The battered skull of a brown bear discovered near a Roman amphitheater in Serbia reveals that the wild animal had been kept in captivity for years and was fighting off an infection when it died around 1,700 years ago.
The finding is the first direct evidence of the use of bears in the gladiatorial arena and attests to the barbarism of animal spectacles in the Roman Empire.
“We cannot say with certainty whether the bear died directly in the arena, but the evidence suggests the trauma occurred during spectacles and the subsequent infection likely contributed significantly to its death,” study lead author Nemanja Marković, a senior research associate at the Institute of Archaeology in Belgrade, told Live Science in an email.
In a study published Monday (Sept. 1) in the journal Antiquity, Marković and colleagues detailed their analysis of the fragmented skull of a brown bear (Ursus arctos) excavated in 2016 near the amphitheater at Viminacium, a Roman frontier military base in present-day Serbia.
The amphitheater at Viminacium was built in the second century A.D. Oval-shaped with high walls, it could seat about 7,000 people. Archaeologists recovered the bear skull near the entrance to the amphitheater, along with a number of other animal bones, including those of a leopard, the researchers noted in the study.
“Previous research suggests animals killed in the arena were butchered nearby, their meat distributed, and bones discarded close to the amphitheatre — not buried in a formal animal graveyard,” Marković said.
Bears forced to participate in these ancient spectacles had a variety of roles. They could be made to fight “venatores,” gladiators who specialized in hunting; to brawl with other animals; to execute convicts; or to give trained performances.
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The researchers’ analysis of the brown bear skull revealed just how brutal these spectacles were for the animals.
Using ancient DNA analysis, the researchers determined that the bear was male and was from the local area, and his teeth suggested he was about 6 years old when he died. Carbon dating of animal bones from the area where the bear was found gave a date range of A.D. 240 to…
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