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Roman spectators watched chariot races in a circus. Circus in Roman times meant racecourse, it did not have the same meaning as today's word, circus. In the city of Rome itself, the Ciurcus Maximus was the main racecourse.
Yes. When people say "Glutes" it is just a shortened version for Gluteus Maximus which is the 3 muscles that make up your buttocks.
Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.Anyone who wanted went to a circus. Remember, in Roman times a circus was not the same as our present day circus. In ancient Rome a circus was a racetrack. People went there to see the chariot races.
The temperature in the Colosseum was the same as the outdoors temperature. It did not have a roof.
Yes and no. An amphitheater is an oval or circular building with rows of seats for spectators. It's usually used for sporting events, but concerts, expos of all types can be held in one. The Colosseum therefore is an amphitheater. However, there is only one Colosseum and it is in Rome. "Colosseum" is a nickname for the Flavian amphitheater. However many cities name their sporting arenas or expo halls "The Colosseum" for their own purposes, even though it is technically a misnomer.
The circus was in town at the same time the duke and king were planning to put on their show.
Michaelangelo is from Rome, the Colosseum, the Parthenon, the Leaning Tower of Pisa.. that's all i can think of, im trying to figure out the same thing
Nothing. They are both the same thing. The Amphitheatrum Flavium is Latin for the Flavian Amphitheatre, and Westerners renamed this as the Great Colosseum.
No, chariot races were held at Rome in a circus. In the eastern part of the empire they were held in a hippodrome---same thing, different name for the racecourse.
Alliteration is a literary (or "rhetorical") technique that strings a series of words who's initial syllable sounds the same. (fun fact: "syllable sounds the same" is a good example of this technique) To create an alliterative phrase with "circus" you need words that have the same first syllable sound. An example would be: Silly Sally saw a super circus.
It will greatly depend on the circus itself, but in most cases they have to be cruel to train them, and nice to sustain them at the same time.
They're not. A circus generally has animals, while a carnival is a smaller version without animals and more games and food.