Women gladiators were seen as transgressive and titillating because they were doing 'manly' things, such as fighting in the arena, which was typically a masculine domain. This novelty was exciting to the Roman audience as it challenged traditional gender norms.
Female gladiators were not common. Evidence suggests they were often presented as a special or unusual event, rather than a regular occurrence. There are fewer records of specific female gladiators compared to male ones, and they were often mentioned in contexts where elite women participated, which was considered scandalous.
The Romans viewed women fighting as deeply unfeminine and inappropriate. Their rigid gender ideals placed martial activities firmly in the masculine sphere, and women engaging in such acts were seen as stepping outside the bounds of acceptable behavior. Elite women fighting in the arena was particularly frowned upon.
Evidence includes inscriptions, literary references, and a relief in the British Museum showing two women, Amazonia and Akila, fighting in a standard gladiator style. There are also mentions in poems and historical texts, though the evidence is sparse compared to male gladiators.
Female gladiators were often treated as a comedy act or a spectacle, rather than as serious athletes. For example, Domitian arranged fights between women and people with dwarfism, which was seen as humorous. However, there are rare instances, like the relief of Amazonia and Akila, where female gladiators were treated with some respect.
No, the Romans did not have a specific term for female gladiators. They referred to them as 'gladiators who are women' or used poetic descriptions like 'Venus fighting.' The term 'gladiatrix' was coined much later, during the medieval period.
Women were sometimes condemned to participate in death spectacles, such as being eaten by wild animals. However, they did not have roles as actors in Roman performances, as acting was reserved for men. Women primarily participated as fighters or victims in these public displays.
The ban on female gladiators, enacted by Septimius Severus, was likely due to concerns about extravagance and decadence in public games. Female gladiators were seen as a costly novelty, and their presence was considered excessive in the context of Roman entertainment.
The grave, discovered in the 1990s, contained gladiator-related artifacts, leading to debates about whether the woman was a gladiator or simply a fan of gladiators. The lack of definitive evidence, such as injuries consistent with gladiatorial combat, has made it difficult to determine her exact role.
The Romans viewed women in martial roles as deeply unfeminine and inappropriate. Their rigid gender ideals meant that women leading battles or fighting were seen as bizarre and transgressive, even if historical examples like Boudicca existed.
Hi, I'm your host, Kate Lister. If you would like Betwixt the Sheets ad-free and get early access, sign up to History Hit. With a History Hit subscription, you can also watch hundreds of original documentaries with top history presenters and enjoy a new release every single week. Sign up now by visiting historyhit.com forward slash subscribe.
Ryan Reynolds here from Int Mobile. With the price of just about everything going up during inflation, we thought we'd bring our prices down.
So to help us, we brought in a reverse auctioneer, which is apparently a thing. Mint Mobile Unlimited Premium Wireless. I bet you get 30, 30, I bet you get 30, I bet you get 20, 20, 20, I bet you get 20, 20, I bet you get 15, 15, 15, 15, just 15 bucks a month. Sold! Give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. $45 upfront payment equivalent to $15 per month. New customers on first three-month plan only. Taxes and fees extra. Speeds lower above 40 gigabytes each detail.
This is a PSA, or Public Sock Announcement. Experts have declared Bombas socks as the best way to warm up chilly feet. These pairs are super cushy, soft, and designed for maximum coziness. Plus, for every pair purchased, another pair will be donated, so someone in need of essential clothing can stay warm this winter.
Go to bombas.com slash ACAST and use code ACAST for 20% off your first purchase. That's B-O-M-B-A-S dot com slash ACAST and use code ACAST at checkout. ACAST powers the world's best podcasts. Here's a show that we recommend. Welcome to Just a Couple Things. It's your sister.
Jesse Wu. You may know me from Wild N' Out, Dish Nation, All Blacks a la carte, and so many other platforms. Just a Couple Things is a podcast where we're dishing all things pop culture as well as comedic story times. Give my podcast a follow and make sure that you subscribe, subscribe, so you never miss out on an episode. Acast helps creators launch, grow, and monetize their podcasts everywhere. Acast.com.
Hello, my lovely Betwixters. It's me, Kate Lister. You are in the right place if you were looking for Betwixt the Sheets. But to keep everything above board and everybody happy, I have to tell you, this is an adult podcast spoken by adults to other adults about adulty things in an adulty way, covering a range of adult subjects, and you should be an adult too. That is what we call the fair dues warning, because if you hear that and you keep listening and you get offended, well, fair dues. We did let you know.
Hello, Betwixters. You've joined me on an archaeological dig in Turkey. As the breeze blows the dirt from the marble relief in front of us, what's revealed are two figures who look to be fighting each other. It's exciting, isn't it? They're both stood in a bracing position, holding swords and shields. What makes this extra fascinating is the inscription...
I don't actually speak Latin, but you don't need to know that right now. We can just pretend that I do. Because written below the figures are the names Amazon and Aquila, indicating that these figures are women. Above them is another inscription that tells us that they were free and no longer slaves. But what's really important here is that these are women gladiators. Amazon and Aquila are
are gladiators. But what do we know about the women that fought as gladiators? What other evidence for this is there? Well, let's head back to ancient Rome to find out. What do you look for in a man? Oh, money, of course. You're supposed to rise when an adult speaks to you. I make perfect copies of whatever my boss needs by just turning it up and pushing the button. I'm not here to win!
Yes, social courtesy does make a difference. Goodness, what beautiful dance. Goodness has nothing to do with it, Jerry.
Hello and welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets, the history of sex scandal and society with me, Kay Lister. We often think of the gladiators as peak masculinity. Ripped athletic men dueling it out to the cries and swoons of the onlooking crowd. It's all very bros, bros, bros. However, it wasn't just men who did this. It was women too. Not many of them, but they were there.
But who were they? And what was life like as a female gladiator in ancient Rome? Following on from last week's episode on the sex lives of gladiators, we are joined once again by the marvellous, the fantastic, the brilliant Emma Southern, author of A History of Ancient Rome and 21 Women, and she is going to help shed some light on the history of women gladiators. Spears at the ready, betwixt us. Let's do this.
And welcome back to Betwixt the Sheets. It's only Emma Southern. How are you doing? Delighted, excited to horrify everybody once again. Hopefully make people go, ugh. So the next installment of our unofficial miniseries, fucking hell, the Romans were shit, weren't they? I'm still waiting for you to tell me something vaguely positive that any of these people did, but they didn't.
There's loads of other people who write about that, like buildings and whatever. That is true. I'm here to tell you about all the other stuff. Yeah.
And in our last episode together, and if you haven't listened to it, do go back and listen, we spoke about gladiators, the boy gladiators, and about them being super sexy and also enslaved and this kind of very strange, ambivalent position that they had between being non-citizens and celebrities and how you'd be a gladiator.
Today we're talking about girl gladiators. That's fascinating. It is. And the Romans thought they were fascinating too. I bet they did. And I do remember there being girl gladiators in Ridley Scott's first gladiator film. They were on chariots and they had metal bras and they shot arrows at people. Yes, not hugely inaccurate.
Actually, we do have evidence of not the metal bras. That's bizarre. No one needs to wear a metal bra. But the women who fight in chariots, we do have evidence of that occurring. And somebody gets very excited that they're going to see this and write a poem about it. So one of the occasions where he knows something. Before we get to that, we should just do a quick recap.
recap of some gladiator history just in case people didn't actually go back and listen to the last episode there where do they come from the gladiators they're so synonymous with Rome and what we think about Rome but where did the idea of getting two blokes together and just going right fight fight fight fight where did that even come from
It comes from the only place you'd expect it to come from, which is obviously what you do at a funeral when someone has died and you're really sad is just make people fight for your entertainment. There is nothing I've ever wanted whenever a grandparent has passed away more than somebody having a battle on their grave. Could you even imagine? It just really takes your mind off it. It would take your mind off it. Right, okay. So it was...
Part of a funeral rite. Can you make that make sense? Why did they think that that was a reasonable thing to be doing? Basically, it's a kind of sacrifice, like a kind of human sacrifice. It starts in prehistory with the Etruscans and nobody really knows what the logic behind it is. In the same way that they don't really know what the logic behind Vestal Virgins is, they just know that it has to exist and it's important. Okay.
That's where it starts in this prehistoric world of the Etruscans. And the Romans inherit it because they inherit so much of Etruscan culture and then turn it up to 11 because they do that with everything. And as they get richer and as they get more luxurious and more decadent and have more money to spend on everything, they...
expand it out and out and out and then divorce it from the funerary context and just make it into a fun time for all the family. And they did love a sacrifice as well, didn't they? The Romans, they were quite big on that. They did love a sacrifice. If they couldn't be cutting the head off of a bird or a...
bull or a sheep or something at any given moment than they were really that happy. Were they big into human sacrifice? So no, they are weird about this. They think that human sacrifice is the worst thing in the world. And the reason that they say that they destroyed the druids is because they claim they were doing human sacrifice. And they talk about it as the most disgusting thing in the world. And then they fairly regularly do something that is objectively a human sacrifice, like bury a vestal virgin alive or have somebody die on somebody's grave.
or bury two ghouls and two Greeks because an omen told them to, but they pretend that it's not a human sacrifice because they didn't actually kill them. There's some mental gymnastics there, isn't there? Yeah. Just killing a person, very bad indeed, in the name of the gods. Doing it in a sort of roundabout way with a whole lot of theatre built into it in the name of the gods, very good indeed.
And just getting two random people to knock seven shades of shit out of each other. Fabulous. Getting two enslaved people to do it in the hope that they might be allowed to go home one day. Double thumbs up. One thing that I have noticed about Roman culture is that it is intensely macho to the point where...
really this is about man love. Their ideas of beauty are very much linked to masculinity and boys being beautiful. There are cocks on everything. There are not vulvas on everything, really. No. Like it's men in the public sphere. It's
I mean, obviously there were women around, but it's almost as if they're going, oh God, you had forgotten about you. Like it's all boys, boys, boys, boys. And the gladiators play into that because they are the epitome of this macho, heteronormative, look at my willy culture. How the hell do women gladiators fit into that? So basically they are a novelty is how it begins. It is...
fun and sometimes funny but always titillating to see women doing man things and this is exactly the same like we said in the previous episode women sex workers are the only women who are allowed to wear togas um
I love that fact, thank you. Female gladiators doing the same thing. They're women wearing men's clothes, doing manly things in the same way that sex workers are having sex publicly and happily, which is not something that women are supposed to do. Gladiators are fighting like men in a masculine style and it's titillating, it's exciting, it's transgressive, it's thrilling in a way that kind of turns everybody on. Interesting. How...
common was it because if it was that kind of titillating and sexy and all the rest of it you'd think there'd be more of them but it doesn't seem like there was as many girl gladiators as boy gladiators
We don't have loads of evidence for specific girl gladiators, nowhere near as much as we do for specific boy gladiators. And it is always presented as an unusual thing that has happened when girl gladiators fight. So there's an inscription from Ostia where a guy records himself as the first person to ever put women in the ring.
or put women in the arena because it's like a big deal. That's the one thing he did in his life that he would like people to remember him for. So we don't have like loads of evidence of specific ones. And there's all kinds of debates about how common they actually were. In the literature, we do have quite a lot of references to women fighting and they tend to only get upset when it's elite women fighting. So noble women going into the arena really upsets people and, yeah.
Like Augustus makes it illegal because apparently people are doing it so often that they keep going in. But they don't get upset when just normal women, when non-elite women are fighting. They think that's quite fun. So there's loads of debate about whether it's something that was happening all the time and people only got upset and thought it was exciting when...
it's elite women or if it is just a novelty act that gets put on every so often. But most of the adverts and things that we have for games and most of the evidence we have for specific games, it's just men. So it's not
Every time you go to the games, it's going to be a special occasion thing when a woman is fighting. And they're often called gladiatrixes today, but that isn't what they would have been called at the time. It isn't, no. The first evidence they have from that is a gloss, the post-classical gloss from the medieval period where somebody invented the word gladiatrix because medieval monks liked to invent Latin words sometimes and they didn't have one.
They didn't actually have a word for female gladiator. They always just had to say a gladiator who is a woman or use some kind of poetic roundabout way of saying it. So they'd say something like, we are used to seeing people die for Mars, but now we have seen Venus fight and things like that. They didn't actually have a specific word for it. Cool.
quite creative then. So I wonder, because I'm thinking about the state of women's sports and athletics today, and it's still steeped in misogyny. I mean, we're getting better by challenging it, but if you look at something like women's football or soccer, if you're American, it's
Men's football is funded to the tune of billions and squillions and they get, you know, taken off and trained from the age of two. And the women's football get like a bus pass and, you know, half a day off work. And there's still this attitude of like that women's sports isn't as good.
as men's sports, which is a really shitty attitude to have. But I'm wondering if the gladiators would have been like that, if it would have been regarded as not as good as when men are fighting. Yeah, it definitely was. There is, unfortunately. I had a tiny hope there that you'd go, no, it wasn't at all.
Women who do sport of any kind, but particularly gladiator sport, are treated definitely as a comedy act sometimes. So one of the most famous examples is...
and this happens more than once, but Domitian sends women out to fight with little people. So people with dwarfism and people who have growth related disorders. And that is considered to be like, this is a great spectacle for the people. People love it. And Marshall writes this poem about how great it is and how hilarious it is. But like, it's a comedy display of women and little people, not a sporting display of two men at the,
peak of their powers or two people. The only evidence that we have that it's a sport that's kind of taken seriously is one relief, which is in the British Museum now. It's from Turkey and it's not on display. I checked yesterday to see if you could still see it and they've got it hidden somewhere. So petition them to put it on display.
But it's two women who are called Amazonia and Akila who are either given their freedom because they fight so well or were sent off in a draw, which is also very unusual because basically it says Missio. So that could mean either of those things. And it's two women fighting in what looks like a very standard gladiator fight. And then their fight is being something extraordinary happened and they were
sent off with some kind of freedom and that is a moment that has been recorded just as a sporting achievement rather than a lol women achievement and that is the only piece of evidence that really suggests that female gladiators could be treated with anything like respect. Do you think that they were also enslaved people? Probably, yes. A lot of the written evidence is about women that were
choose to go into the arena because they're noble women and that is considered to be disgusting. There's evidence of women learning to fight just because they want to. Just for shits and giggles. Yeah, and Juvenal writes about it in his profoundly, astonishingly, eye-openingly misogynistic satire about why you should never marry a woman. And one of them is that women might go and start training as gladiator and
We've all seen them in their armour, hitting the training stick and drinking down ale like they think it's cool. And he thinks it's completely disgusting. But it's clearly women are doing this because they want a bit of that masculine, not like other girls glory. Like all you other girls are at home putting jewellery on, but I'm out here fighting. Or they just think it's cool. It's cool to do. Women box, women...
Do all kinds of sport. Women play football. You know, why go and play football when you know you're going to have people calling you a cunt all the time? Yes. Yeah. But you do it because you love it. And it's worth it on some other level that is above the fact that everybody is going to say terrible, misogynistic things about you. I'll be back with Emma after this short break.
Ryan Reynolds here for, I guess, my 100th Mint commercial. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I mean, honestly, when I started this, I thought I'd only have to do like four of these. I mean, it's unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month. How are there still people paying two or three times that much? I'm sorry, I shouldn't be victim blaming here. Give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch whenever you're ready. For
$45 upfront payment equivalent to $15 per month. New customers on first three-month plan only. Taxes and fees extra. Speeds lower above 40 gigabytes. See details. This is a PSA, or public sock announcement. Experts have declared Bomba socks as the best way to warm up chilly feet. These pairs are super cushy, soft, and designed for maximum coziness. Plus, for every pair purchased, another pair will be donated, so someone in need of essential clothing can stay warm this winter.
Go to bombas.com slash ACAST and use code ACAST for 20% off your first purchase. That's B-O-M-B-A-S dot com slash ACAST and use code ACAST at checkout. For all of your residential and commercial heating needs this year, call the 5 Star Heating Experts at Crop Metcalf. 1-800-GO-CROP or visit cropmetcalf.com. Crop Metcalf is the one with 5 stars. Crop Metcalf, home of the 5 Star Technician.
Two men walk out into the silent arena. One holds a sword and a shield, the other a net and a trident. They face each other. This is the Colosseum, where life and death are decided by skill, strength and the will of the crowd. And these are Rome's greatest fighters. These are the gladiators. Join me for my latest miniseries coming to Dan Snow's History Hit on the 10th of November.
where I explore Rome to discover the true history of the gladiators. We'll dive into the ingenuity and cruelty of ancient Roman entertainment, the weapons, the blood sports, the fierce power plays that unfolded from the emperor's box. And of course, the true story of the most famous gladiator of them all, Spartacus. And since the new Ridley Scott movie, Gladiator 2, is out this month, we thought you might need us to bust some myths on what a day at the arena might really be like.
Join me on an adventure to ancient Rome on the 10th of November for my new mini-series, Gladiators, wherever you get your podcasts.
One of the things I've learned from you is that the Romans, it wasn't just about getting two people to wallop each other. If they could make them do a story at the same time, that's even better. If they could have like somehow act out some kind of mad narrative as well. So I suppose women gladiators, it wouldn't be completely alien to the Romans, as misogynistic and mad as they were. When you think of somebody like Boudicca, who was a woman warrior, or someone like
I nearly said Joan of Arc, but that... No, not Joan of Arc. The Amazons. Sorry. Yes. Yeah, the Amazons. So it's not like they would have been completely unaware of the fact that women can be warriors, but what was their sort of attitude in general to women fighting, women leading battles and warriors? Basically disgusting. Right. And deeply, deeply unfeminine and...
And they have really rigid gender ideals about what men and women both can and should do. And their morality, particularly at the elite levels, is very gendered and biased.
Battle and leading and anything involving war or martial arts is the masculine sphere, 100%. There is no room for women in that. And when women do it, they are considered to be stepping wildly outside of the bounds of appropriate female behaviour. Women are objects of sentences. They are objects of orders. Men are the subjects.
who give orders. So a woman in any kind of martial situation is bizarre and kind of hilarious and slightly disgusting. So there were no Boudicca fans then? I know that they were fighting her, but there was nobody being like, actually, it's kind of cool. There probably were somewhere around. Sometimes they would dress people up as like, they liked to reenact battles. And sometimes they would have people dress up as Britons and have them fight. Aren't they lovely? Aren't they nice? Yeah, it's so good.
What about something like Sparta? Because the Romans were definitely big fans of the Greeks and pretty much nicked all of their stuff and their ideas. And Sparta were famous for training their women as warriors. Did none of that rub off on the Romans? None of that rubbed off because in Athens, which is the place that the Romans liked the most, they kept their women locked away in a separate side of the house. And the best thing you could say about them was that you didn't know what they looked like. Yeah.
And they really leaned into that rather than anything else. Although women, Roman women are a lot freer. Like the reason that women are so into gladiators is that they're happily allowed into the arena. Like they go to the theater, they go to everything. The only thing that Augustus can do when he's trying to force everybody to be more moral, according to his idea of morals is say that women aren't allowed in the front rows at the arena. They have to sit further back. So,
Is there any evidence as to what kind of fights women gladiators would be having? Would it presumably have been just the same as the men? Like one of them's got a stabby sword, the other one's got a net, the other one's got a trident. It'd have been the same sort of format.
As far as we can tell, yes. So there's in Petronius, he talks about the women in chariots. So which is kind of it. That's a fairly high level kind of like you have to be able to control the chariot and be an archer and go around in a circle real fast as well. So we have that. We have the pictures that we have of them are
are of them just in standard gladiator gear and when juvenile describes them he also describes them in very standard gladiator with arm wraps and the leg wraps he describes them as a Thracian which is a specific kind that's the kind who are just wearing like knickers and a big helmet and
and then they've got what looks like a pillow wrapped around their arm and that is basically all they have. So as far as we can tell, there's no special real kind of dressing up. They are just women doing traditional gladiatorial fighting. Do we know about the lives of any of these women? I know we've got a couple of names, but were there any famous women gladiators that we know anything about?
No. Sadly. Oh. We don't know that many names of male gladiators outside of graffiti. And thank God for graffiti. And there's no women gladiators really in graffiti, just in the occasional freeze and when it's mentioned in literary sources. So we don't have any real like superstar female gladiators, which is unfortunate. Do we have any kind of like famous women fighters of any, athletes of any description? No. No, I can't think of any either. Oh,
They're so resistant to women being in the public sphere that they didn't even have actresses. They would just have men dress up as women. Back again to the, it's all about the boys. Yeah. And having women in any kind of public sphere is always a novelty. It's always a transgression. So they get...
They do not get songs about them. They do not get paintings. There's one mosaic of female athletes in like little bikinis, like throwing a ball. Yeah. But that is basically it. And they've got no names on them, unfortunately. The evidence for them is so...
As in it's in passing references here, there or there were. I think like somebody might refer to like women of the sword or something or one of those weird metaphors that you use. It's so sparse. I have heard one or two people say that they didn't exist, that they don't actually believe in them.
What do you think about that particular argument? The evidence is sparse, but for ancient history, it's actually quite good in that it is not just one source. It comes from multiple sources across multiple centuries, across multiple cities. We have evidence from Turkey, from Pompeii, from Rome, from Ostia, from Britain. There is evidence and it's in different forms. We've got the relief, we've got literature,
poems, histories, inscriptions. So they definitely existed. I think that to say that they didn't exist is to just deny quite a varied amount of evidence. And we've said that we've got less evidence for Boudicca than we have for female gladiators. And you'd be hard pushed to say that Boudicca doesn't exist. They are just one of these things that exists
And for the most part, they are not worthy of comment. That's what the Romans do, isn't it? It's like if you just looked at Roman literature and Roman art and Roman pottery, you'd almost think that women just didn't exist in this world. Yeah, unless women paint themselves or if they did that they only existed in like sex context because you get a lot of women like being shagged. They're just not very worthy of being put...
on a freeze. They're just not very, they're not the elite of sport or the most exciting thing that anybody saw that day. And they're just something that happens in the same way that, you know, a lot of stuff that happens in life is never recorded. But they happen in enough contexts that do end up being worthy of comment, like being forced to fight little people, which is so funny that it gets commemorated, or when elite women keep doing it, and so they have to be stopped.
because from that you can see that they are there. They're just not that interesting to people that often. And we should talk about the body that was discovered in London that was excavated because that did not offset the cat among the pigeons. It did and it remains very controversial. So like 1990s it was dug up in London and basically it is a mostly cremated skeleton of a woman and the
A lot of the grave goods that were found in the grave have gladiator stuff on them. So there's lamps, there's like cups that have gladiatorial scenes on them. And this is something that people like gladiator merch is very common, which I find delightful. And,
At the time, and for a long time it has been, there's been this argument. Is she buried with all of this gladiator merch because she is a gladiator or is she buried with it because she is a massive fan of gladiators? And there's no real way of knowing. And because her body was partially...
Cremated, you can't really see whether she had any injuries that would be concurrent with being a gladiator. That would be the best way is if you could see that she had head injuries or arm injuries, then you'd be able to see that she had been training. But it is...
One of the agonies of archaeology is that so much of it is interpretation. And both of those interpretations can be made, is that she's a gladiator and she's buried with gladiator stuff because she's proud of it. Or she is just a woman who goddamn loved the gladiators. It's like when you bury somebody with their football shirt or something.
I've heard people make the argument that she might be a priestess because like wasn't some kind of little ring or something with a god discovered and that this god was supposed to look after gladiators that people have said, oh, maybe she was a priestess. Yes. But again, it is, she could just have that because she likes the gladiators so much. Well,
What do you think, Emma? I know that historians never, ever, ever want to actually come down firmly on one side because we just don't know. I always go with the interpretation that I like the most and where I like the story. And personally, I like the story of someone, a woman who just bloody loves the gladiators. And it's just like, you know, you sometimes get documentaries about people who've decorated their whole house and their football team and like...
Like one of those women who she's got a team of gladiators and she loves them. Gladiator super fan. Exactly. And so when she dies, her husband or her sister or whoever buried her is like, well, we've got to bury her with our gladiator stuff. And that also sort of reminds us that there were gladiators in Britain as well, because we tend to just think of the Colosseum and Rome, but there would have been gladiator fights all over the place, including Britain.
absolutely all over the empire in every place where there was a theater or an amphitheater and there's a couple of amphitheaters in britain and they found a gladiator barracks in kent last year or the year before and it had a cat found a cat skeleton in the gladiator barracks so it was their like little pet cat i think they called him like catiator or something like that um
They came up with a pun. I can't remember what it is now. But yeah, so there were definitely gladiators in Britain. Gladiators everywhere. It was like a quintessentially Roman thing to be doing was to have gladiator fights. Most of the time that you go and see a gladiator fight, it's going to be in a small place. It's going to be a small amount of people fighting. The Colosseum isn't built
until the reign of Titus, which is the second century. So for most of Roman history, the Colosseum doesn't exist. And it's a big deal when the Colosseum is open. Most of the time, it's quite small and much more intimate than the Colosseum. Would they have had...
in the Colosseum in any other capacity other than a gladiator? I'm just trying to think of what the Romans, their shows that they like to put on for each other. Were women prisoners condemned to do horrible things? Oh, they were. So it's not like they wouldn't have seen women in these, I don't even know what you call them, like death spectacles of just awfulness that they've come up with. Yeah, no, so you would definitely see women prisoners being condemned is not uncommon. The only rule against it was you couldn't condemn anyone
a virgin or a pregnant woman. And they had ways around both of those things. Of course they did. But yeah, so they would often do that. And in their spectacular executions, they would very often have women there because they thought it was funny. And the reason that all of the Christian martyrs are being executed in ludicrous and horrible ways is that so many of them are women. And it's kind of titillating to watch women get eaten by a leopard. I saw a freeze yesterday, actually, of a woman tied to a bull being eaten by a leopard.
which felt excessive. That is excessive. If they were anything, they were extra, weren't they, the Romans? So they were happy executing women and men and watching women fight. They didn't have actors, women actors, did they? So there's no other way that a woman would have been involved in this spectacle at all? Not really, no, except as a spectator or a...
they could fund it through a man, but it is a public activity. Most of the time it is political as well or religious and therefore is very firmly in the sphere of male activity. Were women's fights clamped down on long before gladiator fights in general were clamped down on? Yeah. Oh. So it is Septimius Severus who bans women fighting. Whether anybody adhered to the ban is a different question.
but the ban is not repeated, which is unusual. As far as we can tell, women gladiators, because they are a kind of decadent novelty, they're probably more expensive than male gladiators. And so you would have to be putting on a big show to have women. And Septimius Severus makes it illegal. He says, basically, he says he's seen some games that are too extravagant and he's banning a bunch of stuff that's too extravagant. And one of them is female gladiators. When you think...
think about it actually i'm just trying to think like the day-to-day life of these female gladiators is they certainly existed they don't seem to have existed in really large numbers or they might have done and they just didn't bother to tell us that they did but i can't imagine the romans would have been as conscientious as to do something as have like separate gladiator training schools for men and women or like separate housing quarters so presumably these four
few women who either they've been condemned to do this or for reasons known only to themselves went yeah I'll give that a go they have to share space with the male gladiators and train with them and live with them in their little gladiator schools yeah or they're training at martial schools so there's like
schools around the empire which just train people in martial skills that are like specialist schools for learning war skills and they had women in them as well who would just go for fun. They would probably be in those as well. Wow.
It seems like a very, very grim existence. But then actually, when I say that, when I talk to you, most of Rome seems like that. So if you were condemned to this, if it was like, right, Emma Southern, you have been found guilty of not paying an Uber driver and I'm now going to condemn you to fight in the Colosseum, I'm going to assume you couldn't say no. No.
No. What was the option? Suicide, which people did do, often in quite horrible ways. Or just be so bad at it, they wouldn't be worth them sending you out and hope that you got another assignment. Okay.
And the other assignment would probably be, I mean, if you're condemned, the other assignment is going to be like the mines or something or execution and that's going to be rubbish. But I feel like probably women were not condemned to this. I feel like they were probably just enslaved women that were chosen to do it or who volunteered to do it because
because it would be kind of a double condemnation to condemn a woman to the arena. It wouldn't just be condemning her to fight, it would be taking away her femininity as well. And they'd much rather have her be condemned to be eaten by something horrible. Of course they would. Of course they would. Yeah. At a state level, they don't really do gender transgression that often. So I would be surprised if people were condemned to be... I suspect it's people who choose to do it,
and people who are just enslaved women who are particularly strong and are then chosen to be gladiators. But I would be...
I don't think you'd choose me. I've got tiny little wrists. Like you'd look at my arms and just be like, that's just pathetic. I can do like a Zumba class and like a couple of body pump classes, but I don't think that's going to hold you in much stead against a bear. No. Or like another woman with a massive shield. God, no. Oh, no. Terribly scary. No. I just cry. The,
The new Gladiator film is on our horizons. At the time of recording, neither of us have seen it yet, but hopefully by the time this goes out, we will have seen it. I...
have seen a couple of trailers for it but I can't recall if there are women gladiators in it but I would bet ten to a penny that there are I feel like it's likely that there will be I think they're going to be sexy gladiators too I reckon the gold bikini is going to be back I mean fingers crossed for a gold bikini at any given time all I can really remember from the trailer is Paul Meskell kind of flying through the air an elephant which gives me very high hopes yeah for what I'm gonna see so I
If you were in charge of the gladiator film, there's your final question, and you were put in charge of an accurate depiction of the women gladiators, what do you think you'd go for? Would you go for a gold bikini? How would you like them represented?
I wouldn't. I would have them dressed properly. I would have women who took themselves very seriously and had to deal with the fact that nobody else did. It would be much like if I was going to be making a film about a female soccer player, female football player who trains hard, takes their career very, very seriously and has to deal with the fact that when it comes to budget cut time, they're always going to be the ones that get their budget cut.
Emma, you have been marvellous to talk to. Once again, you always are. Perhaps we should try... No, we won't fight each other in the Coliseum. That would be shit. We'll have a game of TIG. Would that amuse people, do you think? Yes, that sounds fun. We could do that. Or just sit down and have some tea. But until we get to that, if people want to know more about you and your work, where can they find you? Not in the Coliseum. Not in the Coliseum, no. My podcast is called History is Sexy, or they can find me at emmasouthern.com, which has links to everything on there.
Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you enjoy the film when you do see it. I cannot wait.
Thank you for listening and thank you so much to Emma for joining me and if you like what you heard please don't forget to like, review and follow along whatever it is that you get your podcasts. If you'd like us to explore a subject or maybe you just fancied saying hi then you can email us at betwixt at historyhit.com. We've got episodes on everything from the history of pubic hair to the second installment of our mini-series The Secret Lives of Six Wives and we are looking at Anne Boleyn. This podcast is brought to you by
podcast was edited by Tom DeLarge and produced by Stuart Beckwith. The senior producer was Charlotte Long. Join me again betwixt the sheets, the history of sex scandal in society, a podcast by History Hit. This podcast contains music from Epidemic Sound.
This is a PSA, or Public Sock Announcement. Experts have declared Bombas socks as the best way to warm up chilly feet. These pairs are super cushy, soft, and designed for maximum coziness. Plus, for every pair purchased, another pair will be donated, so someone in need of essential clothing can stay warm this winter.
Go to bombas.com slash ACAST and use code ACAST for 20% off your first purchase. That's B-O-M-B-A-S dot com slash ACAST and use code ACAST at checkout.
Yeah.
Additionally, Aura provides up to $5 million in identity theft insurance, offering a robust safety net in the event of a worst-case scenario. For a limited time, Aura is offering our listeners a 14-day trial plus a check of your data to see if your personal information has been leaked online. All for free when you visit Aura.com slash safety. That's Aura.com slash safety to sign up for a 14-day free trial and start protecting you and your loved ones. That's
a-u-r-a dot com slash safety. Certain terms apply, so be sure to check the site for details.