The Spartacus War

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The Spartacus War Page 24

by Strauss, Barry


  they went into the mountains: Appian, Civil War 1.120.559.

  ‘terrible’: ‘terrible cross’ of the slaves in Plautus (Martin Hengel, Crucifixion in the Ancient World and the Folly of the Message of the Cross (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1977), 7, n.13.

  ‘infamous’: ‘the infamous stake’, Latin Anthology 415.23-4.

  ‘utterly vile’: Origen, Commentary on Matthew, on 27.22ff. For the translation, see Hengel, Crucifixion, x [sic].

  ‘servile’: Cicero, For Cluentius 66; First Philippic 2.

  less revenge than deterrence: Pseudo-Quintilian: Minor Declamations 274.13, cited in Hengel, Crucifixion, 50.

  the devastation of the countryside: e.g. Velleius Paterculus 2.30.5; Plutarch, Crassus 8.1; Ampelius 45.3; Otto Keller, Pseudacronis scholia in Horatium vetustiora, vol. I (Leipzig: Teubner, 1902), 274, 3.14.19.

  fear, anger and indignation: Livy, History of Rome 3.16.3, 21.41.10.

  Recte omnia velim sint nobis: M. Pagano and J. Rougetet, ‘La casa del liberto P. Confuleius Sabbio a Capu a e isuoi mosaici’, Mélanges de L’École Française de Rome 98(1987):753-65.

  ‘the whole road to Rome from Capua’: Appian, Civil War 1.20.559.

  Roman jurists recommended crucifying notorious brigands: Digest 48.19.28.15, cited in Hengel, Crucifixion, 48.

  Roman authorities also favoured: Pseudo-Quintilian: Minor Declamations 274.13, cited in Hengel, Crucifixion, 50.

  the crucifixion of women: Apuleius, Golden Ass 4.31; Josephus, Antiquities 18.3.4.

  the Romans even crucified dogs: Pliny, Natural History 29.14.57.

  the crucified could linger: Haim Cohn and Shimon Gibson, ‘Crucifixion’, in Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik, eds., Encyclopedia Judaica, 2nd edn. Vol. 5 (Detroit: Macmillan Reference USA, 2007), 309-10.

  cases of crucified men who laughed: Hengel, Crucifixion, 48.

  ‘Crassus had defeated’: Plutarch, Crassus 11.11.

  ‘the troubles at Tempsa’: Cicero, Verrines 6.39, 41.

  ‘the remnants of the Italian war of the fugitive slaves’: Cicero, Verrines 6.39.

  ‘small band’: Cicero, Verrines 6.40.

  ‘the bald adulterer’: Suetonius, Deified Julius 51.

  Marcus Lucullus’s triumph probably took place first: on the dates and other details of the four triumphs, see A. Degrassi, Inscriptiones Italiae XIII.1 (Rome: La Libreria dello Stato, 1947), 565.

  5,000 thrushes: Varro, Agricultural Topics 3.2.15-16, repeated by Columella, On Agriculture 8.10.6. See discussion by M. Beard, The Roman Triumph (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2007), 49 and 346, n.12.

  roughly equivalent to the annual pay of about 100 legionaries: see R. Alston, ‘Roman Military Pay from Caesar to Diocletian’, Journal of Roman Studies 84 (1994): 113-23.

  Conclusion

  ‘He put an end to them’: Suetonius, Deified Augustus 3.1.

  thought to cure malarial fevers: Pliny, Natural History 28.41, 28.46. See also Laura D. Lane, ‘Malaria and Magic in the Roman World’, in David Soren and Noelle Soren, eds., A Roman Villa and a Late Roman Infant Cemetery: Excavation at Poggio Gramignano, Lugnano in Teverina (Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 1999), 640.

  ‘life force’: Itta Gradel, Emperor Worship and Roman Religion (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2002), 37.

  URSUS TUBICEN: Hans-Günther Simon, ‘Zwei ausseregewohn liche reliefverzierte Gefässe aus Langenhain, Wetteraukreis’, Germania 53 (1975): 126-37, esp. 134.

  bitter and protracted tension at Pompeii: Cicero, For Sulla 60-62.

  He called for a mirror: the details come from Suetonius, Deified Augustus 98.5-100.1.

  Acknowledgements

  Chapters of this manuscript were read by and greatly improved through the comments of Kimberly Bowes, Judith Dupré, Mark Levine, Adrienne Mayor, Marcia Mogelonsky, Jan Parker, Matthew Sears and Chaya Rivka Zwolinski. Many Cornell colleagues and students, past and present, offered advice and answered specific questions. I would like to thank in particular Annetta Alexandridis, Edward Baptist, Flaminia Cervesi, Nora Dimitrova, Michael Fontaine, Kathryn Gleason, Harry Greene, Martin Loicano, Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis, Kathryn McDonnell, Mich elle Moyd, Jon Parmenter, Eric Rebillard, Sidney Tarrow, Robert Travers, Rachel Weil and Michael Weiss. I would also like to thank Josh Bernstein, Anna Kirkwood, Kim McKnight, Josiah Ober, Priya Ramasabban, Philip Sabin and Rob Tempio.

  I am deeply grateful to my two academic homes at Cornell University, the Department of History and the Department of Classics. The superb collection and the supportive staff of Cornell’s John M. Olin Library helped make this book possible. I benefited from the comments received when I read portions of my manuscript at Cornell’s Ancient Mediterranean Colloquium, Cornell’s Peace Studies Seminar, and at the Duke-UNC Graduate Colloquium.

  I was lucky enough to make several research trips to Italy. Among those who helped me there are Carmine Cozzolino, Marcella DeFeo, Umberto Del Vecchio, Maria Laura Frullini, Donato Punello and Marcello Tagliente. Jim Zurer provided expert travel advice.

  As in the past, Suzanne Lang provided invaluable secretarial and logistical assistance. Barbara Donnell, Michael Strauss and Sylvie Strauss helped with typing.

  I am greatly indebted to my editor at Simon & Schuster, Bob Bender, whose sage advice improved the manuscript thoroughly. I would also like to thank his assistant, Johanna Li. I am greatly indebted as well to my editors at Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Alan Samson and Keith Lowe, for their perceptive and productive reading of the manuscript. My literary agent and friend, Howard Morhaim, first suggested that I write about Spartacus.

  My family is the true sine qua non of this book. I thank Sylvie and Michael for their support and patience and Marcia for more than I can say.

  George Wood, my former student and friend, fell in Iraq in 2003. George was planning a career as a Roman historian. It is impossible for me to write about Rome without remembering him.

  Josiah Ober and Adrienne Mayor have always been there, as friends and colleagues, for thirty years. Dedicating this book to them is but small recompense.

  Index

  Abella (Avella)

  Achaicus, Lucius Mummius

  Aciris (Agri) River valley

  Aetna (Etna), Mount

  Agri Picentini

  Agri (Aciris) River valley

  Alburni Mountains

  Alexander Jannaeus, king of Judaea

  Alexander the Great

  Allia, Battle of the (390 BC)

  Alps

  Amarantus

  Anatolia

  Antonius

  Antony, Mark aunt of

  Apennine Mountains

  battle in

  community of maroons (runaways)

  Apollo

  Apollonia (San Fratello)

  Apollonius

  Appian Way

  Apulia (Puglia)

  Aquilius, Manius

  Arausio, Battle of (105 BC)

  aristeia (story of warrior’s heroic deeds)

  Arminius, Hermann

  armour

  Arrius, Quintus

  Asia Minor

  Asicius, Lucius

  Aspromonte, Plains of

  Aspromonte Mountains see also Melìa Ridge

  Crassus’s fortifications in

  Roman army meets rebels in (71 BC)

  Atena Lucana (Atena Petilia), hills around

  Aufidus (Ofanto) River

  Augustus, Emperor (Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus)

  Auriolus

  Avella (Abella)

  Bacchae, The

  Bacchantessee also Dionysus, worshippers of

  Bacchussee also Dionysus

  bailiffs, plantation (vilici)

  Balkans

  bandits

  Basilicata see Lucania

  Batiatus, Lentulus (see Vatia)

  battle, prayer before

  battle, wine consumed before

  battle tactics

  Beneventum (Benevento)

  Bessi tribe

  Bible,
Second Book of Maccabees

  Bibracte, Battle of (58 BC)

  Boudicca

  Brindisi (Brundisium)

  Bruttium (Calabria)

  road in centre of

  Buccino (Volcei)

  Bulgaria

  Caepio, Quintus Servilius

  Caesar, Julius adopts Octavian (Augustus) celebration of triumph civil war with Pompey and Gallic people’s religion and Gaul and gladiators’ revolt kidnapped by pirates marches on Rome murder of qualities

  Caggiano

  Calabria see Bruttium

  Callinicus, skirmish at (171 BC)

  Camalatrum, Mount

  Campania

  Campania Felix

  Campanian plain

  Campus Atinas (ValloDiano)

  Cannae, Battle of (216 BC)

  Cannicus (Gannicus)

  Cantenna, Battle of (71 BC)

  Cantenna, Mount

  Capaccio

  Cape Caenys (Punta Pezzo)

  Cape Pelorus (Peloro)

  Caposele

  Capua

  amphitheatre

  city market

  crucifixion of slaves after revolt

  as gladiatorial games center

  gladiators in, after the war

  gladiators’ revolt

  highways from

  Novius’s house

  police force

  Sabbio’s townhouse

  slave revolt (104 BC)

  slaves in

  Thracian lady in

  Vatia, house of see Vatia, Cnaeus Cornelius Lentulus

  Capuans

  Carrhae, Battle of (53 BC)

  Case Romano

  Cassius

  Cassius Longinus, Gaius

  Castelcivita‘

  Castus

  Catiline

  Cato ‘the Censor’ (Marcus Porcius Cato)

  Cato the Elder

  Cato the Younger (Marcus Porcius Cato)

  Catona (Statio ad Statuam)

  Caudine Forks, Battle of the (321 BC)

  Celadus

  celebration, Saturnalia

  Celtic armies before battle

  Celtic refugees

  Celtic women

  Celts

  Balkan

  in battle

  battle as religious act

  at feasts

  as gladiators

  height of

  horse sacred to

  ideal of hero’s death on battlefield

  migrating

  rebel army breakaway contingent

  reputation as herdsmen

  rituals

  sacrifice prisoners of war

  as slaves

  and suicide in defeat

  warlike nature

  as warriors

  centurions

  Charybdis and Scylla, myth of

  Chiusa Grande

  Cicero, Marcus Tullius

  and Verres

  Cilento Hills

  Cilicia

  Cilicians

  Cimbri tribe, women of

  Cisalpine Gaul

  clairvoyants

  Clanis (Clanio) River

  Claudian

  Cleopatra

  Colliano

  Colline Gate, Battle of the (82 BC)

  Columella

  Compsa (Conza)

  Consentia (Cosenza)

  consuls

  Contrada Romano

  Contursi Terme hot springs

  Conza (Compsa)

  Copia see Thurii

  Corbulo

  Coscile River see Sybaris River

  Cosenza (Consentia)

  Cossinius, Lucius

  country estates, managers of

  country estates, slaves on

  Crassus, Marcus Licinius

  Aspromonte Mountains, clash with rebels in

  Aspromonte Mountains, fortifications in

  attack on breakaway rebel army

  Battle of Cantenna

  pursuit of rebels after

  Battle of the Silarus after battle preparations for

  bust of

  career

  character

  Cicero praises

  death of

  defeat of breakaway rebel army

  forces Spartacus to retreat

  grandfather ‘Agelastus’

  and his legions

  marches south

  and Mummius’s defeat

  officers

  ovation celebration

  and prolonged struggle with Spartacus

  punishment for slaves after revolt

  and the rebels’ crossing to Sicily

  recruiting

  return of

  revives decimation discipline practice

  rivalry with Pompey

  Spartacus offers peace treaty

  and split in rebel army

  strategy against Spartacus

  wages war against Marians

  wants confrontation with Spartacus

  and war in Spain

  wealth

  Crassus, Publius

  Crathis (Crati) River

  valley

  Crete

  Crixus

  army crushed

  compromise with Spartacus

  defeated

  funeral games

  leads rebel group in the south

  crucifixions

  meaning

  procedure

  relics saved from

  Cumae

  Curio, Gaius Scribonius

  Danube River

  Darius, king of Persia

  Diana Tifata temple

  Didius, Titus

  Dionysus (god of Thrace)

  worshippers of

  Dositheus

  Dossone della Melìa (Melìa Ridge)

  Drusus, Marcus Livius

  Eboli (Eburum)

  Eburian (Eboli) Hills

  elephants

  emergency (tumultus)

  Ephesus, Turkey, gladiators’ cemetery

  estates, country (latifundia)

  Etna, Mount

  Etruria (Tuscany)

  Familia Gladiatoria Lentuli Vatiae (Lentulus Vatia’s Family of Gladiators) see Vatia, Cnaeus Cornelius Lentulus: gladiatorial barracks

  farm workers

  farmer-soldiers

  farmers, Italian subsistence

  fides relationship (‘protection’; ‘faith’; ‘trust’)

  Flaccus

  Floralia

  Florus (gladiator)

  Florus (writer)

  foraging

  Forum Annii

  free men

  Furius, Lucius

  Gallic warriors’ grave

  Gannicus (Cannicus)

  Garganus (Gargano), Mount

  Gaul

  Gauls

  Gavius, Publius

  Gellius, Lucius

  GenzanoLucania

  German battle cry

  German refugees

  German women

  Germans

  in battle

  contempt for death

  height of

  and hero’s death

  horse sacred to

  migrating

  in rebel army

  rebel army breakaway contingent

  sacrifice prisoners of war

  as slaves

  and women’s religious authority

  Germany

  Getae tribe

  Gióia Tauro (Plain of Metauros)

  Giungano

  Glaber, Caius Claudius

  gladiatorial enterprise (ludus - ‘school’)

  gladiatorial entrepreneurs (lanistae)

  gladiatorial games, Spartacus gives

  gladiatorial games run by private enterprise

  gladiatorial matches

  death blow

  gladiators’ cry

  prizes

  producer (editor)

  referee and assistant (summa rudis and seconda rudis)

  thumbs gesture

  gladi
ators

  Celtic

  diet

  escape from Vatia’s barracks

  family relationship

  ‘fight to the death’ (sine missione)

  heavyweight (murmillones)

  heavyweight (thraex)

  Italian citizen volunteers as

  life expectancy

  life of

  moved out of Rome

  oath of

  origins

  in Pompeii

  rewards for

  Roman attitude towards

  Thraciansee also Spartacus

  training

  gladiators’ revolt see rebel army

  Gorgias

  Gracchi brothers

  grape crops

  grape-vine, wild (vitis vinifera sylvestris)

  Gratidanus, Marius

  Greece

  Greek kings

  Greeks

  Grumentum

  guerrillas

  Gulf of Tarentum (Taranto)

  Hannibal

  Herachthinus

  Heraclea

  vase and contents

  Heracleo

  Herculaneum

  herdsmen

  Hermann (Arminius)

  Highway:

  Highway:

  Hindu Kush Mountains

  Hispania Citerior

  Hispania Ulterior

  Hollywood

  Homer

  Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus)

  Horatius

  horses

  Hortensius

  Illyrians

  Imachara

  imperator as title of honour

  Ionian coast

  Ionian Sea

  Irpinia

  Italian citizens as volunteer gladiators

  Italian nationalists

  Italian subsistence farmers

  Italians in rebel army

  Italy, snakes in

  Italy, winter in

  Jerusalem, siege of (AD)

  Jesus (gladiator)

  Judaea

  Jugurtha, King of Numidia

  kitchens, Roman

  knights, mounted

  Lactarii (Lattari) Mountains

  lanistae (gladiatorial entrepreneurs)

  latifundia (‘wide fields’ - country estates)

  latro (‘thief’, ‘bandit’, ‘highwayman’, guerrilla soldier’, ‘insurgent’)

  Lattari (Lactarii) Mountains

  Lentula

  Lentulus Clodianus, Gnaeus Cornelius

  Licinii family

  lictors (Roman officials’ attendants)

  Lilybaeum (Marsala)

  Livy

  Locris

  loot, acquisition of

  Lucania (Basilicata)

 

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