Thompson T J U, Errickson D, McDonnell Christine, Holst Malin, Caffell Anwen, Pearce John, Gowland Rebecca L
Department of Anthropology, Maynooth University, Maynooth, Ireland.
Cranfield's Forensic Institute, Cranfield University, Bedford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2025 Apr 23;20(4):e0319847. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319847. eCollection 2025.
The spectacle of Roman gladiatorial combat captures the public imagination and elicits significant scholarly interest. Skeletal evidence associated with gladiatorial combat is rare, with most evidence deriving from written or visual sources. A single skeleton from a Roman cemetery outside of York where gladiators arguably were buried presented with unusual lesions. Investigation, including comparative work from modern zoological institutions, has demonstrated that these marks originate from large cat scavenging. Thus, we present the first physical evidence for human-animal gladiatorial combat from the Roman period seen anywhere in Europe.
罗马角斗士战斗的场景激发了公众的想象力,并引发了学术界的浓厚兴趣。与角斗士战斗相关的骨骼证据很少见,大多数证据来自书面或视觉资料。在约克城外一个罗马墓地发现的一具单独的骨骼,据说这里埋葬着角斗士,该骨骼呈现出不寻常的损伤。包括来自现代动物学机构的比较研究在内的调查表明,这些痕迹源于大型猫科动物的 scavenging(此处原文scavenging含义不明,推测可能是“啃食”之类的意思,根据上下文灵活调整为“啃咬”)。因此,我们提供了欧洲任何地方所见的罗马时期人与动物角斗士战斗的首个实物证据。