Roman gladiators drank an energy drink of vinegar and ash, according to an anthropological investigation of arena fighter bones.
The study by the Department of Forensic Medicine at the MedUni
Vienna in cooperation with the Department of Anthropology at the
Institute of Forensic Medicine at the University of Bern, examined bones
from a 2nd century gladiator graveyard uncovered in 1993 in the ancient
Roman city of Ephesos, Turkey. At that time, Ephesos was the capital of
the Roman province of Asia and had over 200,000 inhabitants.
It emerged that the diet of the arena fighters was quite different
from the high-protein intake of modern athletes. Indeed, the typical
food eaten by gladiators was wheat, barley and beans.
“Contemporary Roman texts mention that gladiators consumed a
specific diet called ‘gladiatoriam saginam’, which included barley and
bell beans. Their consumption of barley led to the derogatory nickname
‘hordearii’ (barley eaters),” Fabian Kanz, from the Department of
Forensic Medicine at the Medical University of Vienna in Austria, and
colleagues wrote in the journal PLoS One.
Kanz’s team analyzed the skeletal remains of 53 individuals, including 22 gladiators from about 1,800 years ago.
Using spectroscopy, the researchers measured the carbon, nitrogen and
sulfur in the collagen of the bones, as well as the ratio of strontium
(a chemical element that’s found in ash) to calcium.
The tests revealed that all individuals — gladiators and non
gladiators — mostly ate a vegetarian diet, primarily consisting of grain
and meat-free meals, with little sign of dairy products as well.
However, the researchers found a significant difference between gladiators and the normal population.
The amount of strontium measured in the gladiators’ bones revealed
the arena fighters had a higher intake of minerals from a strontium-rich
source of calcium, meaning the plant ash drink mentioned in ancient
texts probably did exist.
“This ash beverage was served after fights and maybe also after training to remedy body pain,” the researchers wrote.
“Things were similar then to what we do today — we take
magnesium and calcium (in the form of effervescent tablets, for example)
following physical exertion,” Fabian Kanz said.
Source
No comments:
Post a Comment