The Roman Guide to Slave Management (18 page)

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Authors: Jerry Toner

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Criminal slaves who were condemned to the mines, to work in the galleys of ships, or to be thrown to the beasts in the amphitheatre were seen as completely deserving of their fate. It is tempting to think that the Romans will have felt some pity for poor men and women being thrown to the lions, but there is little evidence for this. They seem to have regarded such punishment as just deserts for slaves who were so worthless that they could not even be good at being slaves.

Runaways were a recurrent problem for masters. The loss of capital this represented was something they sought hard to avoid. In the
Oracles of Astrampsychus
, one of the questions is of a master seeking an answer to ‘Will I find the fugitive?’ It is heartening to find that the odds implied by the ten possible responses favour the runaway.
The replies suggest that 60 per cent will not be found, 30 per cent will be and 10 per cent only after a time. Perhaps this is why so many slaves appear to have tried to flee: it often worked. The resources masters had to try to track down an individual in the vast expanse of the Roman empire were limited. There was no police force to help and so long as the slave managed to escape from the immediate vicinity in which he might be recognised, then there was probably a reasonable possibility of starting life afresh as a free man.

The story of Androcles and the lion here related is a later expansion of the old Aesop fable. In this Roman version it is interesting that the slave gives his own account of his motivation for running away: his brutal and unjust treatment. While this is probably a fictional story (although the writer claims to have got it from an eyewitness at the event), it does give some indication of how some slaves bristled at their dreadful treatment and were prepared to take enormous risks to their personal safety in order to achieve the possibility of living in freedom. See Keith Bradley,
Slavery and Society at Rome
,
pp. 107

8
.

The story of Vedius Pollio is in Dio Cassius 54.23.1. Pollio’s actions are also criticised by Seneca,
On Anger
3.40. The description of slaves being punished by working in the flour mill comes from Apuleius’s novel,
The Golden Ass
9.12. On the dreadful conditions in the mines, see Diodorus Siculus 5.36–8. The story of Statilia is in the Justinian
Code
3.36.5. For people injuring themselves by hitting their slaves, see Galen
The Diseases of the Mind
4. An example of a wealthy owner trying to use
his contacts to get his runaways returned can be found in Symmachus
Letters
9.140. On the right of a slave to appeal to the gods or a statue of the divine emperor, see Justinian
Institutes
1.8.2.

   
CHAPTER VI
   
WHEN ONLY TORTURE WILL DO
 

 

T
HE PUNISHMENTS I HAVE OUTLINED
in the previous chapter should enable you to maintain discipline and authority within your household. There are times, though, when one of your slaves might become involved with the law. On these occasions, whenever a slave has to appear as a witness in court, it is a legal requirement that they give their evidence under torture. The reason for this is obvious. Slaves are habitual liars and so it is only when they suffer pain that they can be expected to reveal the truth. The only requirement is that the slave’s owner has willingly offered up the slave for torture. The only exception is that the slave cannot testify against his master, apart from in cases of treason.

Slaves themselves are for the most part morally worthless, a fact that is reflected in their extreme cowardice in the face of fear. It is pathetic to observe their whimpers, their voluble confessions and their terror when faced with the implements of torture. None of which does them any good, of course, because their evidence will
only be taken under torture. Otherwise they might say anything to get themselves, literally, off the hook. The prudence and humaneness of this course can be seen in the example of the slave Primitivus. He was so desperate to get away from his master that he even accused himself of murder and went so far as to name accomplices. It was only when he was put to the torture that the truth emerged, which was that no such crime had ever been committed. If it had not been for the torture, a slave would have been executed, innocent others would have been condemned to the mines, and a law-abiding owner would have been deprived of his property.

The torture of slaves is a common sight in the law courts. I did once hear of someone objecting to a slave being tortured. It was a case of joint ownership, of a beautiful slave girl, by two men who had then fallen out about some business affair and had a fight in which one was badly wounded. The injured party took the other to court where the accused refused to allow the torture of the slave girl because he claimed he was in love with her. Naturally, the wounded man argued that she was in the ideal position to give evidence about the matter, since she was owned equally by the two of them and was able to see who had caused the fight and who had struck the first blow. He also said that the accused’s own slaves, who the accused owned outright and was happy to put up for examination, would probably just have tried to make their master happy by telling all kinds of lies about the accuser. Unfortunately, I do not recall what happened in the end.

There are several standard ways of carrying out the
torture. In the first, the slave will have his hands tied, be hung up by a rope and then flogged with a whip. Some of these whips will have tips made of sharp metal or bone that will cut into the flesh. In the second, the slave will be racked, either on a wooden frame, which is known as the ‘little horse’, or else placed on an implement called the ‘lyre-strings’, both of which are designed to use a system of weights to slowly stretch, dislocate and finally separate limb from limb. Or two heavy pieces of wood will be used to break the legs. Another method is burning. Boiling pitch, hot metal plates, or flaming torches will be applied to the slave to extract the evidence that the court requires. Finally there are the hooks, whose razor-sharp teeth are drawn across the flesh of the victim’s sides. All of these procedures are carried out in public, within the courtroom.

Despite the vigour of these methods, care is taken that the slaves do not die under interrogation, although it has to be said that in practice they frequently do. And once the evidence has been obtained it has to be remembered that we are talking here about slaves. They can never be fully trusted and you should bear in mind that some will not reveal the truth but say anything just to get the torture to stop. And torture should only be used as a last resort in an investigation, at the point when someone is actually being suspected of committing a crime and no other proof from other means has been forthcoming.

I mentioned that slaves cannot be tortured for evidence against their own masters without their permission. Our divine emperor Augustus, though, set the precedent for avoiding this legal nicety. He ordered that
whenever this situation should arise in an investigation, the slave in question should be forcibly sold to the public treasury or to the emperor himself, so that the slave would no longer belong to the same owner and could be interrogated in the usual way. Not surprisingly, there were some who were opposed to false sales of this type since they argued it made a mockery of the law. But others argued that it was vital for such transactions to be carried out, otherwise the many plots that were being made against the emperor under cover of this provision, and which were a constant threat to the stability of the state, might not be discovered.

The murder of a master must be given a special mention. The law states that whenever slaves are present under the same roof when the master is murdered, and they do nothing to help him escape such a fate, then they shall all be questioned under torture and then executed. The reasons for this law are obvious. First and foremost is that fact that no household could ever be safe if the slaves were not compelled to protect their master’s life, whether the threat came from other household members or not, even if it meant placing their own lives at risk.

There are clearly some legal technicalities that have to be addressed here. What does the term ‘under the same roof’ mean? Does it mean within the walls of the house or in the same room? In fact it is generally taken to mean ‘within earshot of the murder’, for if the slaves were close enough to be able to hear their master’s cries for help then they were also close enough to be able to offer it. Of course, some people have a louder voice than others, and some have better hearing, so it will be for the court
to adjudicate on what seems reasonable in each case. Also, any last will the deceased owner had made must not be opened until the investigation is finished. Otherwise, the slaves in question might be named as beneficiaries and be freed, a freedom which would then spare them from the demands of the law for the torture of slaves.

By ‘murdered’ the law means all who have died as a result of violence or bloodshed, such as being strangled, thrown from a great height, or being hit with a blunt object or other such weapon. But if the master has been secretly poisoned then this law does not apply. For the purpose of this law is to ensure that slaves lend assistance to their master when it is clear that he needs it most. Since they cannot be expected to know that their master was being surreptitiously poisoned, they could not have prevented it from happening (and, in this case, other laws will take vengeance for the master’s death on those who were responsible for it). But the law does apply if the poison was being administered by force.

If the master commits suicide then this law does not apply and the slaves under the same roof should not be tortured and executed. But if the owner has turned his hand against himself within sight of his slaves and they could have prevented him from doing so, then the law will apply and they will be punished. If they were not able to help, then they will be acquitted.

The divine emperor Hadrian decreed that the law should certainly be applied to those in the same room as the murder victim. He also stated that no mercy should be shown to slaves who had failed to act simply out of fear of being killed themselves, and that slaves must
assist their owners in some way, if only by just shouting for help from others. However, he conceded that if the murder happened to have taken place when the master was out in his country estate, where a cry might carry for a great distance, then it would be highly unjust if all the slaves in his property were to be tortured and punished. In his great mercy, the emperor decreed that it was sufficient to interrogate only those slaves who were with their master when he was killed and are suspected of having either carried it out or having been accomplices. If the master was travelling and happened to be alone, then the law does not apply. Slave boys who are children and slave girls who are not yet of marriageable age should also not be tortured, since some allowance should be made for their youth.

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