3D Image
Terracotta plaque depicting gladiators with some traces of paint. Second half of the 1st century BCE - 1st century CE, Cumae, in a tomb Musée du Cinquantenaire (Brussels, Belgium). Made with CapturingReality.
This real little terracotta picture represents two gladiators at the end of the fight. The victor, on the left, wearing a tunic and wearing a high crest and double-crested helmet, brandishes triumphantly his shield and that of his adversary. The defeated (Thracian?), Right, disarmed and left arm behind his back, turns to the audience, his thumb finger raised, to ask for his pardon. If the fight had been appreciated, the crowd shouted “stans missus!” (that he leaves standing), otherwise, it ordered the conqueror to slaughter the supplicant (“jugula!”) by inverting the thumb (pollice verso).
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Cite This Work
APA Style
Marchal, G. (2018, October 15). Terracotta Gladiators Plaque. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/image3d/324/terracotta-gladiators-plaque/
Chicago Style
Marchal, Geoffrey. "Terracotta Gladiators Plaque." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified October 15, 2018. https://www.worldhistory.org/image3d/324/terracotta-gladiators-plaque/.
MLA Style
Marchal, Geoffrey. "Terracotta Gladiators Plaque." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 15 Oct 2018. Web. 14 Nov 2024.