Roman Colosseum Awnings
On the one hand the velarium was an ingenious technical solution to a practical problem.
Roman colosseum awnings. They handled huge awnings of cloth equivalent to the size of sails on the present day tall ships and that must have been a great honour. The emperor vespasian who ruled rome from ad 69 to 79 began construction of the citys colosseum and his son the roman emperor. The velarium was the latin name given for the retractable panelled awning at the roman colosseum. Awnings were unfurled from the top story in order to protect the audience from the hot roman.
The colosseum was the scene of thousands of hand to hand combats. Transforming the spot lit arena floor into a. Anfiteatro flavio aɱfiteˈaːtro ˈflaːvjo or colosseo kolosˈsɛːo is an oval amphitheatre in the centre of the city of rome italy built of travertine limestone tuff volcanic rock and brick faced concrete it was the largest. Its purpose was to provide shade for the spectators who watched the gladiatorial games in the blistering sun and heat of ancient rome.
Made of linen shadecloths timber framing iron sockets and rope the system could effectively shade about one third of the arena and seating. But the colosseum s awning was far more than a merely functional piece of engineering. The amphitheatre seated some 50 000 spectators who were shielded from the sun by a massive retractable velarium awning. Colosseum largest and most famous ancient roman amphitheater.
Among the most significant awnings in the ancient world was the velarium the massive complex of retractable shade structures that could be deployed above the seating areas of the roman colosseum. The colosseum provided that kind of entertainment repulsive as it seems. Those sent to rome to work the awning must have been considered very privileged to see the big city and all its attractions. The colosseum or coliseum ˌ k ɒ l ə ˈ s iː ə m kol ə see əm also known as the flavian amphitheatre latin.
Inside the colosseum had seating for more than 50 000 spectators who may have been arranged according to social ranking but were most likely packed into space like sardines in a can judging by evidence from the seating at other roman amphitheaters.