gigantic metaphorical tombstone, a monumentum for the lives of gladiators and venatores.
The Amphitheatre hosts a uniquely rich and heterogeneous epigraphic record. A set of inscriptions from the cavea, the so-called ‘loca inscriptions’, demonstrates that social hierarchies and power relations were enforced in the monumental space of the arena (Gunderson Reference Gunderson1996: 133). These texts, engraved on the risers of steps, allot seating spaces to different segments of society according to the lex Iulia theatralis (Suet., Aug. 44) and the lex Roscia theatralis revived under Domitian, including delegations from outside Rome.Footnote 14 The inscriptions are currently located in the reconstructed sector of the cavea near the entrance by the Ludus Magnus, and date to between the first and fifth centuries AD. An entry in the Acta fratrum Arvalium, a fragmentary marble inscription dated to AD 80 (EAOR VI 167–71 cat. 13 = CIL VI 2059 = 32363 = ILS 5049), is the oldest attestation that traditional repartition of the cavea into ima, media and summa synthetized and responded to rigid hierarchical and societal divisions (Scheid, Reference Scheid1998: 125 nr. 48; Pesando, Reference Pesando and Regina2001: 183). As appears clear from line 15 (loca adsignata in amphitheatro), the inscription specifies the sector (cuneus and tabulatio), number of steps and the allotted space along each step reserved to the collegium across the seating orders of the cavea (maeniana).
Extant inscriptions are heavily fragmentary. They feature collective names in the dative and more rarely in genitive or nominative case of specific groups of spectators, followed by the measurement in feet and subdivisions of a foot (uncia, semuncia, sicilicus) of the width of seating spaces. Equites, praetextati, paedagogi, clientes, Gaditanes are all represented in the epigraphic record of the Amphitheatre. Urbs and orbs conflate in the gigantic structure of the Amphitheatre, in a paradoxical remake of Ovid's hyperbolic nempe ab utroque mari iuvenes, ab utroque puellae / venere, atque ingens orbis in Vrbe fuit, ‘Why, youths and maidens came from either sea: the mighty world was in our city’ (Ars am. 1.173–4).Footnote 15 By representing an ecumenic and heterogeneous audience, the ‘loca’ inscriptions blur the boundaries between Amphitheatre and Rome and advertise the idea of the imperial capital as a microcosm of the empire. As Hardie (Reference Hardie2012: 322) puts it, ‘the circular form of the Colosseum already evokes the orbs over which the emperor rules’. The arena offers, therefore, an ideological space where identities, the relationship between observing and being observed, spectacle and spectator are constantly put into play.Footnote 16
The inscription EAOR VI 174–5 cat. 14.2 = CIL VI 32098b = ILS 5654b = EDR172964 reads Equiti[bus] Rom[anis], proving that the lex Roscia theatralis (67 BC, L. Roscius Otho), according to which the first fourteen rows were assigned to the equites (the knights), was observed as early as the inauguration of the Amphitheatre. The inscription EAOR VI 176 cat. 14.5 = CIL VI 32098e = ILS 5654e = EDR172968, found engraved on step number five of the cavea, reads [Hos]pitib[us publicis] and confirms that such seating blocks were reserved for delegates who entertained a privileged relationship with Rome (hospitium publicum) (Darwall-Smith, Reference Darwall-Smith1996: 88–9). Similarly, clientes coming from colonies and municipia under the jurisdiction of Rome and the Gaditani (inhabitants of Gades, the modern Cádiz), who had their own official representatives in Rome, were entitled to occupy specific sectors of the cavea, as further loca inscriptions demonstrate (EAOR VI 176–8 cat. 14.6 = CIL VI 32098f = ILS 5654f = EDR173065, step 6; EAOR VI 179 cat. 14.11 = CIL VI 320981-m = EDR100772; EDR100682, steps 11–12).Footnote 17 With its representation of such an international audience, this exceptional epigraphic testimony supports Gunderson's remark on amphitheatrical politics (Reference Gunderson1996: 133): ‘Rome was a small point at the centre of a vast empire. This physical relationship was inverted, however, on the day of the show: an orderly construct of Roman society ringed its own empire, contained, controlled and choreographed.’
Although palaeographical analysis suggests that the majority of loca inscriptions were inscribed by individual spectators, rather than members of the central administration, they express the authoritative voice of the Amphitheatre's official epigraphic testimony and share their writing space with graffiti.Footnote 18 The cavea steps become a site for negotiating a performative tension between authorized and subjective forms of writing, official inscriptions versus instantaneous graffiti. Unlike monumental inscriptions, graffiti articulate the spectators’ interaction with and commemoration of the amphitheatrical shows and gain meaning from the physical context in which they are inscribed. Yet, despite the competing formal characteristics and conflicting messages, graffiti's embeddedness in the space of the Amphitheatre, their association with marble and the related contradictions clustering around physical monuments, predicated upon intended permanence and yet, instability, vulnerability and material decay, make them to an extent no less monumental than official inscriptions.Footnote 19 Before turning to the examination of gladiatorial graffiti within the Amphitheatre, evidence from nearby Pompeii, where the culture of gladiatorial graffiti is attested between the first century BC and the first century AD, merits closer consideration. It makes us appreciative of the formal characteristics, distribution patterns and strategies of commemoration fulfilled by gladiatorial graffiti and illustrates the important critical and hermeneutical consequences of investigating graffiti writing contextually.
2. STRATEGIES OF MEMORIALIZATION AND TECHNIQUES OF TEMPORALITY – THE GLADIATORIAL GRAFFITI FROM POMPEII
Pompeii preserves for us a valuable epigraphic testimony for grasping the socio-political status of gladiators and the organization of munera in the ancient world. Graffiti ascribed to gladiators or spontaneously scratched by supporters, libelli gladiatorii, and announcements of spectacles painted on the walls of the city (edicta munerum) testify to the widespread excitement engendered by gladiatorial shows. As Kellum (Reference Kellum, Bergmann and Kondoleon1999: 291) notes, ‘the gladiatorial combats in the amphitheatre, the circus games, the theatrical performances were not spectacles that existed apart from and in opposition to the quotidian world of streets, but rather ritualised extensions of a spectacular culture that pervaded all aspects of Roman urban life’.
Gladiatorial graffiti express the audience's heterogeneous perspectives on, engagement with, and singular commemoration of gladiatorial shows. Simultaneously, they put on display the complicated relationship between the act of inscribing graffiti, strategies of commemoration and advertisement of amphitheatrical performances and techniques of temporality.Footnote 20 Ranging from depictions of standing or victorious gladiators to complex scenes of combats, from single elements of armour and equipment to acclamations for successful combatants, gladiatorial graffiti record a ubiquitous and common leisure culture across the social scale (Keegan, Reference Keegan2014).
With their large number of graffiti scratched by spectators who attended the performances, the walls of the corridor leading to the Large Theatre (VIII.vii.20) and the plaster of the external wall of the Small Theatre (VIII.vii.19) constitute a close precedent for the culture of graffiti-writing within the Flavian Amphitheatre, unveiling parallel mechanics of memorializing the spectacles and comparable ways of preserving the arena performances.Footnote 21 Walkways and entranceways of private houses in Pompeii furnished visitors with a space in which to wait before being received. Clusters of numerical, textual and figural graffiti suggest that inscribing graffiti on vestibules was a customary activity for visitors as much as inhabitants who gathered in that area (Benefiel, Reference Benefiel, Baird and Taylor2011). Similarly, the corridor between the theatres, where spectators engaged socially before taking part in the shows, was imagined as an ideal setting in which to scrawl graffiti. The pictorial repertoire on the masonry includes an exceptional bulk of graffiti.
Amongst the total of 156 graffiti recorded in the corridor, 84 are figural and the remaining are verbal. More rarely, graffiti combine images with words. Depictions of single gladiators, gladiatorial duels, theatrical scenes, ships, profiles of human heads, circles drawn with a compass, animals, but also brief verbal messages, greetings, erotic messages and names populate this setting. The corridor yields a total of six gladiatorial graffiti, which are almost exclusively pictorial.Footnote 22 These graffiti drawings, of which three represent single gladiators, two depict gladiatorial matches and one features a helmet, display key iconographic elements which characterize the graffiti preserved in the Flavian Amphitheatre. Furthermore, this epigraphic testimony reveals that spectators used to deploy venues of spectacle to commemorate or support gladiators.
The graffito AGP-EDR167858 (Fig. 1), scratched along the northern wall of the corridor between the theatres, for instance, displays two gladiators, both armed with helmets and shields, on the verge of assaulting each other.Footnote 23 Brandishing a short sword, the figure on the left can be identified with a murmillo, while the figure on the right, holding a long spear, represents a Samnite. Analysis of the gladiatorial graffiti present in the corridor shows that draughtsmen shared a common iconographic repertoire and visual language which enabled them to represent different combat situations (Benefiel, Reference Benefiel and Ragazzoli2018: 107). Although this representation is quite stereotypical and is scrawled quickly, the rendition of helmets, weapons and gladiatorial equipment enables viewers to identify easily the gladiators’ armour category.Footnote 24 Unlike the majority of gladiatorial graffiti from the Flavian Amphitheatre, which associate texts with images, these graffiti are not labelled, suggesting that viewers were not committed to reproducing the outcomes of a particular combat. Rather, as Benefiel (Reference Benefiel and Ragazzoli2018: 107) argues, ‘sometimes figures which are depicted without labels may signal a general interest in the games’.
While graffitied gladiatorial fights may be prompted by and recall actual spectacles, demonstrating the commemorative functions performed by graffiti, images of standing or victorious gladiators respond to a more generic iconography, testifying to spectators’ enthusiasm for gladiatorial munera and their desire to support amphitheatrical heroes. The graffito AGP-EDR167857 (= CIL IV 2451) (Fig. 2) captures well the spectators’ celebration of their favourites. With its height of 15 centimetres, it features a murmillo armed with a crested helmet, brandishing a sword with his right hand in combat posture, and defending himself with a long shield.Footnote 25 Although sketched rapidly and despite its modest dimensions, the graffito carefully depicts the gladiatorial equipment, including loincloth and ribbons, the crest on the helmet and the fringes on the armour (Niccolini, Reference Niccolini1986, vol. IV: 18, Table vi.6). A series of names followed by numerals (AGP-EDR167898), which critics have interpreted as a list of gladiators accompanied by the number of their victories, appears in the immediate surroundings of the gladiator.Footnote 26 Although these two graffiti are not the product of the same hand, it can be inferred that anonymous authors were receptive to the content and physical environs of graffiti. The juxtaposition of the gladiatorial drawing with the list of gladiators, followed by the number of victories, as is customary in libelli gladiatorii, does not seem to be coincidental. It enables us to infer that spectators conceived of theatres and amphitheatres as appropriate spaces in which to leave their own intimate mark and recollection of the games. In contrast to the graffiti of the Flavian Amphitheatre, as we shall see in the section to follow, Pompeian examples in the Theatre corridor are generally smaller in size, and, therefore, less prominently visible. Nonetheless, as I have discussed, the rendering of gladiatorial equipment is particularly accurate, exhibiting the viewers’ genuine interest in and knowledge of different fighting categories.
The strategies of temporality implemented by the graffiti examined so far, which is predicated upon excited speed and temporal suspension, extemporaneity and durability, constitute a fitting antecedent to the graffiti of the Flavian Amphitheatre. The short timespan between the spectacles is occupied by the swift composition of gladiatorial graffiti, which, by acting as proxies for memory, recall a single transient moment in the arena. The pace of the performance is simultaneously accelerated and decelerated. Graffiti condense the transient combat into a visual snapshot. Yet, they serve a narrative function which enables viewers to re-enact – potentially, an indefinite number of times – the spectacle. By crystallizing the climactic instant of the combat into visual and verbal forms, graffiti generate a temporal suspension and achieve a durability for the show. Within the graffito the time of the performance is both compressed and stretched. On the one hand, the temporal progression of the combat is synthetized into a single gladiatorial drawing. On the other, the crystallization of gladiators in combat posture, in the act of assaulting the opponent, renders the acme of the show infinitely repeatable and, to an extent, eternal. In the section to follow, I shall offer detailed analysis of extant graffiti in the Flavian Amphitheatre, examining the ways in which this medium articulates time and spurs viewers to remember gladiatorial performances.
3. THE GLADIATORIAL GRAFFITI OF THE FLAVIAN AMPHITHEATRE – LONG-LIVED MEMORIALS OF IMPERIAL MUNERA
Dated to between the fourth and fifth centuries AD, numerous gladiatorial graffiti have been rediscovered in the Flavian Amphitheatre (Sabbatini Tumolesi, Reference Sabbatini Tumolesi and Reggiani1988: 91–100). The great fire of AD 217 and many rebuilding phases and progressive spoliation of the monument in later centuries may account for the late dating of the verbal and pictorial graffiti preserved across the Amphitheatre's seating orders (Darwall-Smith, Reference Darwall-Smith1996: 76). The aforementioned epigraphic record from Pompeii, along with the inscriptions of loca dating to the first and second centuries AD, enables us to infer safely that a graffiti culture was active as early as the opening of the Amphitheatre.Footnote 27 Spectators responded to the wondrous realities of the arena by capturing climactic moments of the spectacles unfolding before their own eyes in verbal and pictorial graffiti. Tabulae lusoriae, checkboards, board games of various kinds and graffiti depicting gladiatorial engagements provide evidence for the ways in which the audience experienced the arena games. Scribbling graffiti across the cavea was perceived of as an entertaining activity, a means by which to fend off boredom and express subjective feelings and excitement for the arena shows.Footnote 28
Part of this epigraphic evidence is currently on display in the second order of the Amphitheatre, revealing the width and types of graffiti that spectators scratched with sharp objects on the surfaces of the monument. The Flavian Amphitheatre has yielded a total of sixteen graffiti.Footnote 29 Ten of the surviving graffiti can be ascribed to the gladiatorial world with certainty. While a small percentage is figural, the majority intermeshes depictions of gladiators with explanatory texts, revealing a fluid relationship between words and images that is quintessential to graffiti culture.Footnote 30 In what follows, I shall focus attention on the verbal and visual language of such spontaneous forms of writing. After a glance at three pictorial graffiti, I shall examine graffiti combining representations of single gladiators with short inscriptions, before turning to graffiti of gladiatorial combats in comparison with and opposition to three-dimensional material renditions of gladiators from across the Roman world. Comparative reading of graffiti along with further material and visual media will emphasize the double-edged nature of graffiti as simultaneously material as much as textual artefacts and stimulate new perspectives on the different techniques of perpetuating the memory of gladiatorial performances.
Pictorial graffiti reveal the spectators’ excitement for gladiatorial games. Fans and spectators could represent in the here and now well-known gladiators and capture the particularity of a moment. A retiarius (Inv. 375836) (Fig. 3), a light-armed gladiator with trident and net, high-knee greaves and bandages on his arm and ankles (manica), is graffitied on a marble slab on the steps of the cavea (La Regina, Reference La Regina2001: 342 fig. 41; Langner, Reference Langner2001: Taf. 43 nr 838). Unlike many gladiatorial graffiti from Pompeii, which represent gladiators facing left, on the verge of assaulting opponents (e.g., AGP-EDR167857), the retiarius is depicted in the typical posture of successful fighters, facing the viewer (Langner, Reference Langner2001: 48). He triumphally wields his weapons, which are carefully portrayed. Although no name labels the fighter, it is possible to assume that spectators wished to recall the memory of an extraordinary performance within the Amphitheatre, paying their own tribute to and showing their excitement for this anonymous victorious gladiator.Footnote 31
Two complex fighting scenes are carved on one of the Amphitheatre's marble seats (Inv. 375838) (Fig. 4).Footnote 32 The upper register of the slab represents a gladiatorial spectacle, reproducing one of the most popular visual schemes across the existing evidence: a retiarius, armed with trident and net, engages in a fight with a secutor, armed with a rectangular shield and a helmet. Both fighters, each depicted as a single figure in combat posture, charge against each other in full armour. The absence of the inscriptions and the perfect visual parallelism between the two gladiators prevent us from knowing the engagement's outcome. As discussed in Section 2, the fast timespan of the gladiatorial combat is captured within the temporal fixity of the gladiatorial drawing. Yet, the decisive instant of the fight's acme expands across time. With its highly symbolic language, the graffito activates a narrative, by spurring the viewers to partake in absentia in the spectacle.
The lower register of the marble slab displays a hunting scene: a dog, which chases a gazelle, and an enraged bull are captured in their eternal mad dash. The resolution of the venatio is left to the viewer's imagination. Both graffiti are the product of what seems to be an experienced hand. Whether the two scenes are to be interpreted as belonging to the same arena performance remains open to speculation. The present pictorial graffito elucidates the complex ways in which this epigraphic medium negotiates time and temporality and reveals a paradoxical monumentalization of deeds in the arena. In these iconographic renditions of the amphitheatrical marvels, as the Pompeian testimony has already revealed, the time of shows is simultaneously crystallized and expanded, shrunk down and magnified, becoming a support for memory as much as imagination.
Yet, the best evidence of gladiatorial graffiti preserved for us in the Amphitheatre intermeshes texts with images. At the juncture between visual and verbal artefacts, graffiti which label gladiators with their name and number of victories differ qualitatively from pictorial graffiti. The explanatory texts display a memorializing function which rescues the figures from a status of anonymity and oblivion (Cooley, Reference Cooley2012: 111). Three of the surviving graffiti depict standing gladiators accompanied by the name of the combatant and augural expressions, such as feliciter.Footnote 33 The fragment belonging to a marble slab of one of the Amphitheatre's banisters (EAOR VI 523–4 cat. 19 = EDR189591, fourth–fifth century AD), currently exhibited in the second order of the Amphitheatre, records the cognomen Delicatus (Ḍelicatus [- - - ?], Fig. 5; Fig. 6). The inscription stands above the head of a figure without a helmet, whom critics have alternatively identified as a retiarius or bestiarius.Footnote 34 Since the upper left margin of the marble slab is fragmentary, the first capital letter of the cognomen is difficult to read and has been interpreted variously. Langner identifies the letter ‘h’ as the first capital and restores the gladiator's name to Hicatus.Footnote 35 By reading the initial capital as ‘d’, Orlandi convincingly reconstructs the gladiator's cognomen as Delicatus.Footnote 36 Autoptic analysis of the graffito enabled me to agree with Orlandi's reading. Comparative evidence from Pompeii, such as CIL IV 5279 and CIL IV 5282 (tu mortu(u)s es / tu nugas es), and from the Amphitheatre, such as EAOR VI 526–7 cat. 22 = CIL VI 32260a = EDR171489 (Iocus Quintus) and EAOR VI 528-529 cat. 26 = Inv. 375842 (Antonini nugas), does not rule out the possibility of the name Delicatus to be read as an invective directed against an unfavoured opponent.Footnote 37 The letters, roughly sketched on the stone, imply that the draughtsman rapidly produced the graffito in the hic et nunc, as his own immediate reaction to a spectacular gladiatorial fight. The specimen reveals the sense of speed and excitement which characterized the performances of the Amphitheatre. Graffiti authors responded to and interacted with the visual environment and thrilling atmosphere of the arena, by scrawling quips and sketches of their favourite moments of the games. Writing on stone, even in desultory ways, becomes a means for spectators to offer their own intimate perspectives on the fast succession of the shows, and, simultaneously, a form of entertainment as well as a social activity.
The bust of a gladiator wearing the galerus (EAOR VI 523 cat. 18 = EDR189590) features in the right section of the upper register of a marble step, which is currently situated in one of the storerooms in the first order of the Amphitheatre (Fig. 7).Footnote 38 The posture of the gladiator is stereotypical. The capital letters are carved unevenly across two distinct lines, as follows:
Ḅlas=
[t]us.
The name Blastus, which appears above the fighter's bust on the left, can be restored from the remaining visible letters (EAOR VI 523 cat. 18). Graffiti from the Theatre corridor in Pompeii, where drawings of gladiators survive in conspicuous numbers (e.g., AGP-EDR167857), and across the Amphitheatre, prompt us to argue that the present example either commemorates the heroic deeds of a gladiator or wishes Blastus well for future successful fights.Footnote 39 Unlike Pompeian graffiti, nevertheless, which are rarely labelled, the presence of the gladiator's name suggests the spectators’ familiarity with, and explicit support for, this arena hero. Furthermore, given its large dimensions (25×38×51 centimetres), the graffito was particularly visible. By combining textual and visual elements, it becomes a token for memory or an augural amulet, spurring viewers to remember, re-enact and imagine the gladiators’ spectacular arena performances.
In a similar fashion, the crowd's acclamations for their favourites find several testimonies in extant graffiti. Crowns, palms, laurels, exclamations such as feliciter or augural monograms, often accompany representations of victorious gladiators. The following example (EAOR VI 528 cat. 25 = CIL VI 32261c = EDR189593, fourth–fifth century AD), on display in the second order of the Amphitheatre, highlights the question of the visibility of gladiatorial graffiti within the arena and invites further considerations on the act of producing graffiti (Fig. 8; Fig. 9).Footnote 40 A successful standing retiarius is depicted on a slab of ‘cipollino’ marble, a fragment of a banister. The gladiator wears a subligaculum and high-knee greaves, holds a palm leaf in his right hand and a spear in his left hand. Despite the slab's fragmentary status, the letters T, E, R are still visible, allowing for its restoration as the enthusiastic acclamation Feliciter for the combat's successful outcome ([- - - ? felici]ter). The accurate representation, the lines neatly incised on stone, along with the location of the graffito and the height of the gladiator (approximately 113 centimetres), support the hypothesis that these graffiti were highly visible, so difficult to ignore, and testify to a flourishing graffiti-writing culture in the Amphitheatre.Footnote 41 Furthermore, the location of the graffito on a banister, a very visible architectural part of the monument, leads us to infer that scrawling graffiti was neither a hidden nor a prohibited activity. Rather, it was a collective and collaborative effort, far removed from modern conceptualizations of graffiti as politically transgressive, as acts of defacement.
Investigation of Pompeian evidence proves that gladiatorial graffiti often appear in central spaces of private residences, where the act of inscribing is clearly visible and conceived of as an authorized pastime (Benefiel, Reference Benefiel, Baird and Taylor2011; Lohmann, Reference Lohmann2018). As one among a broad range of possible examples, a scene found in the courtyard of the House of the Ceii (I.vi.15) in Pompeii epitomizes the spatial impact of gladiatorial graffiti on their material surroundings. The south wall of the ‘porticus r’ of the House of the Ceii hosts two pairs of fighting gladiators, each labelled with their own names and the number of their victories. The location of gladiatorial graffiti at a considerable height and above a bird which is central to the wall decoration, gestures towards the possibility that graffiti, sketched by anonymous draughtsmen (be they visitors or the house owners) wandering in the courtyard, were the product of a deliberate choice and were designed to become a complementary decorative motif.Footnote 42 ‘The act of inscribing graffiti’, Benefiel (Reference Benefiel, Baird and Taylor2011: 36) concludes, constitutes ‘an addition to domestic space that did not require an immediate redecoration’. Similarly, it is safe to argue that graffiti such as the present one were considered to be integral to the monumental feat of the Amphitheatre. Gladiatorial graffiti and official written messages alike construct the heterogeneous epigraphic record of the Flavian Amphitheatre. Intermingled with loca inscriptions along the steps of the Amphitheatre, graffiti, with their own prominence, association with marble and physical proximity to official inscriptions, lay claim to a form of authority and monumental status. The materiality of the medium of writing, namely marble, and the existence within an ‘epigraphic environment’, make these graffiti assert permanence and durability, transcending their occasional nature and subjectivity (Woolf, Reference Woolf1996: 28).
The spectators’ excitement for the games, the permeable relationship between verbal and pictorial elements, are both encapsulated in a further graffito, scratched on a fragmentary slab found in the Amphitheatre (EAOR VI 524 cat. 20 = CIL VI 32261b = EDR189592, fourth–fifth century AD) (Fig. 10; Fig. 11).Footnote 43 The present specimen demonstrates a collapse between iconographic and textual elements that is typical of graffiti, where ‘the visual and the verbal could be turned into one another before the very viewer's eye’ (Kellum, Reference Kellum, Bergmann and Kondoleon1999: 291). The graffito features two inscriptions:
a) [- - -] ((palma et laurus?))
b) Hono=
rus.
On the left, it is possible to read the augural monogram PE, which appears to be inscribed in a tabula ansata and reads as either p(alma) e(t) l(aurus) or p(alma) e(t) f(eliciter).Footnote 44 This monogram, which results from the combination of the letters P, E/F and L, achieved wide currency in the late-antique iconography of gladiators as a formulaic acclamation to celebrate past victories or wish well for future successful engagements.Footnote 45 On the right, the name Honorus, possibly a wrong transcription of the otherwise attested cognomen Honorius, is engraved within the upper of the two laurel crowns, each accompanied by palm leaves.Footnote 46 The augural monogram, crowns and palm leaves iconographically synthetize the gladiatorial victory. The material objects of successful fights morph into highly visual symbols, with letters transforming into pictorial elements and vice versa.
Scenes of gladiatorial combats are numerous in the extant epigraphic evidence. Currently on display in the second order of the amphitheatre, the graffito EAOR VI 526–7 cat. 22 = CIL VI 32260a = EDR171489 depicts two gladiators (Fig. 12; Fig. 13).Footnote 47 The inscription a) iocus / Quintus labels the figure on the left, which appears rotated by 90 degrees, while inscription b) Vindicomus / ((theta nigrum)) identifies the gladiator depicted on the lower level of the marble slab.Footnote 48 Part of the galerus and the trident allow us to identify Vindicomus as a retiarius. The Latin word iocus is engraved within the bust of the gladiator Quintus on the upper section of the stone and works as a caption. As Orlandi (2004: EAOR VI, 526–7) argues, the epithet iocus can be interpreted as an invective to the detriment of the fighter, namely ‘object of derision’. Similarly, Vindicomus is the gladiator's nomen artis, a compound of the adjective vindex and the name comes/comis, namely ‘avenging comrade’ (Sabbatini Tumolesi Reference Sabbatini Tumolesi and Reggiani1988: 95). The theta nigrum symbolizes the outcome of the show and the death of the gladiator, as is customary in epitaphic rhetoric, wittily counterbalancing the promising fighter's nomen artis. Ironically, the extempore graffito provides contemporary viewers with a permanent record of the combat, exemplifying the contradictory temporal mechanisms and memorializing functions which define graffiti writing. Despite its occasional nature and its formal characteristics which differ from monumental inscriptions, the graffito's deployment of epitaphic conventions and its embeddedness in the marmoreal architecture of the Amphitheatre morph it into an epitaphic memorial that perpetuates the memory of the deceased gladiator across centuries. As the theta nigrum demonstrates, the graffito performs crucial commemorative mechanics which are germane to epitaphs.Footnote 49 Graffiti, therefore, gain meaning from and, in turn, offer new purpose to the spatial environments and material contexts in which they survive.
Scratched onto the arena's seats and currently on display in the second order of the Amphitheatre, the graffito EAOR VI 524–6 cat. 21 = CIL VI 32260b = EDR171488, dating to the fourth–fifth century AD, is particularly striking for its visual symmetries and the relationship between iconographic and textual elements (Fig. 14; Fig. 15) (Langner, Reference Langner2001: nos 943–4). Two standing gladiators, both awarded with the rudis, are surrounded by symbols of acclamations and victory (crowns, palms and laurels) and accompanied by three inscriptions:Footnote 50
a) [- - -] + li mor=
[- - -]us
R. 1: [I]unior
b) Limeni
nika
PE
c) Quintus
vicit.
The fragmentary status of the stone does not allow for a reconstruction of inscription a) which should label the figure on the left. What seems readable is -iutor. As Orlandi (2004: EAOR VI, 525) observes, comparison with examples of wishes for defeat found within the Amphitheatre suggests, however, that inscription a) can read as an invective against the adversary.Footnote 51
Inscription b) offers an example of exhortation for the victory of Limenius, whose name is combined with the Latin transliteration of the Greek verb nika and the monogram PE. The material objects of gladiatorial reward, such as palms and laurels, visually conflate in a highly symbolic letter, while each gladiator is accompanied by a convex object adorned with small circlets that can be identified with a crown and a rudis.Footnote 52
Inscription c) has been interpreted as the addition of a different hand and has been read as Quintus vicit. Autoptic examination of the graffito, however, reveals instead the reading Quintus fecit, which might signal the graffitist's signature.Footnote 53 Two additional testimonies from the Amphitheatre corroborate this hypothesis. The graffitied inscriptions Lupercus fecit (EAOR VI 529–30 cat. 28 = EDR131530) and the cognomen Quintus scratched upon a tabula lusoria (EAOR VI 531 cat. 30 = CIL VI 32257 = EDR171490) demonstrate that graffiti authors were inclined to claim authorship over their own creations, leaving an indelible mark of their presence in and perspectives on the performances taking place within the Amphitheatre qua spectators.Footnote 54
As this paper has argued, gladiatorial graffiti perform an unconventional memorialization of gladiatorial fights. Although graffiti are not physical monuments stricto sensu, they show a concern for their own monumentality. Engraved on marble, unlike the majority of existing graffiti from Pompeii and Rome, juxtaposed to official inscriptions within an epigraphic environment, graffiti assert intended permanence and achieved durability. The famous Pompeian graffito CIL IV 8899 well exemplifies the collision of graffito, epitaph and monument and their functions:
Hospes, adhuc tumuli ne meias, ossa prec[antur]
Nam, si vis (h)uic gratior esse, caca.
Urticae monumenta vides, discede, cacator.
Non est hic tutum culu(m) aperire tibi.
Traveller, the bones beg you, do not urinate against this tomb, for if you want to be dearer to this man, defecate. You look at the monument of Urtica, leave, defecator. It is not safe for you to open your ass here (Milnor, Reference Milnor2014: 65).
Urtica, speaking from the dead and mimicking the epitaphic discede morator, urges the cacator to leave her monument. As Milnor (Reference Milnor2014: 66–8) argues, the joke resides in the fact that this is not a funerary monument, but rather a monumentum lato sensu, a graffito chiselled on a stretch of wall which is (mis)appropriating epitaphic authority. Similarly, gladiators are immortalized not only in stone epitaphs in elegiac couplets, the metrical form of epitaphic commemoration par excellence, but are also preserved in comparable ways in (marmoreal) graffiti.
The performative tension between (achieved) monumentality and reification, aggrandisement and downsizing of the arena spectacles sheds light on the complex meanings enclosed in the word munus. Imperial munera, which are recorded in the graffiti scribbled across the marble surfaces of the Amphitheatre, morph into all forms of every-day minutiae. Gladiatorial statuettes offered as gifts for the Saturnalia, small-scale gladiators accompanied by Priapus, apotropaic tintinnabula, representations of gladiatorial engagements on oil lamps and glass vases not only testify to the fascination exerted by gladiatorial games, which permeated every aspect of ancient life and nurtured the imagination, sexual imaginary and religious beliefs, but also signify a paradoxical reification of the arena games into three-dimensional, ‘take-away’ gifts (munera).Footnote 55 Five clay statuettes from the Tomb of the Blue Glass Vase outside the Nucerian Gate and the House of Marcus Lucretius (IX.iii.5) in Pompeii represent oplomachi in combat posture, dressed with subligaculum and brandishing a gladium, captured in the climactic moment of assaulting their opponents.Footnote 56 Numerous figurines of this kind have been found in private houses and tombstones in Pompeii and ancient Italy, suggesting that they were exchanged during the Saturnalia as ex voto, cheapened versions of imperial munera.
Besides decorative and commemorative purposes, a number of gladiatorial representations are associated with apotropaic functions (Kellum, Reference Kellum, Bergmann and Kondoleon1999: 287; Jacobelli, Reference Jacobelli2003: 99–105). The case of a bronze statue of a gladiator, depicted as fighting with his phallus which takes the shape of a panther, is exemplary.Footnote 57 Large-scale apotropaic devices were generally placed at the entrance of private residences and shops or at crossroads (compita, VIII.v.37; IX.iii.13; IX.xii.7) to ward off malignant influences and wish well to inhabitants and visitors. The association of gladiators with the cult of the lares and Priapus, and their presence on tombstones, in private houses and in shops emphasize the protective force which was ascribed to these fighters and their heroic deeds.Footnote 58 Material objects show the enormous popularity, pervasiveness and attraction of gladiatorial games and the role of gladiators as symbols of bravery and heroism. On the one hand, gladiators’ endeavours are permanently captured in graffiti, small-scale, unconventional ‘monuments’ carved out of marble. On the other, they continue to exist in all forms of art objects, gifts for exchange, reified and portable versions of imperial munera which have endured over time.
CONCLUSIONS
As I have argued, the analysis of gladiatorial graffiti in the epigraphic environment of the Flavian Amphitheatre disrupts critical assumptions about graffiti as impermanent media and cheap versions of their monumental counterparts. Instead, graffiti disclose techniques of temporality and strategies of memorialization of the arena games which are closely comparable to official inscriptions. By playing on visual symmetries and iconographical elements converting into verbal elements, graffiti recall the memory of the fleeting show, stimulating the audience to mentally relive the experience. As I have discussed, the Amphitheatre appears as a writing environment, in which spontaneous and ephemeral wall-writings have become integral to its marmoreal architecture. Within the monument, the authority of official inscriptions recording the building phases and architecture of the amphitheatre and extempore graffiti all share the same representational space, a venue that physically reinforced social hierarchies. Graffiti are densely material and yet, scratched onto marble surfaces along with loca inscriptions, are endowed with a longer-lasting legacy. Although the extant graffiti evidence within the Amphitheatre is scarce and mostly dates to the fourth–fifth century AD, it is not hard to imagine how the games would have stimulated similar responses in previous centuries and to interpret graffiti as an immediate reaction to the wondrous realities of the arena. Responding to the visual environment of the arena, graffiti-writers offer a wicked twist to monumentality, preserving spectacles via a medium which is by nature occasional and ‘impermanent’, yet which becomes marmoreal and monumental. As I have suggested, many contradictions cluster around the concept of munus: gladiatorial munera, which progressively move away from their origin as ludi funebres, nonetheless retain the association between spectacle and death, prefiguring the gory sacrifices of the lives of gladiators in the arena. Yet imperial munera are reified into exchangeable gifts with apotropaic and protective purposes, demonstrating the ubiquitousness of gladiators across all aspects of ancient culture. By capturing the particularities of a moment in time and stimulating the viewer's recollection of the amphitheatrical marvels, graffiti, which show a flexible relation between the visual and the verbal, act as proxies for memory, textual as much as visual objects capable of rescuing the otherwise forgettable protagonists of the arena from oblivion.