Roman Entertainment-Gladiators By Cailin and Brendan


Roman gladiators were people that fought animals like a bear , lion and even a crocodile .Gladiators were slaves although they did not look like slaves .They often had a vote on if the loser died and often they did die.
Sometimes they would flood the place so they could bring in the crocodiles.
The place is called an arena, that place was massive .

Roman Toys By Brooke and Caitlin.

The romans also had toys like us, but they made them differently like knuckle bone where you have bones on your palm and then you throw them up and try catch them on the other side of your hand. They had yo yo’s as well as us but they made them of wood. Romans skipped like us with skipping ropes but the ones we use are made of plastic and there’s is made of rope. They also play board games and one of the games is called rota and it is like three in a row.

Roman Entertainment-gladiators by Hugh+ Thomas!!!

The romans liked to watch gladiators for entertainment.

Gladiators were people who fought wild animals chained to stumps of wood and other gladiators but sometimes slaves. The place that gladiators fought was called an Erna but the huge one in Rome was called the coliseum. It was very dangerous because the animals were very really quite fierce. They fought tigers, lions and bears. It was very risky being a gladiator and often ended in death.

Outdoor Art Gallery

P123 are still enjoying spending time in the woodlands (in all weathers!) and decided to make pictures of living things from things we found. Hope you can easily see the snail, the deciduous tree, the evergreen tree, the dragonfly and the human face!

Eddleston VS Halyrude

Yesterday on the 20th we played a football match against Halyrude it was so much fun and we won 11-5. There was a lot of support for both teams. Thank you to everyone who supported us. These are the people that were playing on our team JH, NG, JM, CW, JS, MM, RM, CT, RM, LF. We could not have done it with out our coach Davie. Thank you for the support.
Jonathon and Nathan