Read Makers of Ancient Strategy: From the Persian Wars to the Fall of Rome Online
Authors: Victor Davis Hanson
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convincing, but it is true that the slaves found al ies among the free poor.
When the First Sicilian revolt broke out, “the citizen masses . . . rejoiced
because they were jealous at inequities of wealth and differences in
lifestyle.” Instead of helping suppress the insurgency, “the free masses,
Slave Wars of Greece and Rome 197
because of their jealousy, would go out into the countryside on the pre-
text of attacking the runaways and plunder the property there, and even
burn down the farms.”24
In the Second Sicilian war, says one source,
“Turmoil and an Iliad of woes possessed al Sicily. Not only slaves but
impoverished freemen were guilty of rapine and lawlessness.”25
Ever agile, Spartacus tried both strategies: he attempted to break
out and escape abroad, but also sought allies. His original plan, once
the revolt caught fire, was to march into northern Italy and then have
his men split into separate groups and cross the Alps, where they would
seek their respective homelands. The plan failed, however, because of
division among his men. Spartacus was never able to impose his author-
ity on the ethnically heterogeneous group of rebels who fought with
him. They consisted of large numbers of Celts and Germans as well as
Thracians and other groups, many of whom resisted his commands.
Besides, success spoiled them: their many victories encouraged them
to stay in Italy. A veteran soldier, Spartacus knew better: he understood
that Rome would pull together a trained and experienced army that no
ragtag insurgency could defeat, no matter how long they drilled.
So it happened. Marcus Licinius Crassus gained a special command
and raised a big, new army. Many of the recruits were probably vet-
erans who had fought for Sulla in Rome’s civil wars a decade earlier;
others were brought into line by the iron discipline that Crassus im-
posed. For good measure, the Roman army recalled its legions from
Spain, where Pompey (Caius Pompeius Magnus) had just defeated the
rebels. With the handwriting on the wall, Spartacus convinced his men
to retreat south and to try to cross the Strait of Messina to Sicily. He
hoped to renew his fortunes there, either by starting a third slave war
or perhaps by using the island as a stepping-stone to escape across the
sea. But first he had to cross the strait.
Not having any boats himself, Spartacus tried to hire pirates who,
in those days, used Sicily as a base for raids. It was not his first expe-
rience in alliances with free men. The Thracian gladiator had found
support in the early days of his rebellion from “many runaway slaves
and certain free men from the fields.”26 He may have even gained some
backing from southern Italian elites, either because of their simmering
enmity to Roman rule or because Spartacus had bought them.
198 Strauss
Returning to the pirates: they came from southern Anatolia or
Crete, considered themselves enemies of Rome, and had a history of
alliance with Rome’s main enemy in the east, Mithridates. Hence, they
represented a promising collaborator. After taking Spartacus’s money,
however, the pirates left him and his men on the Italian shore. It was
either a case of simple dishonesty or fear of the Roman governor of
Sicily, Caius Verres. Immortalized by Cicero for his corruption, Verres
in fact seems to have taken energetic action to fortify Sicily’s shoreline
and arrest slave troublemakers around the island. He plausibly also ne-
gotiated with the pirates himself, and may simply have outbid Sparta-
cus. Afterward, the Thracian tried to get across the strait another way,
by having his men build rafts, but they foundered in the winter waves.
It is also possible that Spartacus made contact with Mithridates, as the
Roman rebel Sertorius had done a few years earlier, from Spain. Mith-
ridates later used his knowledge of Spartacus’s rebellion as a rhetorical
device to try to stir up a Celtic invasion of Italy (it didn’t materialize). In
any case, Spartacus found no new allies. The slaves were stuck in Italy.
The endgame differed little in essentials when it came to each of the
two Sicilian slave wars and Spartacus. The rebels of the First Sicilian
Slave War managed to defeat in pitched battle several Roman armies,
whose forces they greatly outnumbered, and to take several cities. Af-
ter Rome’s humiliating defeats, the consul Publius Rupilius laid siege
to the two main rebel cities and each time found a traitor to open the
gates. Then he engaged in mopping-up operations around the island.
After a series of incompetent generals failed to put down the second re-
bellion, the consul Manius Aquilius rose to the occasion. He killed the
rebel king in single combat, which would have won him Rome’s high-
est military honor had his opponent been a free man and not a slave.
Spartacus had defeated nine Roman armies, but he could not stand
up to Crassus’s revitalized forces. First Crassus tried to blockade him in
the mountains of the toe of the Italian boot, in winter 72–71 BC, which
the Romans sealed with a massive project of wal s and trenches. Sparta-
cus fought his way out, but at great cost. Pressed on his march north-
ward by the enemy, Spartacus final y gave battle, probably in the upper
val ey of the Silarus (modern Sele) River, not far from the modern city
of Salerno. The Romans defeated the enemy army and kil ed Spartacus.
Slave Wars of Greece and Rome 199
Contrary to popular legend, Spartacus was not crucified, although
6,000 of his men were. Their bodies hung on crosses lining the road be-
tween the cities of Rome and Capua (near Naples, the cradle of Sparta-
cus’s rebellion). Spartacus’s body, however, was never found. After the
battle of the Silarus, Spartacus’s army ceased to exist as a fighting unit.
It broke up into several groups. The Romans hunted them down spo-
radically, destroying the last of their maroon communities in the hills
of southern Italy only in 60 BC.
Spartacus’s failure marked the end of the great era of ancient slave
revolts. Sporadic uprisings continued, such as the revolt of one Selouros
in Sicily during the lifetime of the writer Strabo (d. after AD 21), a na-
scent slave rebellion in southern Italy in AD 24, and what may have been
a slave revolt under Bulla Felix in Italy in AD 206–7.27 The big uprisings,
however, were over.
Several things caused the change. The Romans engaged in effective
repression. First came the spectacles of punishment following each
failed rebellion. Second, as demonstrated by Verres’s actions in Sicily
while he waited for Spartacus, the Romans finally learned not to take
the threat of rebellion lightly. Another factor was the series of civil
wars from 49 to 30 BC, which provided employment opportunities for
discontented slaves. There was no need to form an army of their own,
for example, when 30,000 fugitive slaves could join the rebel fleet of
Sextus Pompey (son of Pompeius Magnus), who dominated the waters
of Sicily from 43 to 36 BC.28
Perhaps the most important factor was the Pax Romana. The acces-
sion of Augustus as Rome’s first emperor (30 BC–AD 14) brought to an
end the era of Roman expansion. With it came an inevitable decline in
the number of prisoners of war who became slaves. Earlier, in the 60s
BC, Pompey (Pompeius Magnus) had succeeded in driving most of the
pirates from Mediterranean waters, thereby ending another source of
slaves. While the Roman slave trade continued, sources of slaves were no
longer so abundant or so cheap. The upshot was that a higher percent-
age of Roman slaves were house slaves. No longer did a steady source
of ex-soldiers and ex-politicians feed the ranks of potential slave rebels.
More and more slaves probably resigned themselves to their new
homes in Italy and Sicily and looked to manumission, not insurrection,
200 Strauss
as the route to freedom. Greek and Roman slavery always offered man-
umission on far more generous terms than did modern slave societies.
To say so is not to detract from the brutality of ancient slavery, but it
may help explain why men like Spartacus eventually became monsters
to frighten children with rather than real figures of Roman society.
In modern times, Spartacus’s reputation has generally boomed.
Except for Arthur Koestler, the disillusioned ex-communist who saw
Spartacus as a kind of post-revolution Lenin, corrupted by power, most
moderns praise Spartacus. They see him as a liberator or an early social-
ist; the nineteenth century made him into a nationalist like Garibaldi.
If, however, we were to subject Spartacus or Drimacus, Salvius or
Eunus, to the cold light of a military staff-college seminar, a different
picture would emerge. From a military point of view, they demon-
strate the unlikelihood of insurrections defeating regular armies. The
ragtag rebel slaves of Greece and Rome could not match the logistical
advantages and institutional advantages of an established state. They
could march their men in mock legions and defeat frightened local mi-
litia; they could put out feelers for allies overseas. Once the state bore
down on them with all its might, however, they faced ruin.
Nor could slaves attract much voluntary support from local popula-
tions of free people, who could figure out that in the end, most rebels
would end up in chains or hanging from crosses. After their initial
escape, and after making enough raids to get loot and revenge, rebel
slaves were well advised to flee, either to the hills or abroad.
There is a lesson for today. Insurgents can crash onto the scene as
loudly as Spartacus and his rebel gladiators did. They can rally religious
support and terrorize local populations. They can draw other discon-
tented people into their ranks at first. They can even come out of the
hills and try to establish their authority over a city or a province. Once
the state responds in all its armed might, however, the rebels are usu-
ally doomed.
Modern insurgencies will usually face a similar fate. In Iraq, for ex-
ample, once the allied states found the political will and the military
tactics to apply force effectively, they broke the back of the insurgency
(2003–9). Still, success is not completely out of reach for insurgents.
They can change the equation through one of several means, all
Slave Wars of Greece and Rome 201
unlikely but not impossible. For instance, they can buy time and space
to turn themselves from a raiding force into a regular army. Having
an isolated location, far from the center of power, helps this process
greatly. The experience of the Chinese communist Red Army after the
Long March of 1934 is an example. A second possibility is acquiring a
state as an ally. The mujahideen of Afghanistan leveraged support from
such states as China, Iran, Pakistan, and the United States into victory
over the Soviet Red Army in the 1980s.
Today’s insurgents, finally, have one advantage that antiquity’s rebel
slaves did not: they can target domestic opinion in the enemy’s state.
In the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62), for example, the insur-
gents lost the military battle but won the war by wearing out French
public opinion.
The Haitian Revolution (1791–1804) was history’s only successful
slave revolt, and it incorporated these various advantages. The rebels
fought a prolonged struggle, far from metropolitan France. The Brit-
ish fleet provided help via a blockade. The French Revolution gave the
rebels the moral high ground. After years of difficult fighting and dis-
ease, the French gave up.
Successful insurgencies are the exception, however. Ancient slave
rebellions remind us that, when it comes to war, states usually hold all
the cards.
Further Reading
An excellent starting point is Brent D. Shaw,
Spartacus and the Slave Wars: A Brief History
with Documents
(Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2001). Theresa Urbainczyk,
Slave Revolts
in Antiquity
(Stocksfield, UK: Acumen Publishing, 2008), offers a very good overview.
For slave rebellions in ancient Greece, see Yvon Garlan,
Slavery in Ancient Greece
, rev.
ed., trans. Janet Lloyd (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988), 176–200; for those in
ancient Rome, see Keith Bradley,
Slavery and Rebellion in the Roman World
,
140 b.c.–70 b.c.
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989).
Important books on ancient slavery include M. I. Finley,
Ancient Slavery and Modern
Ideology
(Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1998); Joseph Vogt,
Ancient Slavery
and the Ideal of Man
, trans. Thomas Wiedemann (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1975); Keith Hopkins,
Conquerors and Slaves
(Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1978); Peter Garnsey,
Ideas of Slavery from Aristotle to Augustine
(Cambridge: Cam-