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1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

THE LAST FIGHT IN THE COLISEUM by CHARLOTTE YONGE

1001 Classic Short Stories & Tales

Jon Hagadorn

Fiction, Arts

4.51.2K Ratings

🗓️ 27 March 2026

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"The Last Fight in the Coliseum" — Charlotte Yonge
  Episode Summary
In this episode, we bring you Charlotte Yonge's powerful historical tale "The Last Fight in the Coliseum," a story that blends imagination with the fading echoes of ancient Rome. Set during the final years of the Roman Empire, the narrative follows a young Christian who finds himself thrust into the brutal world of the gladiatorial arena—not as a warrior, but as a witness to the clash between old Rome and the rising Christian faith.
Yonge uses the grandeur and cruelty of the Coliseum to explore themes of courage, conviction, and the moral transformation of a civilization. The story captures the moment when the old pagan world, built on spectacle and violence, begins to crumble, and a new spiritual worldview takes its place.

What the Story Is About
•     A Christian hermit named Telemachus is brought into the Coliseum during one of the last gladiatorial spectacles.
•     Instead of a traditional gladiator's duel, the confrontation becomes a symbolic struggle between the old Roman order and the new Christian faith.
•     Yonge highlights the contrast between physical might and moral courage, showing how one person's steadfastness can echo louder than the roar of the crowd.
•     The story reflects the broader historical shift as Christianity spreads and the gladiatorial games fade into history.

⭐ Fact vs. Fiction
While the characters and specific events in the story are fictional, the historical backdrop is real:
•     By the 4th century, the gladiatorial games were declining due to cost, political instability, and the growing influence of Christianity.
•     Early Christian writers recorded accounts of believers who were executed in the arena for refusing to renounce their faith.
•     The idea of a final symbolic confrontation in the Coliseum is poetic rather than literal, but it reflects the genuine cultural transition taking place in Rome.
Yonge's story is not meant as strict history—it is a moral and emotional portrait of a world in transformation.

⭐ About Charlotte Yonge
Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823–1901) was a prolific Victorian author known for her historical fiction, moral tales, and character‑driven narratives. Deeply influenced by her Anglican faith, she wrote more than 100 works, many of them exploring themes of virtue, sacrifice, and spiritual courage.
Yonge had a gift for taking historical settings and using them to illuminate the human heart. In "The Last Fight in the Coliseum," she blends history with imagination to create a story that is both dramatic and reflective—a reminder of how individual acts of bravery can shape the moral memory of a civilization.

 

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back, everyone to one thousand one classic short stories and tales.

0:17.4

This is your host, John Hagadorn.

0:20.0

I have a terrific story for you today from a writer

0:23.1

named Charlotte Young. She was a Victorian writer with a deep love for history and moral

0:29.4

storytelling, and in this tale, she imagines one of the final symbolic clashes inside the great

0:35.5

arena. The empire is fading.

0:38.9

The old gods are losing their grip,

0:40.9

and a new belief, quiet, peaceful, and unstoppable,

0:44.9

is rising in its place.

0:47.4

The story is called the last fight in the Coliseum.

0:51.8

The story takes us back to ancient Rome, back to the towering arches of the Coliseum,

0:57.2

where crowds once gathered to watch spectacles of blood and bravery.

1:02.5

But this story isn't about gladiators in the usual sense.

1:06.1

It's about something far more powerful.

1:08.7

Faith, courage, and the moment when the old world of Rome

1:12.6

collided with the new world of Christianity. And now our story. A.D. 4-0-4. As the Romans grew

1:23.5

prouder and more fond of pleasure, no one could hope to please them who did not give

1:27.6

them sports and entertainments. When any person wished to be elected to any public office,

1:33.0

it was a matter of course that he should complement his fellow citizens by exhibitions of the kind

1:37.4

they loved. And when the common people were discontented, their cry was that they wanted

1:42.7

Panam-X circuses, bread, and sports, the only things

1:47.9

they cared for.

...

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