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Third Servile War

The Third Servile War, also called the Gladiator War and the War of Spartacus by Plutarch, was the last in a series of slave rebellions against the Roman Republic known as the Servile Wars. This third rebellion was the only one that directly threatened the Roman heartland of Italy. It was particularly alarming to Rome because its military seemed powerless to suppress it.

Third Servile War
Part of the Servile Wars

Italy and surrounding territory, 218 BC
Date73–71 BC
Location
Result Roman victory
Belligerents
Rebel slaves Roman Republic
Commanders and leaders
Strength
120,000 escaped slaves and gladiators, including non-combatants; total number of combatants unknown
Total:
  • 32,000–48,000 infantry + auxiliaries
  • 12,000 garrison troops (composition unknown)
Casualties and losses
41,000 killed
  • 30,000 killed by Gellius
  • 6,000 crucified by Crassus
  • 5,000 crucified by Pompey
[citation needed]
~20,000 killed

The revolt began in 73 BC, with the escape of around 70 slave gladiators from a gladiator school in Capua. They easily defeated the small Roman force sent to recapture them, and within two years, they had been joined by some 120,000 men, women, and children. The able-bodied adults of this large group were a surprisingly effective armed force that repeatedly showed they could withstand or defeat the Roman military, from the local Campanian patrols to the Roman militia and even to trained Roman legions under consular command. This army of slaves roamed across Italy, raiding estates and towns with relative impunity, sometimes dividing into separate but connected bands with several leaders, including the famous former gladiator Spartacus.

The Roman Senate grew increasingly alarmed at the slave-army's depredations and continued military successes. Eventually Rome fielded an army of eight legions under the harsh but effective leadership of Marcus Licinius Crassus that destroyed the army of slaves in 71 BC. This happened after a long and bitter fighting retreat before the legions of Crassus and after the rebels realized that the legions of Pompey and Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus were moving in to entrap them. The armies of Spartacus launched their full strength against Crassus's legions and were utterly defeated. Of the survivors, some 6,000 were crucified along the Appian Way.

Plutarch's account of the revolt suggests that the slaves simply wished to escape to freedom and leave Roman territory by way of Cisalpine Gaul. Appian and Florus describe the revolt as a civil war in which the slaves intended to capture the city of Rome. The Third Servile War had significant and far-reaching effects on Rome's broader history. Pompey and Crassus exploited their successes to further their political careers, using their public acclaim and the implied threat of their legions to sway the consular elections of 70 BC in their favor. Their actions as consuls greatly furthered the subversion of Roman political institutions and contributed to the transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire.

Background edit

To varying degrees throughout Roman history, the existence of a pool of inexpensive labor in the form of slaves was an important factor in the economy. Slaves were acquired for the Roman workforce through a variety of means, including purchase from foreign merchants and the enslavement of foreign populations through military conquest.[1] With Rome's heavy involvement in wars of conquest in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC, from tens to hundreds of thousands of slaves at a time were imported into the Roman economy from various European and Mediterranean acquisitions.[2] While there was limited use for slaves as servants, craftsmen, and personal attendants, vast numbers of slaves worked in mines and on the agricultural lands of Sicily and southern Italy.[3]

For the most part, slaves were treated harshly and oppressively during the Roman republican period. Under Republican law, a slave was property, not a person. Owners could abuse, injure or even kill their own slaves without legal consequence. While there were many grades and types of slaves, the lowest—and most numerous—grades who worked in the fields and mines were subject to a life of hard physical labor.[4]

The large size and oppressive treatment of the slave population led to rebellions. In 135 BC and 104 BC, the First and Second Servile Wars erupted in Sicily, where small bands of rebels found tens of thousands of willing followers wishing to escape the oppressive life of a Roman slave. While these were considered serious civil disturbances by the Roman Senate, taking years and direct military intervention to quell, they were never considered a serious threat to the Republic. The Roman heartland had never seen a slave uprising, nor had slaves ever been seen as a potential threat to the city of Rome. This changed with the Third Servile War.

Beginning of the revolt (73 BC) edit

Capuan revolt edit

 
The Gladiator Mosaic at the Galleria Borghese

In the Roman Republic of the 1st century BC, gladiatorial games were one of the more popular forms of entertainment. In order to supply gladiators for the contests, several training schools, or ludi, were established throughout Italy.[5] In these schools, prisoners of war and condemned criminals—who were considered slaves—were taught the skills required to fight in gladiatorial games.[6] In 73 BC, a group of some 200 gladiators in the Capuan school owned by Lentulus Batiatus plotted an escape. When their plot was betrayed, a force of about 70 men seized kitchen implements ("choppers and spits"), fought their way free from the school, and seized several wagons of gladiatorial weapons and armor.[7]

Once free, the escaped gladiators chose leaders from their number, selecting two Gallic slaves—Crixus and Oenomaus—and Spartacus, who was said either to be a Thracian auxiliary from the Roman legions later condemned to slavery, or a captive taken by the legions.[8] There is some question as to Spartacus's nationality. A Thraex was a type of gladiator in Rome, so "Thracian" may simply refer to the style of gladiatorial combat in which he was trained.[9] On the other hand, names nearly identical to Spartacus were recorded among five out of twenty Thracian Odrysae rulers of Bosporan kingdom beginning with Spartokos I the founder of the Spartocid dynasty. The name came from the Thracian words *sparas "spear, lance" and *takos "famous" and thus meant "renowned by the spear".[10][11]

These escaped slaves were able to defeat a small force of troops sent after them from Capua, and equip themselves with captured military equipment as well as their gladiatorial weapons.[12] Sources are somewhat contradictory on the order of events immediately following the escape, but they generally agree that this band of escaped gladiators plundered the region surrounding Capua, recruited many other slaves into their ranks, and eventually retired to a more defensible position on Mount Vesuvius.[13]

Defeat of the praetorian armies edit

 
Initial movements of Roman (red) and Slave (blue) forces from the Capuan revolt to the end of winter 73–72 BC. Insert: Vesuvius area.

As the revolt and raids were occurring in Campania, which was a vacation region of the rich and influential in Rome, and the location of many estates, the revolt quickly came to the attention of Roman authorities. They initially viewed the revolt more as a major crime wave than an armed rebellion.

However, later that year, Rome dispatched a military force under praetorian authority to put down the rebellion.[14] A Roman praetor, Gaius Claudius Glaber, gathered a force of 3,000 men, not regular legions, but a militia "picked up in haste and at random, for the Romans did not consider this a war yet, but a raid, something like an attack of robbery."[15] Glaber's forces besieged the slaves on Mount Vesuvius, blocking the only known way down the mountain. With the slaves thus contained, Glaber was content to wait until starvation forced the slaves to surrender.

While the slaves lacked military training, Spartacus' forces displayed ingenuity in their use of available local tools, and in their use of clever, unorthodox tactics when facing the disciplined Roman infantry.[16] In response to Glaber's siege, Spartacus' men made ropes and ladders from vines and trees growing on the slopes of Vesuvius and used them to rappel down the cliffs on the side of the mountain opposite Glaber's forces. They moved around the base of Vesuvius, outflanked the army, and annihilated Glaber's men.[17]

A second expedition, under the praetor Publius Varinius, was then dispatched against Spartacus. For some reason, Varinius seems to have split his forces under the command of his subordinates Furius and Cossinius. Plutarch mentions that Furius commanded some 2,000 men, but neither the strength of the remaining forces, nor whether the expedition was composed of militia or legions, appears to be known. These forces were also defeated by the army of escaped slaves: Cossinius was killed, Varinius was nearly captured, and the equipment of the armies was seized by the slaves.[18]

With these victories, more and more slaves flocked to the Spartacan forces, as did "many of the herdsmen and shepherds of the region", swelling their ranks to some 70,000.[19] The rebel slaves spent the winter of 73–72 BC training, arming and equipping their new recruits, and expanding their raiding territory to include the towns of Nola, Nuceria, Thurii and Metapontum.[20]

The victories of the rebel slaves did not come without a cost. At some time during these events, one of their leaders, Oenomaus, was lost—presumably in battle—and is not mentioned further in the histories.[21]

Motivation and leadership of the escaped slaves edit

 
Spartacus, by Denis Foyatier, c. 1830, displayed at the Louvre. An example of a modern heroic depiction of Spartacus.

By the end of 73 BC, Spartacus and Crixus were in command of a large group of armed men with a proven ability to withstand Roman armies. What they intended to do with this force is somewhat difficult for modern readers to determine. Since the Third Servile War was ultimately an unsuccessful rebellion, no firsthand account of the slaves' motives and goals exists, and historians writing about the war propose contradictory theories.

Many popular modern accounts of the war claim that there was a factional split in the escaped slaves between those under Spartacus, who wished to escape over the Alps to freedom, and those under Crixus, who wished to stay in southern Italy to continue raiding and plundering. This appears to be an interpretation of events based on the following: the regions that Florus lists as being raided by the slaves include Thurii and Metapontum, which are geographically distant from Nola and Nuceria.[22]

This indicates the existence of two groups: Lucius Gellius eventually attacked Crixus and a group of some 30,000 followers who are described as being separate from the main group under Spartacus.[22] Plutarch describes the desire of some of the escaped slaves to plunder Italy, rather than escape over the Alps.[23] While this factional split is not contradicted by classical sources, there does not seem to be any direct evidence to support it.

Fictional accounts sometimes portray the rebelling slaves as ancient Roman freedom fighters, struggling to change a corrupt Roman society and to end the Roman institution of slavery. Although this is not contradicted by classical historians, no historical account mentions that the goal of the rebel slaves was to end slavery in the Republic, nor do any of the actions of rebel leaders, who themselves committed numerous atrocities, seem specifically aimed at ending slavery.[24]

Even classical historians, who were writing only years after the events themselves, seem to be divided as to what the motives of Spartacus were. Appian and Florus write that he intended to march on Rome itself[25]—although this may have been no more than a reflection of Roman fears. If Spartacus did intend to march on Rome, it was a goal he must have later abandoned. Plutarch writes that Spartacus merely wished to escape northwards into Cisalpine Gaul and disperse his men back to their homes.[23]

It is not certain that the slaves were a homogeneous group under the leadership of Spartacus, although this is implied by the Roman historians. Certainly other slave leaders are mentioned—Crixus, Oenomaus, Gannicus, and Castus—and it cannot be told from the historical evidence whether they were aides, subordinates, or even equals leading groups of their own and traveling in convoy with Spartacus' people.

Defeat of the consular armies (72 BC) edit

 
The events of 72 BC, according to Appian's version of events

In the spring of 72 BC, the escaped slaves left their winter encampments and began to move northwards towards Cisalpine Gaul. The Senate, alarmed by the size of the revolt and the defeat of the praetorian armies of Glaber and Varinius, dispatched a pair of consular legions under the command of Lucius Gellius and Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus.[26] Initially, the consular armies were successful. Gellius engaged a group of about 30,000 slaves, under the command of Crixus, near Mount Garganus and killed two-thirds of the rebels, including Crixus.[27]

At this point, there is a divergence in the classical sources as to the course of events, which do not correspond until the entry of Marcus Licinius Crassus into the war. The two most comprehensive (extant) histories of the war by Appian and Plutarch detail very different events. Neither account directly contradicts the other but simply reports different events, ignoring some events in the other account and reporting events that are unique to that account.

Appian's history edit

According to Appian, the battle between Gellius' legions and Crixus' men near Mount Garganus was the beginning of a long and complex series of military maneuvers that almost resulted in the Spartacan forces attacking the city of Rome. After his victory over Crixus, Gellius moved northwards, following the main group of slaves under Spartacus who were heading for Cisalpine Gaul. The army of Lentulus was deployed to bar Spartacus' path and the consuls hoped to trap the rebel slaves between them. Spartacus' army met Lentulus' legion, defeated it, turned and destroyed Gellius' army, forcing the Roman legions to retreat in disarray.[28]

Appian claims that Spartacus executed some 300 captured Roman soldiers to avenge the death of Crixus, forcing them to fight each other to the death as gladiators.[29] Following this victory, Spartacus pushed northwards with his followers (some 120,000) as fast as he could travel, "having burned all his useless material, killed all his prisoners and butchered his pack-animals in order to expedite his movement".[28]

The defeated consular armies fell back to Rome to regroup while Spartacus' followers moved northwards. The consuls again engaged Spartacus at the Battle of Picenum somewhere in the Picenum region and were defeated again.[28] Appian claims that at this point Spartacus changed his intention of marching on Rome—implying this was Spartacus' goal following the confrontation in Picenum—as "he did not consider himself ready as yet for that kind of a fight, as his whole force was not suitably armed, for no city had joined him but only slaves, deserters, and riff-raff".[30] Spartacus decided to withdraw into southern Italy again. The serviles seized the town of Thurii and the surrounding countryside, arming themselves, raiding the surrounding territories, trading plunder with merchants for bronze and iron (with which to manufacture more arms) and clashing occasionally with Roman forces which were invariably defeated.[28]

Plutarch's history edit

 
The events of 72 BC, according to Plutarch's version of events

Plutarch's description of events differs significantly from Appian's. According to Plutarch, after the battle between Gellius' legion and Crixus's men (whom Plutarch describes as "Germans") near Mount Garganus, Spartacus' men engaged the legion commanded by Lentulus, defeated it, seized the Roman supplies and equipment, then pushed into northern Italy.[31] After this defeat, both consuls were relieved of command of their armies by the Roman Senate and recalled to Rome.[32] Plutarch does not mention Spartacus engaging Gellius' legion at all, nor of Spartacus facing the combined consular legions in Picenum.[31]

Plutarch then goes on to detail a conflict not mentioned in Appian's history. According to Plutarch, Spartacus' army continued northwards to the region around Mutina (modern Modena). There, a Roman army of some 10,000 soldiers—led by the governor of Cisalpine Gaul, Gaius Cassius Longinus—attempted to bar Spartacus' progress and was also defeated.[33] Plutarch makes no further mention of events until the initial confrontation between Marcus Licinius Crassus and Spartacus in the spring of 71 BC, omitting the march on Rome and the retreat to Thurii described by Appian.[32] As Plutarch describes Crassus forcing Spartacus' followers to retreat southwards from Picenum, it could be inferred that the rebel slaves approached Picenum from the south in early 71 BC, implying that they withdrew from Mutina into southern or central Italy for the winter of 72–71 BC. Why they might do so, when there was apparently no reason for them not to escape over the Alps—Spartacus' goal according to Plutarch—is not explained.[34]

The war under Crassus (71 BC) edit

 
The events of early 71 BC. Marcus Licinius Crassus takes command of the Roman legions, confronts Spartacus, and forces the rebel slaves to retreat through Lucania to the straits near Messina. Plutarch says this occurred in the Picenum region, while Appian places the initial battles between Crassus and Spartacus in the Samnium region.

Crassus takes command of the legions edit

Despite the contradictions in the classical sources regarding the events of 72 BC, there seems to be general agreement that Spartacus and his followers were in the south of Italy in early 71 BC. The Senate, alarmed at the apparently unstoppable rebellion, gave the task of putting it down to Marcus Licinius Crassus.[32] Crassus had been a field commander under Lucius Cornelius Sulla during the civil war between Sulla and the Marian faction in 82 BC and had served under Sulla during the dictatorship that followed.[35]

Crassus was given a praetorship and assigned six new legions in addition to the two formerly consular legions of Gellius and Lentulus, giving him an estimated army of some 32,000–48,000 trained Roman infantry plus auxiliaries (there being quite a range in the size of Republican legions).[36] Crassus treated his legions with harsh, even brutal, discipline, reviving the punishment of unit decimation within his army. Appian is uncertain whether he decimated the two consular legions for cowardice when he was appointed their commander or whether he had his entire army decimated for a later defeat (an event in which up to 4,000 legionaries would have been executed).[37]

Plutarch only mentions the decimation of 50 legionaries of one cohort as punishment after Mummius' defeat in the first confrontation between Crassus and Spartacus.[38] Regardless of events, Crassus' treatment of his legions proved that "he was more dangerous to them than the enemy" and spurred them on to victory rather than running the risk of displeasing their commander.[37]

Crassus and Spartacus edit

When the forces of Spartacus moved northwards once again, Crassus deployed six of his legions on the borders of the region (Plutarch claims the initial battle between Crassus' legions and Spartacus' followers occurred near the Picenum region, Appian claims it occurred near the region of Samnium).[32][39] Crassus detached two legions under his legate, Mummius, to maneuver behind Spartacus but gave them orders not to engage the rebels. When an opportunity presented itself, Mummius disobeyed, attacked the Spartacist forces and was routed.[38] Despite this initial loss, Crassus engaged Spartacus and defeated him, killing some 6,000 of the rebels.[39]

The tide seemed to have turned in the war. Crassus' legions were victorious in several more engagements, killing thousands of the rebel slaves and forcing Spartacus to retreat south through Lucania to the straits near Messina. According to Plutarch, Spartacus made a bargain with Cilician pirates to transport him and some 2,000 of his men to Sicily, where he intended to incite a slave revolt and gather reinforcements. He was betrayed by the pirates, who took payment and then abandoned the rebel slaves.[38] Minor sources mention that there were some attempts at raft and shipbuilding by the rebels as a means to escape but that Crassus took unspecified measures to ensure the rebels could not cross to Sicily and their efforts were abandoned.[40] Spartacus' forces retreated towards Rhegium, Crassus' legions following; upon arrival Crassus built fortifications across the isthmus at Rhegium, despite harassing raids from the rebel slaves. The rebels were under siege and cut off from their supplies.[41]

The end of the war edit

 
The last events of the war in 71 BC, where the army of Spartacus broke the siege by Crassus' legions and retreated toward the mountains near Petelia. Shows the initial skirmishes between elements of the two sides, the turn-about of the Spartacan forces for the final confrontation. Note the legions of Pompey moving in from the north to capture survivors.

The legions of Pompey were returning to Italy, having put down the rebellion of Quintus Sertorius in Hispania. Sources disagree on whether Crassus had requested reinforcements or whether the Senate simply took advantage of Pompey's return to Italy but Pompey was ordered to bypass Rome and head south to aid Crassus.[42] The Senate also sent reinforcements under the command of "Lucullus", mistakenly thought by Appian to be Lucius Licinius Lucullus, commander of the forces engaged in the Third Mithridatic War but who appears to have been the proconsul of Macedonia, Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus, the former's younger brother.[43] With Pompey's legions marching from the north and Lucullus' troops landing in Brundisium, Crassus realized that if he did not put down the slave revolt quickly, credit for the war would go to the general who arrived with reinforcements and he spurred his legions on to end the conflict quickly.[44]

Hearing of the approach of Pompey, Spartacus tried to negotiate with Crassus to bring the conflict to a close before Roman reinforcements arrived.[45] When Crassus refused, Spartacus and his army broke through the Roman fortifications and headed up the Bruttium peninsula with Crassus's legions in pursuit.[46] The legions managed to catch a portion of the rebels – under the command of Gannicus and Castus – separated from the main army, killing 12,300.[47]

Even though Spartacus had lost many men, Crassus' legions had also suffered greatly. The Roman forces under the command of a cavalry officer named Lucius Quinctius were destroyed when some of the escaped slaves turned to meet them.[48] The rebel slaves were not a professional army and had reached their limit. They were unwilling to flee any farther and groups of men were breaking away from the main force to independently attack Crassus's legions.[49]

With discipline breaking down, Spartacus turned his forces around and brought his entire strength to bear on the legions. In this last stand, the Battle of the Silarius River, Spartacus' forces were routed, the vast majority of them being killed on the battlefield.[50] All the ancient historians stated that Spartacus was also killed on the battlefield but his body was never found.[51]

Aftermath edit

 
The Fall of Spartacus

The rebels of the Third Servile War were annihilated by Crassus. Pompey's forces did not directly engage Spartacus's forces but his legions moving from the north were able to capture some 5,000 rebels fleeing the battle, "all of whom he slew".[52] After this action, Pompey sent a dispatch to the Senate, saying that while Crassus certainly had conquered the slaves in open battle, he had ended the war, thus claiming a large portion of the credit and earning the enmity of Crassus.[53] While most of the rebel slaves were killed on the battlefield, some 6,000 survivors were captured by the legions of Crassus. All 6,000 were crucified along the Appian Way from Rome to Capua.[45]

Pompey and Crassus reaped political benefit for having put down the rebellion; both returned to Rome with their legions and refused to disband them, instead camping outside Rome.[15] Both men stood for the consulship of 70 BC, even though Pompey was ineligible because of his youth and lack of service as praetor or quaestor.[54] Both men were elected consul for 70 BC, partly due to the implied threat of their armed legions encamped outside the city.[55][56]

It is difficult to determine the extent to which the events of this war contributed to changes in attitudes toward, use of, and legal rights accorded to Roman slaves. However, the end of the Servile Wars seems to have coincided with the end of the period of the most prominent use of slaves in Rome and the beginning of a new perception of slaves within Roman society and law.

Certainly the revolt had shaken the Roman people, who "out of sheer fear seem to have begun to treat their slaves less harshly than before".[57] The wealthy owners of the latifundia began to reduce the number of agricultural slaves, opting to employ the large pool of formerly dispossessed freemen in sharecropping arrangements.[58] With the end of Augustus' reign (27 BC – 14 AD), the major Roman wars of conquest ceased until the reign of Emperor Trajan (reigned 98–117 AD) and with them ended the supply of plentiful and inexpensive slaves through military conquest. This era of peace further promoted the use of freedmen as laborers in agricultural estates.

The legal status and rights of Roman slaves also began to change. During the time of Emperor Claudius (reigned 41–54 AD), a constitution was enacted that made the killing of an old or infirm slave an act of murder and decreed that if such slaves were abandoned by their owners, they became freedmen.[59] Under Antoninus Pius (reigned 138–161 AD), laws further extended the rights of slaves, holding owners responsible for the killing of slaves, forcing the sale of slaves when it could be shown that they were being mistreated and providing a (theoretically) neutral third party to which a slave could appeal.[60] While these legal changes occurred much too late to be direct results of the Third Servile War, they represent the legal codification of changes in the Roman attitude toward slaves that evolved over decades.

The Third Servile War was the last servile war and Rome did not see another slave uprising of this magnitude again.[61]

In popular culture edit

References edit

Classical works edit

  • Appian, Civil wars, Penguin Classics; New Ed edition, 1996. ISBN 0-14-044509-9.
  • Caesar, Julius, Commentarii de Bello Gallico.
  • Cicero, M. Tullius. The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero, literally translated by C. D. Yonge, "for Quintius, Sextus Roscius, Quintus Roscius, against Quintus Caecilius, and against Verres". London. George Bell & Sons. 1903. OCLC: 4709897
  • Florus, Publius Annius, Epitome of Roman History. Harvard University Press, 1984. ISBN 0-674-99254-7
  • Frontinus, Sextus Julius, Stratagems, Loeb edition, 1925 by Charles E. Bennett. ISBN 0-674-99192-3
  • Gaius the Jurist, Gai Institvtionvm Commentarivs Primvs
  • Livius, Titus, This History of Rome
  • Livius, Titus, Periochae, K.G. Saur Verlag, 1981. ISBN 3-519-01489-0
  • Orosius, Histories.
  • Plutarchus, Mestrius, Plutarch's Lives, "The Life of Crassus" and "The Life of Pompey". Modern Library, 2001. ISBN 0-375-75677-9.
  • Sallust, Histories, P .McGushin (Oxford,1992/1994) ISBN 0-19-872140-4
  • Seneca, De Beneficiis
  • Suetonius, Lives of the Twelve Caesars: The Life of Claudius.

Modern books edit

  • Bradley, Keith. Slavery and Rebellion in the Roman World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989. ISBN 0-7134-6561-1.
  • Broughton, T. Robert S. Magistrates of the Roman Republic, vol. 2. Cleveland: Case Western University Press, 1968.
  • Davis, William Stearns ed., Readings in Ancient History: Illustrative Extracts from the Sources, 2 Vols, Vol. II: Rome and the West. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1912–13.
  • Matyszak, Philip, The enemies of Rome, Thames & Hudson, 2004. ISBN 0-500-25124-X.
  • Mommsen, Theodor, The History of Rome, Books I-V, Project Gutenberg electronic edition, 2004. ISBN 0-415-14953-3.
  • Shaw, Brent. Spartacus and the Slave Wars: a brief history with documents. 2001. [1]
  • Smith, William, D.C.L., LL.D., A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, John Murray, London, 1875.
  • Strachan-Davidson, J. L. (ed.), Appian, Civil Wars: Book I, Oxford University Press, 1902 (repr. 1969).
  • Strauss, Barry. The Spartacus War Simon & Schuster, 2009. ISBN 1-4165-3205-6.

Multimedia edit

  • , "The History of Ancient Rome: Lecture 23, Sulla's Reforms Undone", The Teaching Company. [sound recording:CD].

See also edit

Notes edit

  • References to the Mommsen text is based on the Project Gutenberg e-text edition of the books. References are therefore given in terms of line numbers within the text file, and not page numbers as would be the case with a physical book.
  • References to "classical works" (Livy, Plutarch, Appian, etc.) are given in the traditional "Book:verse" format, rather than edition-specific page numbers.
  1. ^ Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Servus", p. 1038 2011-06-05 at the Wayback Machine; details the legal and military means by which people were enslaved.
  2. ^ Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Servus", p. 1040 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine; Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico, 2:33. Smith refers to the purchase of 10,000 slaves from Cilician pirates, while Caesar provides an example of the enslavement of 53,000 captive Aduatuci by a Roman army.
  3. ^ Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Servus", p. 1039 2009-06-21 at the Wayback Machine; Livy, The History of Rome, 6:12
  4. ^ Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Servus", pp. 1022–39 2013-07-26 at the Wayback Machine summarizes the complex body of Roman law pertaining to the legal status of slaves.
  5. ^ Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Gladiatores", p. 574 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. ^ Mommsen, The History of Rome, 3233–3238.
  7. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 8:1–2; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Livy, Periochae, 95:2 2018-11-07 at the Wayback Machine; Florus, Epitome, 2.8. Plutarch claims 78 escaped, Livy claims 74, Appian "about seventy", and Florus says "thirty or rather more men". "Choppers and spits" is from Life of Crassus.
  8. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Plutarch, Crassus, 8:2. Note: Spartacus' status as an auxilia is taken from the Loeb edition of Appian translated by Horace White, which states "... who had once served as a soldier with the Romans ...". However, the translation by John Carter in the Penguin Classics version reads: "... who had once fought against the Romans and after being taken prisoner and sold ...".
  9. ^ Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Gladiatores", p. 576 2012-10-10 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ Ivan Duridanov (Иван Дуриданов) (1985). Die Sprache der Thraker [The Language of the Thracians] (in German). Hieronymus Verlag. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-3-928-28631-2.
  11. ^ Vladimir I. Georgiev (1977). Траките И Техният Език [The Thracians and their Language] (in Bulgarian). Изд-во на Българската академия на науките. p. 95-96.
  12. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 9:1.
  13. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Florus, Epitome, 2.8; – Florus and Appian make the claim that the slaves withdrew to Vesuvius, while Plutarch only mentions "a hill" in the account of Glaber's siege of the slave's encampment.
  14. ^ Note: while there seems to be consensus as to the general history of the praetorian expeditions, the names of the commanders and subordinates of these forces varies widely based on the historical account.
  15. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116.
  16. ^ Frontinus, Stratagems, Book I, 5:20–22 and Book VII:6.
  17. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 9:1–3; Frontinus, Stratagems, Book I, 5:20–22; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Broughton, Magistrates of the Roman Republic, p. 109. Note: Plutarch and Frontinus write of expeditions under the command of "Clodius the praetor" and "Publius Varinus", while Appian writes of "Varinius Glaber" and "Publius Valerius".
  18. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 9:4–5; Livy, Periochae , 95 2018-11-07 at the Wayback Machine; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Sallust, Histories, 3:64–67.
  19. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 9:3; Appian, Civil War, 1:116. Livy identifies the second commander as "Publius Varenus" with the subordinate "Claudius Pulcher".
  20. ^ Florus, Epitome, 2.8.
  21. ^ Orosius, Histories 5.24.2; Bradley, Slavery and Rebellion, p.96.
  22. ^ a b Plutarch, Crassus, 9:7; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:117.
  23. ^ a b Plutarch, Crassus, 9:5–6.
  24. ^ Historian Barry Strauss On His New Book The Spartacus War (Interview). Simon and Schuster. 2009. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  25. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:117; Florus, Epitome, 2.8.
  26. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116–117; Plutarch, Crassus 9:6; Sallust, Histories, 3:64–67.
  27. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:117; Plutarch, Crassus 9:7; Livy, Periochae 96 2017-07-19 at the Wayback Machine. Livy reports that troops under the (former) praetor Quintus Arrius killed Crixus and 20,000 of his followers.
  28. ^ a b c d Appian, Civil Wars, 1:117.
  29. ^ Appian, Civil war, 1.117; Florus, Epitome, 2.8; Bradley, Slavery and Rebellion, p.121; Smith, Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Gladiatores", p.574 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine. – Note that gladiator contests as part of some funeral rituals in the Roman Republic were a high honor, according to Smith. This accords with Florus' passage "He also celebrated the obsequies of his officers who had fallen in battle with funerals like those of Roman generals, and ordered his captives to fight at their pyres".
  30. ^ Appian, Civil war, 1.117; Florus, Epitome, 2.8. Florus does not detail when and how Spartacus intended to march on Rome, but agrees this was Spartacus' ultimate goal.
  31. ^ a b Plutarch, Crassus, 9:7.
  32. ^ a b c d Plutarch, Crassus 10:1;.
  33. ^ Bradley, Slavery and Rebellion, p. 96; Plutarch, Crassus 9:7; Livy, Periochae , 96:6 2017-07-19 at the Wayback Machine. – Bradley identifies Gaius Cassius Longinus as the governor of Cisalpine Gaul at the time. Livy also identifies "Caius Cassius" and mentions his co-commander (or sub-commander?) "Cnaeus Manlius".
  34. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 9:5.
  35. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 6; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:76–1:104. Plutarch gives a brief synopsis of Crassus's involvement in the war, with 6:6–7 showing an example of Crassus as an effective commander. Appian gives a much more detailed account of the entire war and subsequent dictatorship, in which Crassus's actions are mentioned throughout.
  36. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:118; Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, "Exercitus", p.494 2012-10-06 at the Wayback Machine; Appian details the number of legions, while Smith discusses the size of the legions throughout the Roman civilization, stating that late republican legions varied from 5,000–6,200 men per legion.
  37. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, 1:118.
  38. ^ a b c Plutarch, Crassus, 10:1–3.
  39. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, 1:119.
  40. ^ Florus, Epitome, 2.8; Cicero, Orations, "For Quintius, Sextus Roscius ...", 5.2
  41. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 10:4–5.
  42. ^ Contrast Plutarch, Crassus, 11:2 with Appian, Civil Wars, 1:119.
  43. ^ Strachan-Davidson on Appian. 1.120; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120; Plutarch, Crassus, 11:2.
  44. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120; Plutarch, Crassus, 11:2.
  45. ^ a b Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120.
  46. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120; Plutarch, Crassus, 10:6. No mention of the fate of the forces who did not break out of the siege is mentioned, although it is possible that these were the slaves under command of Gannicus and Castus mentioned later.
  47. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 11:3; Livy, Periochae, 97:1 2017-07-19 at the Wayback Machine. Plutarch gives the figure 12,300 rebels killed. Livy claims 35,000.
  48. ^ Bradley, Slavery and Rebellion. p. 97; Plutarch, Crassus, 11:4.
  49. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 11:5;.
  50. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120; Plutarch, Crassus, 11:6–7; Livy, Periochae, 97.1 2017-07-19 at the Wayback Machine. Livy claims some 60,000 rebel slaves killed in this final action.
  51. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:120; Florus, Epitome, 2.8.
  52. ^ Matyszak, The Enemies of Rome p.133; Plutarch, Pompey, 21:2, Crassus 11.7.
  53. ^ Plutarch, Crassus, 11.7.
  54. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:121.
  55. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:121; Plutarch, Crassus, 12:2.
  56. ^ Fagan, The History of Ancient Rome; Appian, Civil Wars, 1:121.
  57. ^ Davis, Readings in Ancient History, p.90
  58. ^ Smitha, Frank E. (2006). "From a Republic to Emperor Augustus: Spartacus and Declining Slavery". Retrieved 2006-09-23.
  59. ^ Suetonius, Life of Claudius, 25.2
  60. ^ Gaius, Institvtionvm Commentarivs, I:52; Seneca, De Beneficiis, III:22. Gaius details the changes in the rights of owners to inflict whatever treatment they wished on their slaves, while Seneca details the slaves' right to proper treatment and the creation of a "slave ombudsman".
  61. ^ Though there were other slave revolts in the future. See, e.g., Zosimus, Historia Nova, I.71.
  62. ^ "Spartacus – Comic-Con 2009 - UGO.com". Tvblog.ugo.com. 29 June 2009. Archived from the original on 16 July 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  63. ^ "AUSXIP Spartacus: Blood and Sand TV Show Lucy Lawless Sam Raimi & Rob Tapert". Spartacus.ausxip.com. Retrieved 24 February 2013.

External links edit

Classical historical works
Works at LacusCurtius.
Works at Livius.org.
  • Appian on Spartacus 2016-04-24 at the Wayback Machine (excerpts from The Civil Wars).
  • Florus on Spartacus 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine (excerpts from the Epitome of Roman History).
  • Livy's Periochae. 95:2 2018-11-07 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Livy's Periochae. 96:1 and 97:1 2017-07-19 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Plutarch on Spartacus 2018-02-16 at the Wayback Machine (excerpts from the Life of Crassus).
Works at The Internet Classics Archive.
  • Livy's Histories
Modern works
  • William Smith's, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities at LacusCurtius.
  • A is also available at The Ancient Library.

third, servile, also, called, gladiator, spartacus, plutarch, last, series, slave, rebellions, against, roman, republic, known, servile, wars, this, third, rebellion, only, that, directly, threatened, roman, heartland, italy, particularly, alarming, rome, beca. The Third Servile War also called the Gladiator War and the War of Spartacus by Plutarch was the last in a series of slave rebellions against the Roman Republic known as the Servile Wars This third rebellion was the only one that directly threatened the Roman heartland of Italy It was particularly alarming to Rome because its military seemed powerless to suppress it Third Servile WarPart of the Servile WarsItaly and surrounding territory 218 BCDate73 71 BCLocationRoman ItalyResultRoman victoryBelligerentsRebel slavesRoman RepublicCommanders and leadersSpartacus MIA Crixus Gannicus Oenomaus Castus Marcus Licinius Crassus Pompey Lucius Gellius Quintus Marcius Rufus Publius Varinius Gaius Claudius Glaber Gaius Cassius Longinus Gnaeus Manlius Marcus LucullusStrength120 000 escaped slaves and gladiators including non combatants total number of combatants unknown3 000 militia8 Roman legions of 4 000 6 000 infantrymen auxiliaries Total 32 000 48 000 infantry auxiliaries12 000 garrison troops composition unknown Casualties and losses41 000 killed30 000 killed by Gellius6 000 crucified by Crassus5 000 crucified by Pompey citation needed 20 000 killed The revolt began in 73 BC with the escape of around 70 slave gladiators from a gladiator school in Capua They easily defeated the small Roman force sent to recapture them and within two years they had been joined by some 120 000 men women and children The able bodied adults of this large group were a surprisingly effective armed force that repeatedly showed they could withstand or defeat the Roman military from the local Campanian patrols to the Roman militia and even to trained Roman legions under consular command This army of slaves roamed across Italy raiding estates and towns with relative impunity sometimes dividing into separate but connected bands with several leaders including the famous former gladiator Spartacus The Roman Senate grew increasingly alarmed at the slave army s depredations and continued military successes Eventually Rome fielded an army of eight legions under the harsh but effective leadership of Marcus Licinius Crassus that destroyed the army of slaves in 71 BC This happened after a long and bitter fighting retreat before the legions of Crassus and after the rebels realized that the legions of Pompey and Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus were moving in to entrap them The armies of Spartacus launched their full strength against Crassus s legions and were utterly defeated Of the survivors some 6 000 were crucified along the Appian Way Plutarch s account of the revolt suggests that the slaves simply wished to escape to freedom and leave Roman territory by way of Cisalpine Gaul Appian and Florus describe the revolt as a civil war in which the slaves intended to capture the city of Rome The Third Servile War had significant and far reaching effects on Rome s broader history Pompey and Crassus exploited their successes to further their political careers using their public acclaim and the implied threat of their legions to sway the consular elections of 70 BC in their favor Their actions as consuls greatly furthered the subversion of Roman political institutions and contributed to the transformation of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire Contents 1 Background 2 Beginning of the revolt 73 BC 2 1 Capuan revolt 2 2 Defeat of the praetorian armies 3 Motivation and leadership of the escaped slaves 4 Defeat of the consular armies 72 BC 4 1 Appian s history 4 2 Plutarch s history 5 The war under Crassus 71 BC 5 1 Crassus takes command of the legions 5 2 Crassus and Spartacus 5 3 The end of the war 6 Aftermath 7 In popular culture 8 References 8 1 Classical works 8 2 Modern books 8 3 Multimedia 9 See also 10 Notes 11 External linksBackground editFurther information Slavery in ancient Rome First Servile War and Second Servile War To varying degrees throughout Roman history the existence of a pool of inexpensive labor in the form of slaves was an important factor in the economy Slaves were acquired for the Roman workforce through a variety of means including purchase from foreign merchants and the enslavement of foreign populations through military conquest 1 With Rome s heavy involvement in wars of conquest in the 2nd and 1st centuries BC from tens to hundreds of thousands of slaves at a time were imported into the Roman economy from various European and Mediterranean acquisitions 2 While there was limited use for slaves as servants craftsmen and personal attendants vast numbers of slaves worked in mines and on the agricultural lands of Sicily and southern Italy 3 For the most part slaves were treated harshly and oppressively during the Roman republican period Under Republican law a slave was property not a person Owners could abuse injure or even kill their own slaves without legal consequence While there were many grades and types of slaves the lowest and most numerous grades who worked in the fields and mines were subject to a life of hard physical labor 4 The large size and oppressive treatment of the slave population led to rebellions In 135 BC and 104 BC the First and Second Servile Wars erupted in Sicily where small bands of rebels found tens of thousands of willing followers wishing to escape the oppressive life of a Roman slave While these were considered serious civil disturbances by the Roman Senate taking years and direct military intervention to quell they were never considered a serious threat to the Republic The Roman heartland had never seen a slave uprising nor had slaves ever been seen as a potential threat to the city of Rome This changed with the Third Servile War Beginning of the revolt 73 BC editCapuan revolt edit nbsp The Gladiator Mosaic at the Galleria BorgheseIn the Roman Republic of the 1st century BC gladiatorial games were one of the more popular forms of entertainment In order to supply gladiators for the contests several training schools or ludi were established throughout Italy 5 In these schools prisoners of war and condemned criminals who were considered slaves were taught the skills required to fight in gladiatorial games 6 In 73 BC a group of some 200 gladiators in the Capuan school owned by Lentulus Batiatus plotted an escape When their plot was betrayed a force of about 70 men seized kitchen implements choppers and spits fought their way free from the school and seized several wagons of gladiatorial weapons and armor 7 Once free the escaped gladiators chose leaders from their number selecting two Gallic slaves Crixus and Oenomaus and Spartacus who was said either to be a Thracian auxiliary from the Roman legions later condemned to slavery or a captive taken by the legions 8 There is some question as to Spartacus s nationality A Thraex was a type of gladiator in Rome so Thracian may simply refer to the style of gladiatorial combat in which he was trained 9 On the other hand names nearly identical to Spartacus were recorded among five out of twenty Thracian Odrysae rulers of Bosporan kingdom beginning with Spartokos I the founder of the Spartocid dynasty The name came from the Thracian words sparas spear lance and takos famous and thus meant renowned by the spear 10 11 These escaped slaves were able to defeat a small force of troops sent after them from Capua and equip themselves with captured military equipment as well as their gladiatorial weapons 12 Sources are somewhat contradictory on the order of events immediately following the escape but they generally agree that this band of escaped gladiators plundered the region surrounding Capua recruited many other slaves into their ranks and eventually retired to a more defensible position on Mount Vesuvius 13 Defeat of the praetorian armies edit Further information Battle of Mount Vesuvius nbsp Initial movements of Roman red and Slave blue forces from the Capuan revolt to the end of winter 73 72 BC Insert Vesuvius area As the revolt and raids were occurring in Campania which was a vacation region of the rich and influential in Rome and the location of many estates the revolt quickly came to the attention of Roman authorities They initially viewed the revolt more as a major crime wave than an armed rebellion However later that year Rome dispatched a military force under praetorian authority to put down the rebellion 14 A Roman praetor Gaius Claudius Glaber gathered a force of 3 000 men not regular legions but a militia picked up in haste and at random for the Romans did not consider this a war yet but a raid something like an attack of robbery 15 Glaber s forces besieged the slaves on Mount Vesuvius blocking the only known way down the mountain With the slaves thus contained Glaber was content to wait until starvation forced the slaves to surrender While the slaves lacked military training Spartacus forces displayed ingenuity in their use of available local tools and in their use of clever unorthodox tactics when facing the disciplined Roman infantry 16 In response to Glaber s siege Spartacus men made ropes and ladders from vines and trees growing on the slopes of Vesuvius and used them to rappel down the cliffs on the side of the mountain opposite Glaber s forces They moved around the base of Vesuvius outflanked the army and annihilated Glaber s men 17 A second expedition under the praetor Publius Varinius was then dispatched against Spartacus For some reason Varinius seems to have split his forces under the command of his subordinates Furius and Cossinius Plutarch mentions that Furius commanded some 2 000 men but neither the strength of the remaining forces nor whether the expedition was composed of militia or legions appears to be known These forces were also defeated by the army of escaped slaves Cossinius was killed Varinius was nearly captured and the equipment of the armies was seized by the slaves 18 With these victories more and more slaves flocked to the Spartacan forces as did many of the herdsmen and shepherds of the region swelling their ranks to some 70 000 19 The rebel slaves spent the winter of 73 72 BC training arming and equipping their new recruits and expanding their raiding territory to include the towns of Nola Nuceria Thurii and Metapontum 20 The victories of the rebel slaves did not come without a cost At some time during these events one of their leaders Oenomaus was lost presumably in battle and is not mentioned further in the histories 21 Motivation and leadership of the escaped slaves edit nbsp Spartacus by Denis Foyatier c 1830 displayed at the Louvre An example of a modern heroic depiction of Spartacus By the end of 73 BC Spartacus and Crixus were in command of a large group of armed men with a proven ability to withstand Roman armies What they intended to do with this force is somewhat difficult for modern readers to determine Since the Third Servile War was ultimately an unsuccessful rebellion no firsthand account of the slaves motives and goals exists and historians writing about the war propose contradictory theories Many popular modern accounts of the war claim that there was a factional split in the escaped slaves between those under Spartacus who wished to escape over the Alps to freedom and those under Crixus who wished to stay in southern Italy to continue raiding and plundering This appears to be an interpretation of events based on the following the regions that Florus lists as being raided by the slaves include Thurii and Metapontum which are geographically distant from Nola and Nuceria 22 This indicates the existence of two groups Lucius Gellius eventually attacked Crixus and a group of some 30 000 followers who are described as being separate from the main group under Spartacus 22 Plutarch describes the desire of some of the escaped slaves to plunder Italy rather than escape over the Alps 23 While this factional split is not contradicted by classical sources there does not seem to be any direct evidence to support it Fictional accounts sometimes portray the rebelling slaves as ancient Roman freedom fighters struggling to change a corrupt Roman society and to end the Roman institution of slavery Although this is not contradicted by classical historians no historical account mentions that the goal of the rebel slaves was to end slavery in the Republic nor do any of the actions of rebel leaders who themselves committed numerous atrocities seem specifically aimed at ending slavery 24 Even classical historians who were writing only years after the events themselves seem to be divided as to what the motives of Spartacus were Appian and Florus write that he intended to march on Rome itself 25 although this may have been no more than a reflection of Roman fears If Spartacus did intend to march on Rome it was a goal he must have later abandoned Plutarch writes that Spartacus merely wished to escape northwards into Cisalpine Gaul and disperse his men back to their homes 23 It is not certain that the slaves were a homogeneous group under the leadership of Spartacus although this is implied by the Roman historians Certainly other slave leaders are mentioned Crixus Oenomaus Gannicus and Castus and it cannot be told from the historical evidence whether they were aides subordinates or even equals leading groups of their own and traveling in convoy with Spartacus people Defeat of the consular armies 72 BC editSee also Battle of Picenum nbsp The events of 72 BC according to Appian s version of eventsIn the spring of 72 BC the escaped slaves left their winter encampments and began to move northwards towards Cisalpine Gaul The Senate alarmed by the size of the revolt and the defeat of the praetorian armies of Glaber and Varinius dispatched a pair of consular legions under the command of Lucius Gellius and Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus 26 Initially the consular armies were successful Gellius engaged a group of about 30 000 slaves under the command of Crixus near Mount Garganus and killed two thirds of the rebels including Crixus 27 At this point there is a divergence in the classical sources as to the course of events which do not correspond until the entry of Marcus Licinius Crassus into the war The two most comprehensive extant histories of the war by Appian and Plutarch detail very different events Neither account directly contradicts the other but simply reports different events ignoring some events in the other account and reporting events that are unique to that account Appian s history edit According to Appian the battle between Gellius legions and Crixus men near Mount Garganus was the beginning of a long and complex series of military maneuvers that almost resulted in the Spartacan forces attacking the city of Rome After his victory over Crixus Gellius moved northwards following the main group of slaves under Spartacus who were heading for Cisalpine Gaul The army of Lentulus was deployed to bar Spartacus path and the consuls hoped to trap the rebel slaves between them Spartacus army met Lentulus legion defeated it turned and destroyed Gellius army forcing the Roman legions to retreat in disarray 28 Appian claims that Spartacus executed some 300 captured Roman soldiers to avenge the death of Crixus forcing them to fight each other to the death as gladiators 29 Following this victory Spartacus pushed northwards with his followers some 120 000 as fast as he could travel having burned all his useless material killed all his prisoners and butchered his pack animals in order to expedite his movement 28 The defeated consular armies fell back to Rome to regroup while Spartacus followers moved northwards The consuls again engaged Spartacus at the Battle of Picenum somewhere in the Picenum region and were defeated again 28 Appian claims that at this point Spartacus changed his intention of marching on Rome implying this was Spartacus goal following the confrontation in Picenum as he did not consider himself ready as yet for that kind of a fight as his whole force was not suitably armed for no city had joined him but only slaves deserters and riff raff 30 Spartacus decided to withdraw into southern Italy again The serviles seized the town of Thurii and the surrounding countryside arming themselves raiding the surrounding territories trading plunder with merchants for bronze and iron with which to manufacture more arms and clashing occasionally with Roman forces which were invariably defeated 28 Plutarch s history edit nbsp The events of 72 BC according to Plutarch s version of eventsPlutarch s description of events differs significantly from Appian s According to Plutarch after the battle between Gellius legion and Crixus s men whom Plutarch describes as Germans near Mount Garganus Spartacus men engaged the legion commanded by Lentulus defeated it seized the Roman supplies and equipment then pushed into northern Italy 31 After this defeat both consuls were relieved of command of their armies by the Roman Senate and recalled to Rome 32 Plutarch does not mention Spartacus engaging Gellius legion at all nor of Spartacus facing the combined consular legions in Picenum 31 Plutarch then goes on to detail a conflict not mentioned in Appian s history According to Plutarch Spartacus army continued northwards to the region around Mutina modern Modena There a Roman army of some 10 000 soldiers led by the governor of Cisalpine Gaul Gaius Cassius Longinus attempted to bar Spartacus progress and was also defeated 33 Plutarch makes no further mention of events until the initial confrontation between Marcus Licinius Crassus and Spartacus in the spring of 71 BC omitting the march on Rome and the retreat to Thurii described by Appian 32 As Plutarch describes Crassus forcing Spartacus followers to retreat southwards from Picenum it could be inferred that the rebel slaves approached Picenum from the south in early 71 BC implying that they withdrew from Mutina into southern or central Italy for the winter of 72 71 BC Why they might do so when there was apparently no reason for them not to escape over the Alps Spartacus goal according to Plutarch is not explained 34 The war under Crassus 71 BC edit nbsp The events of early 71 BC Marcus Licinius Crassus takes command of the Roman legions confronts Spartacus and forces the rebel slaves to retreat through Lucania to the straits near Messina Plutarch says this occurred in the Picenum region while Appian places the initial battles between Crassus and Spartacus in the Samnium region Crassus takes command of the legions edit Despite the contradictions in the classical sources regarding the events of 72 BC there seems to be general agreement that Spartacus and his followers were in the south of Italy in early 71 BC The Senate alarmed at the apparently unstoppable rebellion gave the task of putting it down to Marcus Licinius Crassus 32 Crassus had been a field commander under Lucius Cornelius Sulla during the civil war between Sulla and the Marian faction in 82 BC and had served under Sulla during the dictatorship that followed 35 Crassus was given a praetorship and assigned six new legions in addition to the two formerly consular legions of Gellius and Lentulus giving him an estimated army of some 32 000 48 000 trained Roman infantry plus auxiliaries there being quite a range in the size of Republican legions 36 Crassus treated his legions with harsh even brutal discipline reviving the punishment of unit decimation within his army Appian is uncertain whether he decimated the two consular legions for cowardice when he was appointed their commander or whether he had his entire army decimated for a later defeat an event in which up to 4 000 legionaries would have been executed 37 Plutarch only mentions the decimation of 50 legionaries of one cohort as punishment after Mummius defeat in the first confrontation between Crassus and Spartacus 38 Regardless of events Crassus treatment of his legions proved that he was more dangerous to them than the enemy and spurred them on to victory rather than running the risk of displeasing their commander 37 Crassus and Spartacus edit When the forces of Spartacus moved northwards once again Crassus deployed six of his legions on the borders of the region Plutarch claims the initial battle between Crassus legions and Spartacus followers occurred near the Picenum region Appian claims it occurred near the region of Samnium 32 39 Crassus detached two legions under his legate Mummius to maneuver behind Spartacus but gave them orders not to engage the rebels When an opportunity presented itself Mummius disobeyed attacked the Spartacist forces and was routed 38 Despite this initial loss Crassus engaged Spartacus and defeated him killing some 6 000 of the rebels 39 The tide seemed to have turned in the war Crassus legions were victorious in several more engagements killing thousands of the rebel slaves and forcing Spartacus to retreat south through Lucania to the straits near Messina According to Plutarch Spartacus made a bargain with Cilician pirates to transport him and some 2 000 of his men to Sicily where he intended to incite a slave revolt and gather reinforcements He was betrayed by the pirates who took payment and then abandoned the rebel slaves 38 Minor sources mention that there were some attempts at raft and shipbuilding by the rebels as a means to escape but that Crassus took unspecified measures to ensure the rebels could not cross to Sicily and their efforts were abandoned 40 Spartacus forces retreated towards Rhegium Crassus legions following upon arrival Crassus built fortifications across the isthmus at Rhegium despite harassing raids from the rebel slaves The rebels were under siege and cut off from their supplies 41 The end of the war edit Main article Battle of the Silarius River nbsp The last events of the war in 71 BC where the army of Spartacus broke the siege by Crassus legions and retreated toward the mountains near Petelia Shows the initial skirmishes between elements of the two sides the turn about of the Spartacan forces for the final confrontation Note the legions of Pompey moving in from the north to capture survivors The legions of Pompey were returning to Italy having put down the rebellion of Quintus Sertorius in Hispania Sources disagree on whether Crassus had requested reinforcements or whether the Senate simply took advantage of Pompey s return to Italy but Pompey was ordered to bypass Rome and head south to aid Crassus 42 The Senate also sent reinforcements under the command of Lucullus mistakenly thought by Appian to be Lucius Licinius Lucullus commander of the forces engaged in the Third Mithridatic War but who appears to have been the proconsul of Macedonia Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus the former s younger brother 43 With Pompey s legions marching from the north and Lucullus troops landing in Brundisium Crassus realized that if he did not put down the slave revolt quickly credit for the war would go to the general who arrived with reinforcements and he spurred his legions on to end the conflict quickly 44 Hearing of the approach of Pompey Spartacus tried to negotiate with Crassus to bring the conflict to a close before Roman reinforcements arrived 45 When Crassus refused Spartacus and his army broke through the Roman fortifications and headed up the Bruttium peninsula with Crassus s legions in pursuit 46 The legions managed to catch a portion of the rebels under the command of Gannicus and Castus separated from the main army killing 12 300 47 Even though Spartacus had lost many men Crassus legions had also suffered greatly The Roman forces under the command of a cavalry officer named Lucius Quinctius were destroyed when some of the escaped slaves turned to meet them 48 The rebel slaves were not a professional army and had reached their limit They were unwilling to flee any farther and groups of men were breaking away from the main force to independently attack Crassus s legions 49 With discipline breaking down Spartacus turned his forces around and brought his entire strength to bear on the legions In this last stand the Battle of the Silarius River Spartacus forces were routed the vast majority of them being killed on the battlefield 50 All the ancient historians stated that Spartacus was also killed on the battlefield but his body was never found 51 Aftermath edit nbsp The Fall of SpartacusThe rebels of the Third Servile War were annihilated by Crassus Pompey s forces did not directly engage Spartacus s forces but his legions moving from the north were able to capture some 5 000 rebels fleeing the battle all of whom he slew 52 After this action Pompey sent a dispatch to the Senate saying that while Crassus certainly had conquered the slaves in open battle he had ended the war thus claiming a large portion of the credit and earning the enmity of Crassus 53 While most of the rebel slaves were killed on the battlefield some 6 000 survivors were captured by the legions of Crassus All 6 000 were crucified along the Appian Way from Rome to Capua 45 Pompey and Crassus reaped political benefit for having put down the rebellion both returned to Rome with their legions and refused to disband them instead camping outside Rome 15 Both men stood for the consulship of 70 BC even though Pompey was ineligible because of his youth and lack of service as praetor or quaestor 54 Both men were elected consul for 70 BC partly due to the implied threat of their armed legions encamped outside the city 55 56 It is difficult to determine the extent to which the events of this war contributed to changes in attitudes toward use of and legal rights accorded to Roman slaves However the end of the Servile Wars seems to have coincided with the end of the period of the most prominent use of slaves in Rome and the beginning of a new perception of slaves within Roman society and law Certainly the revolt had shaken the Roman people who out of sheer fear seem to have begun to treat their slaves less harshly than before 57 The wealthy owners of the latifundia began to reduce the number of agricultural slaves opting to employ the large pool of formerly dispossessed freemen in sharecropping arrangements 58 With the end of Augustus reign 27 BC 14 AD the major Roman wars of conquest ceased until the reign of Emperor Trajan reigned 98 117 AD and with them ended the supply of plentiful and inexpensive slaves through military conquest This era of peace further promoted the use of freedmen as laborers in agricultural estates The legal status and rights of Roman slaves also began to change During the time of Emperor Claudius reigned 41 54 AD a constitution was enacted that made the killing of an old or infirm slave an act of murder and decreed that if such slaves were abandoned by their owners they became freedmen 59 Under Antoninus Pius reigned 138 161 AD laws further extended the rights of slaves holding owners responsible for the killing of slaves forcing the sale of slaves when it could be shown that they were being mistreated and providing a theoretically neutral third party to which a slave could appeal 60 While these legal changes occurred much too late to be direct results of the Third Servile War they represent the legal codification of changes in the Roman attitude toward slaves that evolved over decades The Third Servile War was the last servile war and Rome did not see another slave uprising of this magnitude again 61 In popular culture editThe film Spartacus 1960 which was executive produced by and starred Kirk Douglas was based on Howard Fast s novel Spartacus and directed by Stanley Kubrick The film s script was written by Dalton Trumbo who had been blacklisted during the McCarthyism period of the 1950s The film s success contributed to the collapse of the blacklist The phrase I m Spartacus from this film has been referenced in a number of other films television programs and commercials In 2004 Fast s novel was adapted as a made for TV movie by the USA Network with Goran Visnjic in the main role One episode of 2007 2008 BBC s docudrama Heroes and Villains features Spartacus The television series Spartacus starring Andy Whitfield and later Liam McIntyre in the title role aired on the Starz premium cable network from January 2010 to April 2013 62 63 The History Channel s Barbarians Rising 2016 features the story of Spartacus in its second episode entitled Rebellion The Netflix docudrama TV series Roman Empire features Spartacus as well as the Battle of the Silarius River in its 2nd season recounting the story of Gaius Julius Caesar The Third Servile War and ancient slave revolts in general play a central part in Arms of Nemesis by Steven Saylor References editClassical works edit Appian Civil wars Penguin Classics New Ed edition 1996 ISBN 0 14 044509 9 Caesar Julius Commentarii de Bello Gallico Cicero M Tullius The Orations of Marcus Tullius Cicero literally translated by C D Yonge for Quintius Sextus Roscius Quintus Roscius against Quintus Caecilius and against Verres London George Bell amp Sons 1903 OCLC 4709897 Florus Publius Annius Epitome of Roman History Harvard University Press 1984 ISBN 0 674 99254 7 Frontinus Sextus Julius Stratagems Loeb edition 1925 by Charles E Bennett ISBN 0 674 99192 3 Gaius the Jurist Gai Institvtionvm Commentarivs Primvs Livius Titus This History of Rome Livius Titus Periochae K G Saur Verlag 1981 ISBN 3 519 01489 0 Orosius Histories Plutarchus Mestrius Plutarch s Lives The Life of Crassus and The Life of Pompey Modern Library 2001 ISBN 0 375 75677 9 Sallust Histories P McGushin Oxford 1992 1994 ISBN 0 19 872140 4 Seneca De Beneficiis Suetonius Lives of the Twelve Caesars The Life of Claudius Modern books edit Bradley Keith Slavery and Rebellion in the Roman World Bloomington Indiana University Press 1989 ISBN 0 7134 6561 1 Broughton T Robert S Magistrates of the Roman Republic vol 2 Cleveland Case Western University Press 1968 Davis William Stearns ed Readings in Ancient History Illustrative Extracts from the Sources 2 Vols Vol II Rome and the West Boston Allyn and Bacon 1912 13 Matyszak Philip The enemies of Rome Thames amp Hudson 2004 ISBN 0 500 25124 X Mommsen Theodor The History of Rome Books I V Project Gutenberg electronic edition 2004 ISBN 0 415 14953 3 Shaw Brent Spartacus and the Slave Wars a brief history with documents 2001 1 Smith William D C L LL D A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities John Murray London 1875 Strachan Davidson J L ed Appian Civil Wars Book I Oxford University Press 1902 repr 1969 Strauss Barry The Spartacus War Simon amp Schuster 2009 ISBN 1 4165 3205 6 Multimedia edit Fagan Garret G The History of Ancient Rome Lecture 23 Sulla s Reforms Undone The Teaching Company sound recording CD See also editBattle of Baduhenna Wood Mercenary War German Peasants WarNotes editReferences to the Mommsen text is based on the Project Gutenberg e text edition of the books References are therefore given in terms of line numbers within the text file and not page numbers as would be the case with a physical book References to classical works Livy Plutarch Appian etc are given in the traditional Book verse format rather than edition specific page numbers Smith A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities Servus p 1038 Archived 2011 06 05 at the Wayback Machine details the legal and military means by which people were enslaved Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Servus p 1040 Archived 2012 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Caesar Commentarii de Bello Gallico 2 33 Smith refers to the purchase of 10 000 slaves from Cilician pirates while Caesar provides an example of the enslavement of 53 000 captive Aduatuci by a Roman army Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Servus p 1039 Archived 2009 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Livy The History of Rome 6 12 Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Servus pp 1022 39 Archived 2013 07 26 at the Wayback Machine summarizes the complex body of Roman law pertaining to the legal status of slaves Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Gladiatores p 574 Archived 2012 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Mommsen The History of Rome 3233 3238 Plutarch Crassus 8 1 2 Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Livy Periochae 95 2 Archived 2018 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Florus Epitome 2 8 Plutarch claims 78 escaped Livy claims 74 Appian about seventy and Florus says thirty or rather more men Choppers and spits is from Life of Crassus Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Plutarch Crassus 8 2 Note Spartacus status as an auxilia is taken from the Loeb edition of Appian translated by Horace White which states who had once served as a soldier with the Romans However the translation by John Carter in the Penguin Classics version reads who had once fought against the Romans and after being taken prisoner and sold Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Gladiatores p 576 Archived 2012 10 10 at the Wayback Machine Ivan Duridanov Ivan Duridanov 1985 Die Sprache der Thraker The Language of the Thracians in German Hieronymus Verlag pp 84 85 ISBN 978 3 928 28631 2 Vladimir I Georgiev 1977 Trakite I Tehniyat Ezik The Thracians and their Language in Bulgarian Izd vo na Blgarskata akademiya na naukite p 95 96 Plutarch Crassus 9 1 Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Florus Epitome 2 8 Florus and Appian make the claim that the slaves withdrew to Vesuvius while Plutarch only mentions a hill in the account of Glaber s siege of the slave s encampment Note while there seems to be consensus as to the general history of the praetorian expeditions the names of the commanders and subordinates of these forces varies widely based on the historical account a b Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Frontinus Stratagems Book I 5 20 22 and Book VII 6 Plutarch Crassus 9 1 3 Frontinus Stratagems Book I 5 20 22 Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Broughton Magistrates of the Roman Republic p 109 Note Plutarch and Frontinus write of expeditions under the command of Clodius the praetor and Publius Varinus while Appian writes of Varinius Glaber and Publius Valerius Plutarch Crassus 9 4 5 Livy Periochae 95 Archived 2018 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Appian Civil Wars 1 116 Sallust Histories 3 64 67 Plutarch Crassus 9 3 Appian Civil War 1 116 Livy identifies the second commander as Publius Varenus with the subordinate Claudius Pulcher Florus Epitome 2 8 Orosius Histories 5 24 2 Bradley Slavery and Rebellion p 96 a b Plutarch Crassus 9 7 Appian Civil Wars 1 117 a b Plutarch Crassus 9 5 6 Historian Barry Strauss On His New Book The Spartacus War Interview Simon and Schuster 2009 Archived from the original on 2021 12 22 Appian Civil Wars 1 117 Florus Epitome 2 8 Appian Civil Wars 1 116 117 Plutarch Crassus 9 6 Sallust Histories 3 64 67 Appian Civil Wars 1 117 Plutarch Crassus 9 7 Livy Periochae 96 Archived 2017 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Livy reports that troops under the former praetor Quintus Arrius killed Crixus and 20 000 of his followers a b c d Appian Civil Wars 1 117 Appian Civil war 1 117 Florus Epitome 2 8 Bradley Slavery and Rebellion p 121 Smith Greek and Roman Antiquities Gladiatores p 574 Archived 2012 10 05 at the Wayback Machine Note that gladiator contests as part of some funeral rituals in the Roman Republic were a high honor according to Smith This accords with Florus passage He also celebrated the obsequies of his officers who had fallen in battle with funerals like those of Roman generals and ordered his captives to fight at their pyres Appian Civil war 1 117 Florus Epitome 2 8 Florus does not detail when and how Spartacus intended to march on Rome but agrees this was Spartacus ultimate goal a b Plutarch Crassus 9 7 a b c d Plutarch Crassus 10 1 Bradley Slavery and Rebellion p 96 Plutarch Crassus 9 7 Livy Periochae 96 6 Archived 2017 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Bradley identifies Gaius Cassius Longinus as the governor of Cisalpine Gaul at the time Livy also identifies Caius Cassius and mentions his co commander or sub commander Cnaeus Manlius Plutarch Crassus 9 5 Plutarch Crassus 6 Appian Civil Wars 1 76 1 104 Plutarch gives a brief synopsis of Crassus s involvement in the war with 6 6 7 showing an example of Crassus as an effective commander Appian gives a much more detailed account of the entire war and subsequent dictatorship in which Crassus s actions are mentioned throughout Appian Civil Wars 1 118 Smith A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities Exercitus p 494 Archived 2012 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Appian details the number of legions while Smith discusses the size of the legions throughout the Roman civilization stating that late republican legions varied from 5 000 6 200 men per legion a b Appian Civil Wars 1 118 a b c Plutarch Crassus 10 1 3 a b Appian Civil Wars 1 119 Florus Epitome 2 8 Cicero Orations For Quintius Sextus Roscius 5 2 Plutarch Crassus 10 4 5 Contrast Plutarch Crassus 11 2 with Appian Civil Wars 1 119 Strachan Davidson on Appian 1 120 Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Plutarch Crassus 11 2 Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Plutarch Crassus 11 2 a b Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Plutarch Crassus 10 6 No mention of the fate of the forces who did not break out of the siege is mentioned although it is possible that these were the slaves under command of Gannicus and Castus mentioned later Plutarch Crassus 11 3 Livy Periochae 97 1 Archived 2017 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Plutarch gives the figure 12 300 rebels killed Livy claims 35 000 Bradley Slavery and Rebellion p 97 Plutarch Crassus 11 4 Plutarch Crassus 11 5 Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Plutarch Crassus 11 6 7 Livy Periochae 97 1 Archived 2017 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Livy claims some 60 000 rebel slaves killed in this final action Appian Civil Wars 1 120 Florus Epitome 2 8 Matyszak The Enemies of Rome p 133 Plutarch Pompey 21 2 Crassus 11 7 Plutarch Crassus 11 7 Appian Civil Wars 1 121 Appian Civil Wars 1 121 Plutarch Crassus 12 2 Fagan The History of Ancient Rome Appian Civil Wars 1 121 Davis Readings in Ancient History p 90 Smitha Frank E 2006 From a Republic to Emperor Augustus Spartacus and Declining Slavery Retrieved 2006 09 23 Suetonius Life of Claudius 25 2 Gaius Institvtionvm Commentarivs I 52 Seneca De Beneficiis III 22 Gaius details the changes in the rights of owners to inflict whatever treatment they wished on their slaves while Seneca details the slaves right to proper treatment and the creation of a slave ombudsman Though there were other slave revolts in the future See e g Zosimus Historia Nova I 71 Spartacus Comic Con 2009 UGO com Tvblog ugo com 29 June 2009 Archived from the original on 16 July 2012 Retrieved 24 February 2013 AUSXIP Spartacus Blood and Sand TV Show Lucy Lawless Sam Raimi amp Rob Tapert Spartacus ausxip com Retrieved 24 February 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Third Servile War Classical historical works Works at LacusCurtius Appian s The Civil Wars Frontinus s The Strategemata Plutarch s Life of Crassus Plutarch s Life of PompeyWorks at Livius org Appian on Spartacus Archived 2016 04 24 at the Wayback Machine excerpts from The Civil Wars Florus on Spartacus Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine excerpts from the Epitome of Roman History Livy s Periochae 95 2 Archived 2018 11 07 at the Wayback Machine Livy s Periochae 96 1 and 97 1 Archived 2017 07 19 at the Wayback Machine Plutarch on Spartacus Archived 2018 02 16 at the Wayback Machine excerpts from the Life of Crassus Works at The Internet Classics Archive Livy s HistoriesModern worksWilliam Smith s A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities at LacusCurtius A scanned page version is also available at The Ancient Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Third Servile War amp oldid 1203146323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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