
thumb|right|A retiarius stabs at a secutor with his [[trident in this mosaic from the villa at Nennig, c. 2nd–3rd century CE.]]
thumb|right|A retiarius stabs at a secutor with his [[trident in this mosaic from the villa at Nennig, c. 2nd–3rd century CE.]]
A retiarius (plural retiarii; literally, "net-man" in Latin) was a Roman gladiator who fought with equipment styled on that of a fisherman: a weighted net (rete (3rd decl.), hence the name), a three-pointed trident (fuscina or tridens), and a dagger (pugio). The retiarius was lightly armoured, wearing an arm guard (manica) and a shoulder guard (galerus). Typically, his clothing consisted only of a loincloth (subligaculum) held in place by a wide belt, or of a short tunic with light padding. He wore no head protection or footwear.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).