The Spartacus War

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The Spartacus War Page 25

by Strauss, Barry

lake in

  north-western

  northern hills

  Lucanian horses

  Lucanians

  Lucullus, Lucius Licinius

  Lucullus, Marcus

  Lucullus, Marcus Terentius Varro

  ludus (gladiatorial enterprise - ‘school’)

  Lusitania

  Lusitanians

  Macedonia

  Machiavelli

  Maedi tribe

  Magdalene Mountains (Monti della Maddalena)

  Magna Graecia (‘Greater Greece’)

  managers of country estates

  Manlius, Cnaeus

  Marcellus, Marcus Claudius

  Marcius Rufus, Quintus

  Marco, Plains of

  Marians

  Marius

  wife of

  Marius (inhabitant of Vibo Valentia)

  maroon communities

  Marsala (Lilybaeum)

  Marseilles (Massilia)

  Martha (Syrian prophetess)

  Marzano, Mount

  Massilia (Marseille)

  Melìa Ridge (Dossone della Melìa)

  Messana (Messina)

  Messina, Strait of

  Metapontum (Metaponto)

  temple of Apollo

  Metauros, Plain of (Gióia Tauro)

  Metellus, Lucius Caecilius

  Metellus Pius, Quintus Caecilius

  Milo

  Mithridates, King of Pontus

  Mithridatic Wars

  Modena (Mutina)

  Moesian tribe

  Monastir (Ruspina), Tunisia

  Monte del Papa (Pope’s Mountain)

  Monti della Maddalena (Magdalene Mountains)

  Mount Aetna (Etna)

  Mount Camalatrum

  Mount Cantenna

  Mount Garganus (Gargano)

  Mount Marzano

  Mount Ogna

  Mount Soprano

  Mount Vesuvius

  Grand Cone

  Monte Somma

  slave-run estates around

  Mount Vultur (Vulture)

  Mummius

  musical instrument, tibia

  Mutina (Modena)

  Napoleon Bonaparte

  Nares Lucanae

  nationalists, Italian

  Nocera (Nuceria)

  Nola

  Novius family

  Nuceria (Nocera)

  Numantia

  Numidian cavalry

  Octavius, Gaius

  Odrysian people

  Oenomaus

  Ofanto (Aufidus) River

  Ogna massif

  Oliveto Citra

  Olympias

  opportunists

  Orange, France

  Orchomenus, Battle of (85 BC)

  Orpheus and Orphic religion

  Oscan language

  ovation celebration

  Padus River see Po River

  Paestum

  Palermo (Panormus)

  Partenio Mountains

  Parthians

  pathfinders

  peltasts (lightly armed Thracian infantrymen)

  Perperna, Marcus

  Petelia

  Peteline Mountains

  Pharsalus, Battle of (48 BC)

  Philippus

  Picenti, Agri

  Picentia

  Picentine guide

  Picentini Mountains

  Picenum, Battle of (72 BC)

  pirates

  Plain of Metauros (Gióia Tauro)

  Plain of Sybaris

  Plains of Aspromonte

  Plains of Marco

  Plutarch

  Po (Padus) River

  plain

  Polla

  Pollino Mountains

  Pompeians

  Pompeii

  fresco at

  gladiatorial ludus

  small farms around

  Spartacus painting in

  veteran soldiers in

  Pompey, Sextus

  Pompey the Great (Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus)

  Pomptinus, Caius

  Pope’s Mountain (Monte del Papa)

  Portugal

  Poseidonia

  praetors

  prayer before battle

  prisoners of war

  prophetesses

  ‘proscription’

  Ptolemy31

  Publipor

  Puglia (Apulia)

  Punic War, Second (218-201 BC)

  Punta Pezzo (Cape Caenys)

  Puteoli (Pozzuoli)

  Pydna, Battle of (168 BC)

  Pythagoras

  quaestors (financial officials)

  Quinctius, Lucius

  rebel army

  achievements

  after final battle

  Apennine Mountains battle

  on the Appian Way

  Aspromonte Mountains, wins clash in

  attack on Roman camp at Vesuvius

  attack on Varinius’s force

  battle with joint consular army

  battles against army

  beginnings of

  breakaway contingent defeat at Battle of Cantenna

  breakout from Aspromonte Mountains

  in Bruttium

  camp left deserted

  Campus Atinas, raping and pillaging in

  Capuans driven off

  cavalry

  Celts in

  cohesion

  commanders, choosing

  Crassus’s force encounters

  Crixus’s army crushed by

  crucifixions after defeat

  defeated at Battle of the Silarus

  desire to fight Roman army

  equipment captured

  fugitives join

  Germans in

  Glaber sent to put down

  heads for Samnium

  heads south

  heads south again

  internal divisions

  leadership

  marches northwards

  marches to the sea

  new recruits

  ‘nobles’ in

  numbers, estimated

  pathfinders

  plans to cross to Sicily

  possible mutiny in

  pre-battle rituals

  pursued after Cantenna battle

  rafts, men build and try to cross to Sicily on

  raids

  raids on Roman camps

  reaches the Ionian coast

  respect for Spartacus’s authority

  retreat into Aspromonte Mountains

  retreat to Peteline Mountains

  Roman attitude towards

  Rome’s response to

  splits into two groups

  survivors at large

  Thracians in

  Thurii conquered

  training newcomers

  unit insignia designations

  at Vesuvius

  on Via Annia

  weapons, improvised

  Regium (ReggioCalabria)

  religions and lunar cycles

  Roccadaspide

  Roman army

  against guerrilla warfare

  and Apennine Mountains battle

  Aspromonte Mountains, clash with rebels in

  auxilia units

  battle formation see Roman army: tactics

  Battle of Arausio (105 BC)

  Battle of Cantenna

  Battle of the Silarus preparations for

  battles against rebels

  camp attacked by rebels

  camps and defences

  and Capuan slave revolt (104 BC)

  centurions

  chickens considered sacred to

  cohorts

  commanders, new, chosen

  commanders enabled to reward bravery with citizenship

  Crassus’s force encounters rebels

  cremation of dead after battle

  decimation discipline practice revived

  discipline in

  eagles

  failures

  farmers in


  fasces (bundle of rods)

  fighting wars (73 BC)

  joint consular army battle

  legionaries

  legions

  losses

  marches south under Crassus

  in northern Lucanian hills

  Numidian cavalry

  pursuit of rebel army

  recruiting officers (conquisitores)

  refuses to accept defeat

  sent to put down gladiators’ revolt

  size of

  slave legions

  standard-bearers

  standards

  tactics

  under Varinius sent after rebels

  veteran soldiers

  Roman attitude

  towards gladiators

  towards slave revolt

  towards slaves

  towards Spartacus

  Roman fleet

  Roman Games (Great Games)

  Rome see also Senate

  Campus Martius (Field of Mars)

  Capitoline Hill

  Colline Gate

  defences

  Forum

  funeral games

  gladiatorial games

  optimates (conservative politicians)

  Pompey’s and Crassus’s armies reach

  response to gladiator’s revolt

  and Sicilian slave uprisings

  Spartacus sold into slavery in

  terror in

  triumph celebration

  Rufus, Quintus Marcius

  runaways’ (maroons’) communities

  Rupilius, Publius

  Ruspina, Battle of (46 BC)

  Sabbio, Publius Confuleius

  Saguntum

  St Augustine

  Salernum (Salerno)

  Sallust

  Samnium

  Samus

  San Fratello (Apollonia)

  Sarnus (Sarno) River

  Saturnalia (annual celebration)

  Scipio Aemilianus

  Scordisci people

  Scrofa, Gnaeus Tremelius

  Scrofario

  Scylla and Charybdis, myth of

  seers

  Sele (Silarus) River

  marshes

  Upper, valley ofsee also Silarus, Battle of the

  Seleucia

  Senate

  afraid of gladiators’ revolt

  appoints Crassus to command legions

  and Capuan slave revolt

  and consuls’ lack of success against Spartacus

  and Crassus’s ovation

  and Dionysus worship

  gladiators moved out of Rome by

  and pirates

  praetors

  reacts to news of defeat of Glaber’s army

  and return of Pompey

  sets public policy

  and Sicily

  senators

  Seneca

  Sertorius, Quintus

  Shakespeare, William

  shepherds

  shields

  large oblong (scuta)

  rebels’ woven

  small (parmulae)

  Sicels

  Sicilian Slave War, First (135-132 BC)

  Sicilian Slave War, Second (104-100 BC)

  Sicilian slaves

  Sicily

  Sila Greca

  Sila Mountains

  Silarus River see Sele River

  Silarus, Battle of the (71 BC)

  after the battle

  slave legions

  slave revolt see rebel army

  slave shepherds of Apulia

  slave stewards

  slave uprisingssee also rebel army

  Anatolian

  Slave War, First Sicilian (135-132 BC)

  Slave War, Second Sicilian (104-100 BC)

  slaves

  Celtic

  cost of

  on country estates

  freedom earned

  German

  in Italy

  minor humiliations for

  Roman view of

  runawaysee also rebel army

  sales of

  and seers

  Sicilian

  Thracian

  Thurii

  urban

  in vineyards

  worshipping the genius of master

  smallholders, Italian

  snakes, symbolism of

  snakes in Italy

  Social War (91-88 BC)

  Soprano, Mount

  Spain

  Spartacus

  Alps, wants to avoid battle and head for

  on the Appian Way

  Aspromonte Mountains, wins clash in

  attack on Roman camp

  authority respected by rebels

  battle in Apennines

  Battle at Cantenna

  Battle of Picenum

  Battle of the Silarus

  death at

  kills his horse before

  born as aristocrat theory

  breakout from Aspromonte Mountains

  brought up as a warrior

  builds his army

  captured and enslaved

  challenges Roman army

  Claudian’s statement on

  compromise with Crixus

  Crassus’s strategy against

  crucifies Roman prisoner

  death before disgrace philosophy

  description

  deserts army and becomes a latro

  early life as an auxiliary

  encourages gladiators to revolt

  escape from Vatia’s barracks

  fate of a revolutionary

  feelings towards Rome

  fighting methods

  gives gladiatorial games for slaves

  as a gladiatorsee also gladiatorial matches

  in gladiatorial barracks

  and gladiators’ revolt

  heads for Samnium

  as a leader

  legend of

  lover see Thracian lady

  Lucanian travels in folklore

  march to the sea

  marches northwards

  and new recruits

  in Nola

  origins

  peace treaty offered to Crassus

  and pirates

  plans to cross to Sicily

  plans to move north

  and Pompey

  prolongs the struggle

  pursued after Cantenna battle

  rafts, orders men to build and cross to Sicily on

  and raiding

  raids on Roman camps

  retreat into Aspromonte Mountains

  retreat to Peteline Mountains

  retreats south through Lucania

  Roman attitude towards

  snake said to have wrapped itself around his face

  sold into slavery

  and support for Mithridates

  symbolic power

  at Thurii

  triumph against Varinius

  turns south again

  Venusia, approach to

  and Vesuvius

  ‘victory disease’

  Spartacus’s rebellion see rebel army

  Sparticus

  spolia opima (‘splendid spoils’)

  Statio ad Statuam (Catona)

  Strabo

  Strait of Messina

  Strongoli

  Sulla

  civil wars

  Sulla’s army

  Sulla’s veterans

  Sybaris

  Sybaris, Plain of

  Sybaris (Coscile) River

  valley

  Sybarites

  Syracuse

  Great Harbour

  Temple of Athena

  Tacitus

  Tanager (Tanagro) River

  Tarentum (Taranto), Gulf of

  Tempsa, ‘troubles’ at

  tenant-farmers

  Terence

  Teutoburg Forest massacre (AD)

  Thrace

  Dionysus worship in

  slave trade

  Sulla
invades

  and women’s religious authority

  Thracian art and culture

  Thracian lady (Spartacus’s lover)

  in Capua

  escapes from Vatia’s barracks

  origins

  prophecy after snake wraps itself around Spartacus’s face

  in Thrace

  and Thurii

  as worshipper of Dionysus

  Thracian nomads

  Thracian peltasts (lightly armed infantrymen)

  Thracian revolt (15 BC)

  Thracian war cry

  Thracian women

  Thracians

  in battle

  battle preparations

  contempt for death

  as gladiatorssee also Spartacus

  height of

  and hero’s death

  horse sacred to

  as horsemen

  as men of honour

  in Mithridates’ war

  and mountainous terrain

  passion for war

  in rebel army

  as slaves

  specialize in night attacks

  tattoos

  and Vesuvius

  victories over

  as warriors

  Thucydides

  Thurii

  plain of

  Todi

  Tonnara

  Toranius, Gaius

  Torre lo schiavo

  Tremellius Scrofa, Cnaeus

  Triballi people

  triumph, celebrating a

  Triumvirate, First

  tumultus (emergency)

  Tuscany (Etruria)

  Tyre, rebels from

  Tyrrhenian Sea

  finds in olive grove near

  urban slaves

  ValloDiano (Campus Atinas)

  Varinius, Publius

  Varro

  Varus, Quintilius

  Vatia, Cnaeus Cornelius Lentulus

  gladiatorial barracks (ludus)

  gladiators escape from

  Venosa (Venusia)

  Venus

  Venusia (Venosa)

  Venusians

  Verres, Gaius

  Vestal virgin

  Vesuvinum wine

  veteran soldiers

  Vettius, T. Minucius

  Via Annia

  Via Grande (‘Great Way’)

  Via Latina

  Vibo Valentia

  vilicae (female officials)

  vilici (plantation bailiffs)

  Villa San Giovanni

  villas, ‘rustic’

  vineyards, slaves in

  Viriathus

  Volcei (Buccino)

  Vologaesus

  Volturnus (Volturno) River valley

  Vultur (Vulture), Mount

  weapons

  catapults, mobile (‘scorpions’)

  javelins (pila)

  javelins, little (iacula or tela)

  missiles, ‘acorn’

  projectiles, Roman army

  rebels’ improvised

  swords, broad straight (gladii)

  swords, curved (sicae)

  wine, amphorae of

  wine consumed before battle

  wine production

  winter in Italy

  women

  at battles

  Celtic

  Cimbri

  German

  plantation officials (vilicae)

  as prophetesses

  Thracian

 

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