Vocab 1
Vocab 2
Vocab 3
Misc. 1
Misc. 2
100

What did gladiators do?

Fought each other and wild animals.

100

Naumachina

Floor flooded with water to mock navy battles

100

Circus

An oblong arena

100

What were the years of the Republic?

500BCE-27BCE

100

What were the years of the Empire?

27BCE-476AD—The Empire

200

Coliseum

A famous amphitheater in Rome

200

Closet Dramas

Plays not meant to be performed in front of an audience

200

Where was Circus Maximus and how many people did it hold?

Rome, 180,000

200

What type of events were held in a circus vs. amphitheater?

Circus: Chariot Races

Amphitheatre: Gladiator battles, Naumachina, and wild animal battles

200

Theatres sat how many people?

Between 10,000 and 40,000

300

Mime

Any of the following:

-Female roles were played by women

–Romans were the first to use women on stage

–Actors did not wear masks

–Subjects were drawn from urban life

–Language was frequently indecent

300

Pantomime

Any of the following:

-A silent, interpretive dance similar to mime today

–Performed by a lone actor who played many roles indicated by a mask with a closed mouth

–There was a chorus that narrated the story

–Story lines were serious and drawn from mythology

300

Scaenae frons

Permanent scene house (rather than skene in Greece)

300

Where and when was the first theater built?

Pompei in 75 BCE

300

Romans added what to the theater stage?

Curtains

400

Pulpitum

Stage that was raised 5 feet above the level of the orchestra and reached by staircases

400

Vomitoria

Covered passages into the theatres (similar to Greek paradoi)

400

SURPISE! Not vocab. What was the most popular form of entertainment?

Chariot Races

400

Difference between Greek and Roman comedies

Any of the following:

-Roman tragedies were mostly translations of Greek tragedies. They were not as important to Roman theatre history as comedy was

In Roman:

–The chorus was abandoned

–The musical elements associated with the chorus were scattered throughout the play

–All of the action took place on the street

–The plays dealt with affairs of the well-to-do middle class and every day domestic affairs

400

Difference between Greek and Roman masks

Any of the following:

-Masks for tragedy were greatly exaggerated (as opposed to those from Greek comedies)

-Some masks were designed with one cheerful and one serious side as a way of indicating a character’s change in mood without a change of masks

500

Auleum

-Ceiling called that jutted out over the stage. It did not cover the audience or the orchestra

500

fabula Atellana

Any of the following:

-stock characters (characters that represent a stereotyped role—the beggar, the miser, etc—and remained the same from theatre to theatre

-Music and dance

-Emphasized buffoonery, trickery and cheating

-Rural settings

-Short farces (slapstick comedy) that became popular around the 1st century BCE

500

ludi Romani

Roman Festivals

500

Roman Costumes

Any of the following:

-Everyday dress.  If it was a Greek comedy, Greek costumes were worn (chiton, kothornos, onkos).  If it was a Roman comedy, Roman costumes were worn

-Roman dress was typically a toga—actually a cloak

500

3 Roman Playwrites and 3 Roman plays

Playwrites: Plautus, Terence, Seneca

Plays: The Trojan Women, The Pot of Gold, The Brothers