Aspendos Gladiator School

Gladiators from the Zliten mosaic.
Image via Wikipedia

The Aspendos Gladiator School is planning to train Turkish oil wrestlers to re-enact the gladiator fights of ancient Rome in the southern Province of Antalya.

The school is in the Serik district, which is also home to the ancient theater of Aspendos. The school covers 300 square meters near the site of the ancient theater and is expected to be open by the end of May.

Students will receive basic acting training to re-enact the gladiator fights and the chariot races of ancient times. Handmade costumes and weapons will be used during the shows, and there will be an 800-person spectator hall built to match Roman architectural tradition. There will also be a Roman market in the arena.

The school’s administrator, Ali Akay, said the spectators would also be provided with outfits of the time to increase the ambience, adding that the gladiators who will take part in the shows are set to begin horse-riding training in the next few days.

“We have 16 horses. Up to now, we have spent almost 300,000 Turkish Liras, and we are still holding auditions for gladiator candidates. They are supposed to be well built, and therefore we believe the best candidates will be Turkish oil wrestlers. We have already offered the roles to our local wrestlers, and we are waiting for the results.”

Akay also said 40 people will take part in the shows, which will be composed of many traditional Roman games. “We will re-enact the gladiator spirit in Anatolia with the shows we produce. Of course, we have commercial concerns, but our main motive is our love for and interest in history.”

via Local wrestlers to be trained as gladiators in south Turkey | Hurriyet Daily News.

… I guess these folks can have competitions from the gang at Regensburg who are Gladiating Through University … not sure ‘costumes’ is the right word to describe what they wear …

Oh Noes! Mortar Falling Off Colosseum!

00000 - Rome - Colosseum
Image by xiquinhosilva via Flickr

A brief AP report is making the rounds detailing something of concern about the Colosseum. Here’s the incipit of a representative piece from the Globe:

Rome archaeology officials say three chunks of mortar have fallen off from the Colosseum but that no one was hurt and tourist visits will go on as normal.

The pieces, covering a total of about a square meter about 10 square feet, occurred about 6 a.m. Sunday, hours before the ancient arena opens to the public.

Archaeology official Roberto Cecchi said the area involved was already scheduled for maintenance and will be further inspected on Monday.

via Chunks of mortar fall off Rome’s Colosseum – Boston.com.

… the Colosseum remains open. I guess they’ll add this to the list of things to take care of with their ‘big restoration plans’

More coverage:

AIA e-Reviews

Culling some items from an AIA newsletter:

From Paris to Pompeii: French Romanticism and the Cultural Politics of Archaeology
By Göran Blix
Reviewed by Walter Berry
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/01_Berry.pdf

Ancient Bodies, Ancient Lives: Sex, Gender, and Archaeology
By Rosemary A. Joyce
Reviewed by Karina Croucher
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/02_Croucher.pdf

New Directions in the Skeletal Biology of Greece
Edited by Lynne A. Schepartz, Sherry C. Fox, and Chryssi Bourbou
Reviewed by Anne Ingvarsson-Sundström
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/04_Ingvarsson-Sundstrom.pdf

Lessons Learned: Reflecting on the Theory and Practice of Mosaic Conservation. Proceedings of the 9th ICCM Conference, Hammamet, Tunisia, November 29December 3, 2005
Edited by Aïcha Ben Abed, Martha Demas, and Thomas Roby
Reviewed by Jean Ann Dabb
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/05_Dabb.pdf

Warriors and Weapons in Bronze Age Europe
By Anthony Harding
Reviewed by Nick Thorpe
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/09_Thorpe.pdf

Knossos and the Prophets of Modernism
By Cathy Gere
Reviewed by Nanno Marinatos
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/10_Marinatos.pdf

The People of Knossos: Prosopographical Studies in the Knossos Linear B Archives
By Hedvig Landenius Enegren
Reviewed by Michael Franklin Lane
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/11_Lane.pdf

Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum. France 41. Louvre 27: Céramique attique archaïque, goblets mastoids à figures noires et rouges
By Nassi Malagardis and Athéna Tsingarida
Reviewed by Regina Attula
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/12_Attula.pdf

Ayios Stephanos: Excavations at a Bronze Age and Medieval Settlement in Southern Laconia
By W.D. Taylour and R. Janko
Reviewed by Chrysanthi Gallou
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/13_Gallou.pdf

Thracians and Their Neighbours: Their Destiny, Art and Heritage
By Jan Bouzek
Reviewed by Nikola Theodossiev
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/14_Theodossiev.pdf

Textile Production in Pre-Roman Italy
By Margarita Gleba
Reviewed by Brian E. McConnell
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/15_McConnell.pdf

Votives, Places and Rituals in Etruscan Religion: Studies in Honor of Jean MacIntosh Turfa
Edited by Margarita Gleba and Hilary Becker
Reviewed by Ingrid Krauskopf
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/16_Krauskopf.pdf

Romes Cultural Revolution
By Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
Reviewed by Regina Gee
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/17_Gee.pdf

La céramique romaine dArgos: Fin du IIe siècle avant J.-C.fin du IVe siècle après J.-C.
By Catherine Abadie-Reynal
Reviewed by Phillip Kenrick
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/18_Kenrick.pdf

PoseidoniaPaestum. Vol. 5, Les maisons romaines de lîlot nord
By Irene Bragantini, Rosa De Bonis, Anca Lemaire, and Renaud Robert.
Reviewed by Kathryn Lomas
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/book_reviews/114.2/19_Lomas.pdf

Museum Reviews

Roma: La Pittura di un Impero
Scuderie del Quirinale, Rome
Reviewed by Eleanor Winsor Leach
http://www.ajaonline.org/pdfs/museum_reviews/AJA1142_Leach.pdf