Home : Complete Site List : Search : What's New? : Permission to Use : Contact Us

Amphitheater Interior

< Prev | 6 of 14 | Next >
Amphitheater Interior
Click Photo for Larger Version
Please read before you download

Images and/or text from holylandphotos.org are NOT TO BE USED ON OTHER WEB SITES, NOR COMMERCIALLY, without special permission. To request permission contact us at holylandphotos@gmail.com.

Photo Comments

View of the interior of the Amphitheater at Pompeii. It measures 432 x 335 ft. and could hold 20,000 people!  Note the high retaining wall to protect the spectators.  In this earliest of amphitheaters, there were no underground passages nor chambers—as in later structures.

On the left side of the image note that the first five rows are "walled off" and were for the use of the elite of the city.  The upper seats were for the use of lesser class people and eventually women—who were allowed to go to the amphitheater because of a decree of Emperor Augustus (r. 27 B.C.–A.D.14).

It was built in 80 B.C. when Pompeii became a Roman Colony.  It is the oldest amphitheater in existence!

It was used for sports and gladiator contests, hunts and battles with wild animals!  Wall advertisements for the spectacles have been found on the walls of buildings at Pompeii.