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Authors: Jill Rubalcaba

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At the Circus Maximus in Rome, games always ended in death—death for the animals, death for the gladiators, death for the entertainers. That such depravity was considered entertaining must have sickened outsiders like Damon and Artemas. Many historians now attribute the Romans' lust for these excessively violent spectacles to insanity caused by lead poisoning. The Romans drank from goblets made of a metal alloy that contained lead.

The games at the Circus Maximus usually were held in the daytime before crowds numbering as many as a quarter million. The most popular event was the chariot race, but as the population developed an increasing delight in gladiator combat, the Romans eventually built the Coliseum. The opening performances there continued nonstop for one hundred days, costing hundreds of gladiators and thousands of animals their lives.

While the Greek games honored the body and the Egyptians abhorred killing for sport, the Romans sought entertainment in bloodlust, accentuating basic cultural differences, deepening mutual distrust, and straining already brittle relationships. Nowhere was the clash of cultures more evident than in the inhuman brutality at the Circus Maximus.

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