Gladiator Relief Discovered in Bulgaria

News September 13, 2018

SHARE:

VELIKO TARNOVO, BULGARIA—Archaeology in Bulgaria reports that a stone relief thought to date to the Severan Dynasty (A.D. 193-235) has been found in the ancient Roman city of Nicopolis ad Istrum, which is located in northern Bulgaria, by a team of archaeologists led by Ivan Tsarov of the Veliko Tarnovo Regional Museum of History. The rare image, discovered under the pavement in the southwestern corner of the city’s forum, depicts a type of gladiator known as a secutor, wearing a helmet and a shield and armed with a short sword, facing another type of gladiator called a retiarius, wearing an arm and a shoulder guard and carrying a trident, a dagger, and a net. Tsarov and his colleagues think the carved stone may have been part of a frieze that decorated a table where olive oil and grains were weighed, or part of a sacrificial altar associated with rituals performed before gladiatorial battles. The find is said to confirm three inscriptions mentioning gladiator fights that have been found in the city, even though an amphitheater has not been located. Tsarov thinks the battles may have been held in a wooden structure outside the city. To read about research on an area outside an amphitheater in present-day Austria where gladiatorial contests took place, go to “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.”

  • Features July/August 2018

    The City at the Beginning of the World

    The only Maya city with an urban grid may embody a creation myth

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Timothy Pugh/Itza Archaeological Project)
  • Letter from England July/August 2018

    Inside the Anarchy

    Archaeologists explore the landscape of England’s first civil war

    Read Article
    (Kate Ravilious)
  • Artifacts July/August 2018

    Roman Boxing Gloves

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Vindolanda Trust)
  • Digs & Discoveries July/August 2018

    Sun Storm

    Read Article
    (Universal History Archive/UIG via Getty Images)