Colosseum Marble Seat

This stone has also been used as a seat for the first 3 rows those reserved for the social class most.
Colosseum marble seat. Lime was used as binder for the cement by adding water. Such as the stairs and the marble seats. It was made of limestone which is heated. The design of colosseum was so clever that fifty thousand hurrying people could enter show their entry tickets and be seated in 15 minutes.
The use of marble which came from a monument dedicated to the emperor implies that the batch of capitals had been made at a later date. Elliptical in shape it reaches a height of over 48 mt. Known as the flavian amphitheater the colosseum is the most impressive building of the roman era. The entry tickets told them which entrance to use and where to sit.
Since the games were public spectacles entrance was free. The colosseum or the flavian amphitheatre is one of the most legendary monuments of ancient roman culture. Anfiteatro flavio aɱfiteˈaːtro ˈflaːvjo or colosseo kolosˈsɛːo is an oval amphitheatre in the centre of the city of rome italy built of travertine limestone tuff volcanic rock and brick faced concrete it was the largest amphitheatre. Each arched entrance had a number carved above it.
The colosseum was a stage for gladiatorial battle or a stage for justice where prisoners or criminals were executed in front of the entire rome. Some of the columns are also made of marble. These were constructed in workshops off site and then fitted into the amphitheatre when required. The number was matched to the entry ticket.
The entrances of the cavea were decorated with marble pieces as well as the balustrades. The colosseum was damaged by lightning and earthquakes in medieval times and even more severely by vandalism. Preservation of the colosseum began in earnest in the 19th century with notable efforts led by pius viii and a restoration project was undertaken in the 1990s. The colosseum ˌ k ɒ l ə ˈ s iː ə m kol ə see əm also known as the flavian amphitheatre latin.
Of the marble decorations of the colosseum. The first three marble rows were for the nobles and special guests. However people needed tickets. The first two or three rows of seats the ones reserved for the senators decorations of niches maybe with tympanums and trabeations.
All the marble seats and decorative materials disappeared as the site was treated as little more than a quarry for more than 1 000 years. Marble is used both in decoration and the entrances of the cavea in colosseum.