| Cestus
Definition for
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A
cestus
is
an
ancient
battle
glove.
In
effect,
it
is
the
Classic
world's
equivalent
to
brass
knuckles,
sometimes
used
in
pankration.
The first version of a cestus was a series of leather thongs that were tied over the hand. Greeks used them in their hand-to-hand competitions, where only knock out mattered. In Roman Latin, cestus referred to leather that was wrapped or bound over anything, including items like belts. Romans modified the leather thongs by adding metal parts, including studs and iron plates. Some of them had fixed spikes over the knuckles. More dangerous versions of the same weapon included the myrmex or "limb-piercer", and the originally Greek sphairai, thin leather thongs with cutting blades. Cesti were usually used in gladiator bouts where otherwise unarmed combatants - usually slaves - fought to the death. This form of boxing became increasingly bloody until the cestus was officially banned in the 1st century BC. Hand-to-hand fighting was banned in 393 AD. The Boxer of Quirinal in Rome is the most famous statue in bronze. The sitting statue has the cesti on its hands. A
cestus
(plural
cesti)
is a
belt
or
girdle
worn
by
women
in
ancient
Greece.
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