Why were the games important for the Romans? The games were important to the Romans for three main reasons, which will be explored in this essay. Firstly

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Part 2 - Why were the games important for the Romans?

The games were important to the Romans for three main reasons, which will be explored in this essay. Firstly, and most significantly, they provided the Romans with a sense of civilised order and democratic influence. Secondly the games held a mythological importance and religious symbolism which was inherent in society. Finally, the games reinforced already strong Roman values and morals. Each of these elements served to make the games vital to Roman society and culture.

When the democratic system was altered to an imperial one, the emperors needed a way to appease the people, although they had lost the right to vote. The games fulfilled this role. To the Romans, the amphitheatre was a place of order, a triumph over chaos and lawlessness. They could communicate their feelings, and as the Emperor attended these games, they had the opportunity to voice their opinions directly to him. Occasionally it might be complaints about the cost of wheat, or calling for the removal of an unpopular official. The security of the crowd facilitated this, and the impression of direct communication was perhaps of more importance than the actual communication. The arena was a place of justice, where people saw criminals executed and social order established, and Romans had an interactive part to play;
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"The spectators demand that the slayer shall face the man who is to slay him in his turn; and they always reserve the latest conqueror for another butchering. The outcome of every fight is death," Seneca (Epistle VII).

To the people, it was an actual and symbolic restitution of a society in peril, civilization triumphed over barbarians, and wild beasts. Spectators could virtually decide on the fate of gladiators in the arena, and it was a foolhardy Emperor who ignored the wishes of the people;

"As patron of the games and the most conspicuous member there, ...

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