Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Lost mosaic reveals first image of female beast-fighter from the Roman era

Amazing stuff!

"... presents evidence that a 3rd-century Roman mosaic from Reims, which depicts a topless figure with prominent breasts battling a leopard, is actually a visual representation of a Roman female beast-fighter, or venatrix. This contradicts previous research, which read her role as that of an agitator, a clown-like arena staff member whose job was to whip the animals to make them attack during a hunt. ..."

From the abstract:
"Women fighting beasts in arena games are attested by the written sources, but no visual source is known to show their image. It is proposed that a figure in a mosaic found in Reims in 1860 but destroyed in World War I, and largely forgotten since then, depicts one of those women.
Evidence is presented proving that (1) she is a woman – whereas previous researchers only suggested that she might be a woman; and (2) she is a beast-fighter – a huntress, a venatrix – whereas previous researchers have wrongly identified her as an agitator, an inexistent arena role, or a paegniarius, a kind of clown with a whip.
The identification of the sole known visual source depicting a Roman female beasts-huntress alone is very important, but, additionally, since the mosaic dates to the third century, it adds a whole century to the history of those female arena huntresses, since venatrices are supposed to have disappeared soon after AD 100, and to the history of women in the Roman arena, since female gladiators disappeared in AD 200. Thus, she is a female arena fighter (and performer) recorded at a later date."

Lost mosaic reveals first image of female beast-fighter from the Roman era

New Evidence of Women Fighting Beasts in the Roman Arena: The Woman in the Mosaic from Reims (open access, a very long article covering all sorts of aspects)


Figure 1. Mosaic from Reims, third century. Found in Reims in 1860, destroyed in 1917 during WWI. Lost. Drawing from Loriquet 1862: planche XVIII.


Figure 2. The woman. (a) Drawing from Loriquet 1862: planche IX, n° 11. (b) Detail of the breasts.

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