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FM
Former Member
The Colosseum in Rome held a special tour to mark Women's Day on Thursday, exploring the famous monument's feminine angle -- from female gladiators to noblewomen in love with the arena fighters. "From senators' wives to humbler women, many were crazy about gladiators. They were like footballers today," said Lucilla Rossi, a tour guide. She said the problem was that stories about the liaisons between Roman women and gladiators were all contained in chronicles written by men. "They are very critical of the women, their behaviour, their feelings, especially when they behave differently from the stereotype of a Roman matron. "It's not very impartial!" she said. A comedian in the arena below declaimed some scathing verses from the Latin poet Juvenal about women's love for gladiators: "Iron, that's what they love!" Juvenal also spilled the gossip on Eppia, the wife of a senator, saying she abandoned her children and ran off to Egypt with a gladiator even though he had "a broken arm, a big bump on the nose and a rheumy eye."

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