Building the Colosseum
(Research Paper)
A Critical insight into the construction techniques used in the building
of the Colosseum
By Taso Bouzinelos
Student ID: 0550991
For AHCL-2206H
Instructor: Dr. James Cook
Date: March 31, 2015
Taso Bouzinelos 1
The Colosseum stands as an architectural achievement of the Flavian
dynasty (69- 96 C.E.). It was the first freestanding amphitheater in Roman
history, something that was never before implemented in amphitheater
construction (Fig. 1). The first Flavian emperor, Vespasian, commissioned the
Colosseum in 70 C.E. with the intent of bolstering his political image. He
incorporated previous architectural elements from the Augustan period to
legitimize his rule as emperor. One great example of this was the Theater of
Marcellus, which Vespasian copied the column styles and incorporated it in the
Colosseum. This was achieved through the use of construction techniques,
which dictated the social hierarchy and performance of this amphitheater. An
element in which the construction techniques used in the Colosseum dictated its
outcome can be seen through an analysis of building materials used in the
construction of the amphitheater. In turn, this had a social/political impact on the
Flavian dynasty. Both aspects of the Colosseum not only provide tremendous
insight into the construction techniques, but they also lay out the template of
propaganda for bolstering the public image of the Flavian emperors.
This can be done by reference to the drainage systems in the Colosseum,
the materials used in its construction and the seating system in the Roman
amphitheater. All of these innovations used in the construction of the Colosseum
increase the reputation of the Flavian emperors. The Flavians can, in turn, use
the Colosseum as a political tool to win the support of the Roman people. The
construction methods used in the Colosseum, such as the drainage systems, the
materials, and the seating system, bolstered the public image of the Flavians.
Taso Bouzinelos 2
The first construction method used in the Colosseum that bolstered the
public image of the Flavians was the drainage systems. In fact, this element of
the Colosseum led to its success. During the amphitheater’s construction, the
major problem its Roman engineers faced was to revert Nero’s lake into more
suitable ground for building the Colosseum.1 To solve this problem, the engineers
developed a drainage system, which directed water along the south of the site.
This joined with the main drainage system that carried Rome’s effluent under the
streets into the River Tiber.2 For the most part, this system was efficient. The
function of the drainage system in the Colosseum made it suitable for workers to
build on top of it.
Aside from this, implementing a drainage system in the Colosseum proves
that it could host naumachiae or naval battles. The arena itself had no
subterranean structure when it was opened. This made it possible to flood it and
allow the Flavians to stage naval battles.3 Large basins of water were dug in the
arena to accommodate this. These basins were covered for normal
performances, but could be made available when required for special events in
the Colosseum. For instance, the hunting of aquatic creatures such as crocodiles
and hippopotamuses was made possible through this system.4 To support this
claim, the Roman historian, Suetonius, mentions that Titus, the eldest son of
Vespasian, staged a naumachiae on the old artificial lake of Nero’s Domus Aurea
during the inauguration of the Colosseum in 80 C.E. (Suet. Tit. 7.). This made it
1
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 142.
2
Connolly 2003, 39.
3
Kohne, Ewigledben, and Jackson 2000, 25.
4
Kohne, Ewigledben, and Jackson 2000, 34.
Taso Bouzinelos 3
possible for the Flavian emperors to stage naumachiae and essentially increase
their public image through the presentation of naval battles. Although, in order to
accomplish this feat of ingenuity, the Colosseum needed an effective drainage
system. Evidence for this drainage system is evident through the remains of lead
pipes,5 however, most of the lead pipes were stripped out during the Middle
Ages.6 Conduits ran round the outside of the building.7 In fact, four large water
conduits to a main drainage system – built on the outside to control the flow of
water coming out of the Colosseum. This consisted of 3000 meters of water
channels which included inflow and outflow pipes. These lead pipes were
essential for the drainage systems of the Colosseum. They supplied the cisterns
required for an internal water supply, which was necessary to host the
naumachiae.8
The results of the excavations conducted from 1973 to 1977 were
particularly interesting. It provided the collecting drains used in the Colosseum
needed to stage naval battles or hunting expeditions.9 In particular,
archaeologists identified two strata in the southern collecting drain put down
under the last Flavian emperor, Domitian (r. 81-96 C.E.). The first layer produced
a deposit of silty clay; the second contained chiefly construction materials used to
build the Colosseum.10 This is significant for understanding the impact the
drainage systems had on the preservation of the Colosseum.
5
Rea 2000, 99.
6
Connolly 2003, 158.
7
Connolly 2003, 39.
8
Connolly 2003, 40.
9
Rea 2000, 99.
10
Rea 2000, 99.
Taso Bouzinelos 4
Along with this, the success of the drainage systems proves not only that
the Colosseum was built on a drained lake, but also demonstrates that the
drainage systems used in the Colosseum were effective. In the 19th century,
Italian archaeologist, Antonio Nibby, did some excavations of the drainage
system in the Colosseum. In his excavations, Nibby found that the drainage
system was still intact and functional. In fact, he even re-used the ancient
drainage structures in order to continue excavations of the piazza or platform in
the Colosseum.11 The preservation of these drainage systems used in the
Colosseum is a testament to ever-growing image of the Flavians through the
construction of drainage systems in the Colosseum.
The second construction technique used in the construction of the
Colosseum that bolstered the public image of the Flavian emperors is the
foundation materials. In fact, the materials used in the construction of the
Colosseum were essential for conveying Flavian propaganda. The materials
used in the Colosseum consisted of travertine, tufa, bricks and concrete, all of
which are local to Italian Peninsula. However, the amount materials used in the
construction of the Colosseum is staggering. In the entire monument, the
Colosseum consisted of 100,000 cubic meters of hard travertine limestone, 300
tones of iron clamps, 250,000 cubic meters of mortar and over a million bricks. 12
This is a tremendous amount of building materials used for one building, let alone
an amphitheater. Besides these materials, it is important to note how the
Colosseum was constructed. One of the major elements of the Colosseum was
11
Schingo 2000, 73-74.
12
Connolly 2003, 41.
Taso Bouzinelos 5
the wooden platform in which the gladiators would fight against each other. No
remains of the arena floor itself survive in the archaeological record since it was
completely made of wood,13 although there is some evidence of what it could
have looked like. First, the wooden construction of the arena was lain directly on
the walls of tufa blocks.14 The wooden structure was then connected between
purlin and tuff wall by means of the dovetailed woods. A piece of wood in the
form of a double dovetail could have been inserted into the voids to establish the
connection between the stonewalls and the purlins. This type of construction
provided stability and strength for the rigorous events being performed on the
wooden platform of the Colosseum.
On top of this, brick arches were positioned directly under the wooden
platform to provide more support.15 This system of brick arches also created a
network of tunnels (hypogea) underneath the seating area (cavea), which was
used for access to the stadium and for storage (Fig. 2).16 This brick network of
tunneling is new and innovative in Roman amphitheater construction. Prior to the
Colosseum, stone amphitheaters of the Republican period did not have room for
storage or housing exotic animals in preparation for major spectacle events.
Compared to the Colosseum, Roman architects did not use mortar or concrete to
build Republican amphitheaters, but based their construction on the topography
of the land. In other words, Republican amphitheaters that were made of stone
were built into hills or man-made mounds. With the introduction of concrete and
13
Beste 2000, 83.
14
Beste 2000, 82.
15
Beste 2000, 87.
16
Connolly 2003, 37.
Taso Bouzinelos 6
mortar, the architects of the Colosseum were able to build a freestanding
amphitheater that was able to facilitate a complex network of tunnels for
movement and storage. This innovation alone bolstered the public image of the
Flavian emperors, as the Colosseum could house more animals and objects.
This means more spectacles can be performed at the Colosseum.
Besides this, the brick arches were framed with engaged columns, half
columns carved into the travertine blocks surmounted with an architrave and
cornice. This created the effect of a combined colonnade and arcade.17 The
result was a network of rib vaults and relieving arches that channeled the load of
the brick wall away from the crown to the ribs and then onto the tufa walls. 18 Ribs
built entirely of radially-laid bipedales are a full bay wide and placed at intervals
that correspond to stairs located above at Level III. The rib was evidently meant
to provide further protection against the added weight of the stair, and the device
of leaving a section open may have aided somehow in the construction
process.19 The four at the main axes were differentiated from the other seventy-
six and it is generally assumed that these were used by the performers and the
emperor and his party or by the officials presenting the show.20 On top of this, an
underground passage linked it directly to the arena in the amphitheater, so that
the gladiators could reach the scene of their combat without being seen by the
public (Fig. 3).21 To understand this, it is important to talk about the foundations
of the cavea. It took the form of an oval ring consisting of two parts: lower
17
Connolly 2003, 50.
18
Lancaster 2005, 78.
19
Lancaster 2005, 79.
20
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 128.
21
Kohne, Ewigledben, and Jackson 2000, 33.
Taso Bouzinelos 7
construction is constructed of opus caementicium with caementa of leucititic lava,
the heaviest of the local volcanic stones; was built in a trench dug into the
underlying alluvium and bedrock. The upper foundation contains drainage
channels as well as galleries and service-rooms to house the various mechanical
devices employed during the spectacles in the Colosseum.
Another important element in this construction is concrete. This material
was laid systematically in layers that correspond to the floor levels of the galleries
and drains.22 It even was laid on top of tufa and travertine blocks in both the
vertical and horizontal joints to provide more support for the entire foundation. 23
This provides archaeologists with much information on the construction process
that is complementary in relation to stonewalls and arches.24 The use of concrete
in these structures makes it not only stronger, but more durable and secure when
Roman builders continued building on top of it. These are the main reasons of
why foundation materials used in the construction of the Colosseum bolstered
the public image of the Flavian emperors.
The third construction method used in the Colosseum that bolstered the
public image of the Flavian emperors was the seating system (Fig. ). The seating
system was primarily arranged according to a Roman’s social status. The first
section of this seating system was known as the ima cavea.25 This was strictly
reserved for Roman senators and members of the old Roman aristocracy. It
provided an excellent view of the spectacles that occurred in the Colosseum and
22
Lancaster 2005, 60.
23
Lancaster 2005, 64-65.
24
Lancaster 2005, 73.
25
Connolly 2003, 53.
Taso Bouzinelos 8
was in close proximity to the podium. This is where the emperor and the royal
family would sit and ‘conduct’ the games for the entertainment of the Roman
people. The second section of the Colosseum was known as the maenianum
primum, which consisted of members from the equestrian class. The second
level had a much bigger capacity than the first and this mainly consisted of
members from the Roman military. In fact, they were becoming more involved in
Roman politics with the advent of the Colosseum. By looking at this perspective,
it would make sense that Vespasian would make this section of the Colosseum
larger than the first. This is because Vespasian himself was a general in the
Roman army and it was his soldiers who elected him to power. It would be right
of him to appreciate them in this way, which in turn bolsters the public image of
the Flavian dynasty.
Above this is the third level, which was known as maenianum secundum
imum. This is where the ordinary (male) citizens sat here. The fourth level and
final level of the seating system used in the Colosseum was known as the
maenianum secundum summum.26 This is where the poor, women and slaves
would sit when attending the Colosseum. This type of social hierarchy in the
Colosseum can be also seen in relation to the three different types of columns on
each level. The bottom storey had columns of the Doric order, the second of the
Ionic order and the third of the Corinthian order. The Doric order is reminiscent of
Classical Greece, in which the aristocracy was trying to emulate in terms of
culture and language. In other words, the Roman aristocracy were “Phil-
Hellenes” or lovers of Greek things. The Ionic order is associated with the East
26
Connolly 2003, 53.
Taso Bouzinelos 9
and the Corinthian order is strongly associated with Rome. The decoration of the
Colosseum’s façade represents an important innovation in amphitheater
architecture.27 The Colosseum was the first amphitheater that we know to have
used Greek architectural orders for its façade.28 These are the ways in which the
seating system bolstered the public image of the Flavian emperors.
All of these construction techniques used in the Colosseum led to a
bolstering public image among the Flavian emperors. Although, it is important to
understand the implications for this. When Vespasian embarked on his grand
plan for the Colosseum in 70C.E., he was trying to do something that no one had
ever attempted before. Vespasian wanted to build an all-purpose, permanent,
stone amphitheater that would be the greatest entertainment venue in the
world.29 He wanted to diminish Nero’s memory (damnatio memoriae) from
Roman history and place a monument in its place. This was the Colosseum. It
was constructed on the atrium of Nero’s dismantled Domus Aurea or Golden
House, and was dedicated as a victory monument of the Roman-Jewish Wars.30
This was not the only justification for Vespasian building an amphitheater on top
of Nero’s Domus Aurea. Vespasian claims that the construction of the
Colosseum was an ‘Augustan’ project, for he had learned that that Augustus
wished to erect such an amphitheater in the center of the city (Suet. Vesp.9.1).
This is apparent when looking at Flavians coins (Fig. 5) and relief from the Tomb
of the Haterii (Fig. 6), which depicts a triumphal quadrigae over the entrances to
27
Welch 2007, 138.
28
Welch 2007, 138-139.
29
Connolly 2003, 31.
30
Elkins 2014, 73.
Taso Bouzinelos 10
viewing platforms on the short axis.31 Most of the Colosseum sestertii of Titus and
all those of Domitian show the Colosseum, and the porticus of the Baths of Titus,
all symbols of Flavian achievement.32 The fact that the pulvinaria coin types of
Titus and Domitian represent chairs, thrones, naturally leads to the assumption
that the Colosseum was the venue for the funerary games of Vespasian, Titus
and later emperors.33
From this, the Colosseum puts the world on display, so too is the world
already a thing made for spectacular consumption.34 Originally, it was
Vespasian’s first task was to reconstruct the ceremonial center of Rome (Fig. 7),
to stamp his own identity on the city and to wipe away the memory of Nero. 35 It
was a brilliantly calculated political gesture to obliterate Nero’s memory with a
monument to public entertainment. In building, the Colosseum, Vespasian was
dramatically making the point that the profits of Roman military success belonged
to the common people of Rome.36 The Roman Colosseum was the fruit of Roman
victory over the Jews.37 Monarchy was so firmly entrenched that emperors could
readily risk, even periodically enjoy, confronting their citizen-subjects
collectively.38 The celebration of the amphitheater and its games in poetry and
the application of Greek architectural orders and statues to the façade of the
Colosseum both reflect a shift in the amphitheater’s status during the mid- to later
31
Elkins 2014, 75.
32
Elkins 2014, 93.
33
Elkins 2014, 104-5.
34
Gunderson 2003, 647.
35
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 28.
36
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 32.
37
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 34.
38
Hopkins and Beard 2005, 40.
Taso Bouzinelos 11
first century AD. The games were consciously embraced as an integral part of
the Roman cultural self-image.39 The new building type and its games were an
important component of the Roman public self-image which, during the republic,
was largely military.40 The exceptional nature of this gift to the Roman people can
also be seen in another attempt to give its inauguration permanence.41 These are
the main reasons in which the construction methods used in the Colosseum
bolster the public of the Flavians.
The Colosseum stands as an architectural achievement of the Flavian
dynasty (69- 96 C.E.). It was the first freestanding amphitheater in Roman
history, something that was never implemented in amphitheater construction
before. The first Flavian emperor, Vespasian, commissioned the Colosseum in
70 C.E. Vespasian incorporated previous architectural elements from the
Augustan period to legitimize his rule as emperor, most notably, the Theater of
Marcellus. This was achieved through the use of construction techniques, which
dictated the social hierarchy and performance of this amphitheater. An element in
which the construction techniques used in the Colosseum dictated its outcome
can be seen through an analysis of materials used to construct the amphitheater
and its social/political impact on the Flavian dynasty. Both aspects of the
Colosseum not only provide tremendous insight into the construction techniques,
but they also lay out the template of propaganda for bolstering the public image
of the Flavian emperors.
39
Welch 1991, 273.
40
Welch 1991, 277.
41
Wiedemann 1992, 18.
Taso Bouzinelos 12
This can be done by reference to the drainage systems in the Colosseum,
the materials used in its construction and the seating system. All of these
innovations increase the reputation of the Flavian emperors. They, in turn, can
use the Colosseum as a political tool to win the support of the Roman people.
The construction methods used in the Colosseum such as the drainage systems,
the materials, and the seating system bolstered the public image of the Flavians.
Taso Bouzinelos 13
Illustrations
Figure 1. An artist’s reconstruction of how the Colosseum would have looked like
in antiquity (Dartmouth College 2013).
Taso Bouzinelos 14
Figure 2. A western view of the underground chambers (hypogea) in the
Colosseum, ca. late 1st century C.E. (Walks of Italy 2011).
Taso Bouzinelos 15
Taso Bouzinelos 16
Figure 3. A floor plan of the major entrances and passageways in the Colosseum
(Baskets Life Travel 2014).
Figure 4. A reconstructed drawing of the seating system used in the Colosseum
when it was operational (Philip Smith 2004).
Taso Bouzinelos 17
Figure 5. (Left) Sestertius of Titus depicting the Colosseum flanked by the Meta
Sudans and porticus of the Baths of Titus, (Right) Titus surrounded by the spoils
of war, ca. 80-81C.E. (Jeff Starck 2014).
Taso Bouzinelos 18
Figure 6. A tomb relief from the Tomb of the Haterii depicting the architectural
and figural elements that decorated the Colosseum, ca. 100-110 C.E. (Andrea
Pepe 1998-2012)
Taso Bouzinelos 19
Figure 7. A map depicting most of the important sites of Roman architecture
situated in Rome; the Colosseum is situated between the Baths of Trajan and the
Palace of Augustus (W.W. Norton 2010).
Taso Bouzinelos 20
Sources for Illustrations
Baskets Life Travel. 2014. “10 things to show your kids at the Roman
Colosseum,” Baskets Life Travel. Accessed on March 25, 2015.
http://basketslifetravel.com/10-things-to-show-your-kids-at-the-roman-
collosseum/
Dartmouth College. 2013. “Rome FSP 2013,” Dartmouth College. Accessed on
February 12, 2015. https://romefsp2013.wordpress.com/page/2/
Pepe, Andrea. 1998-2012. “Imago,” The Colosseum. Accessed on March 25,
2015. http://www.the-colosseum.net/NEWTEST/en/architecture/imago_en.htm
Smith, Philip. 2004. “Amphitheatrum,” University of Chicago. Accessed on March
25, 2015. http://www.istrianet.org/istria/architecture/urban/amphitheatrum.htm
Starck, Jeff. 2014. “Roman coin rarity in Chicago auction celebrates Colosseum,”
Coin World. Accessed March 25, 2015. http://www.coinworld.com/news/roman-
coin-rarity-in-chicago-auction-celebrates-colosseum.html
Walks of Italy. 2011. “Colosseum underground tours extend opening dates &
allows independent visits,” Walks of Italy. Accessed on March 25, 2015.
https://www.walksofitaly.com/blog/rome/colosseum-underground-opening-dates-
tours-rome-hypogeum
W.W. Norton & Company. 2010. “The Civilization of Ancient Rome,” W.W. Norton
& Company. Accessed on February 12, 2015.
http://www.wwnorton.com/college/history/western-civilization17/ch/05/visual-
evidence.aspx
Taso Bouzinelos 21
Primary Sources
Suetonius. The Twelve Caesars, transl. R. Graves (Harmondsworth, UK:
Penguin Books, 1957, repr. 1967).
Secondary Sources
Beste, H.J. 2000. “The construction and phases of development of the wooden
arena flooring of the Colosseum,” Journal of Roman Archaeology 13, 79-92.
Connolly, P. 2003. Colosseum (London, UK: BBC Books).
Elkins, N.T. 2014. “The Procession and Placement of Imperial Cult Images in the
Colosseum,” Papers of the British School at Rome 82, 73-107.
Gunderson, E. 2003. “The Flavian Amphitheater all the world as stage,” in
Flavian Rome: Culture, Image, Text, eds. A.J. Boyle and W.J. Dominik. (Leiden,
NL: Koniniklijike Brill), 637-658.
Hopkins, K. and M. Beard. 2005. The Colosseum (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press).
Kohne, E., C. Ewigledben, and R. Jackson, eds. 2000. Gladiators and Caesars:
The Power of Spectacle in Ancient Rome (Berkley, University of California
Press).
Lancaster, L.C. 2005. “The process of building the Colosseum: the site, materials
and construction techniques,” Journal of Roman Archaeology 18, 57-82.
Rea, R. 2000. “Studying the valley of the Colosseum (1970-2000): achievements
and prospects,” Journal of Roman Archaeology 13, 93-103.
Schingo, G. 2000. “A history of earlier excavations in the arena,” Journal of
Roman Archaeology 13, 69-78.
Welch, K.E. 2007. The Roman Amphitheatre: From its Origins to the Colosseum
(New York: Cambridge University Press).
Welch, K.E. 1991. “Roman amphitheaters revived,” JRA 4, 272-81.
Wiedemann, T. 1992. Emperors and Gladiators (London and New York,
Routledge).