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Many popular ideas about the Roman arena were formed in the nineteenth century from popular images and accounts . The influential artist Jean Léon Gérôme used genuine gladiatorial art and equipment from Pompeii as models for his paintings of ancient Rome and the arena , but he also invented freely in dramatizing his scenes . Movies from Quo Vadis to Gladiator have drawn on such works to ____________________ a world of strangely armed gladiators , Christians ____________________ awaiting attack by lions , and " thumbs down " death - gestures by emperors and ____________________ crowds . Actual Roman images of the arena are quite different : crowds and emperors are rarely shown , we are not sure which direction the thumb actually pointed in the famous death gesture , and victims of attack by big cats were certainly neither ____________________ nor ____________________ . The Romans glorified the ____________________ shown in the arena , but ____________________ the events and degraded the participants . Mosaic pictures of executions and combats , ____________________ violent to our eyes , were displayed in the public rooms and even dining rooms in the homes of wealthy Romans . How can the viewer today possibly understand such images ? Until fairly recently , modern authors writing about the arena minimized its significance and ____________________ the ____________________ violence as a ____________________ to Roman history . The ____________________ was also to view the events through our own eyes and to see them as ____________________ or horrifying , although to most Romans ____________________ with victims of the arena was ____________________ . In the past few decades , however , ____________________ have started to analyze the complex motivations for deadly public entertainments and for contradictory views of gladiators as ____________________ , yet beloved hero - slaves .