Greek and Roman Slaveries
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Greek and Roman Slaveries

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Greek and Roman Slaveries

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About This Book

Greek and Roman Slaveries

Slavery was foundational to Greek and Roman societies, affecting nearly all of their economic, social, political, and cultural practices. Greek and Roman Slaveries offers a rich collection of literary, epigraphic, papyrological, and archaeological sources, including many unfamiliar ones. This sourcebook ranges chronologically from the archaic period to late antiquity, covering the whole of the Mediterranean, the Near East, and temperate Europe.

Readers will find an interactive and user-friendly engagement with past scholarship and new research agendas that focuses particularly on the agency of ancient slaves, the processes in which slavery was inscribed, the changing history of slavery in antiquity, and the comparative study of ancient slaveries.

Perfect for undergraduate and graduate students taking courses on ancient slavery, as well as courses on slavery more generally, this sourcebook's questions, cross-references, and bibliographies encourage an analytical and interactive approach to the various economic, social, and political processes and contexts in which slavery was employed while acknowledging the agency of enslaved persons.

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Yes, you can access Greek and Roman Slaveries by Eftychia Bathrellou, Kostas Vlassopoulos in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Ancient History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2022
ISBN
9781118969335
Edition
1

1
What Is Slavery?

What is slavery? Modern scholarship has largely focused on two definitions: slaves were human property,6 and slavery is a form of social death: the violent domination of dishonored outsiders without acknowledged kinship links (natal alienation).7 There is no shortage of ancient sources that support these two definitions (1.1, 1.11ā€“2, 1.14). On this basis, scholars have constructed a stereotype of slaves as outsiders acquired through trade or war (1.2) who lived and worked under the direct control of their masters.
We aim to assess the advantages and limits of these approaches by examining servile groups like the Spartan helots and the Cretan woikeis, who were native inhabitants with their own families, working the land and surrendering a part of the harvest to their masters. Were such groups really slaves, or should they be interpreted as persons in an intermediate state ā€œbetween slavery and freedom,ā€ as serfs or dependent peasants (1.3)? Or should we rather see them as slaves with peculiar characteristics, as a result of the peculiar histories of the societies in which they lived (1.4ā€“9)? If so, slavery was not a uniform institution across ancient societies but a complex and contradictory phenomenon affected by a variety of economic, political, social, and cultural processes.8 Social death was undoubtedly a constant threat that slaves faced and a harsh reality for many of them, but how should we account for cases in which masters (1.18) or states (1.15) honored their slaves? How should we interpret sources in which slaves present themselves as honorable persons (1.17) or honor their fellow-slaves (1.16)? Natal alienation was undoubtedly part of the slave condition, but how should we account for the evident significance of slave families for how slaves acted (1.13)?
If property and social death emphasize the power of masters over slaves, we also need to take into account the role of slave agency. Should we see slavery as a relationship unilaterally defined by the masters or rather as an asymmetrical negotiation of power involving, masters, slaves, and other groups and agents?9 In this respect, we explore a variety of issues: the negotiations that were inherent in the masterā€“slave relationship (1.19, 1.21ā€“2), the slavesā€™ quest for emotional fulfillment and support and its impact on how slavery operated as an institution (1.20, 1.25), the significance of the intervention of the state and other third parties in relations between masters and slaves (1.23ā€“4), and the conjunctures that slaves could take advantage of to enhance their conditions (1.26).
Finally, we move beyond property and social death to examine other ways (modalities) of conceptualizing slavery that existed in ancient societies, even in the text of the same author: as domination, an instrumental relationship, an asymmetrical relation of benefaction and reward, and so on (1.27). Although some sources can describe enslaved persons as natural slaves (1.28), it was also possible to conceive of slavery as an extreme form of bad luck, from which it was legitimate to seek to escape (1.30). These diverse modalities were partly complementary and partly contradictory;10 we shall explore their consequences for how slavery operated in the various ancient societies.

PROPERTY AND DOMINATION: ā€œCHATTEL SLAVESā€ AND OTHERS

1.1 Aristotle, Politics, 1253b23ā€“1254a17:11 Greek Philosophical Treatise (Fourth Century BCE)

Literature: Garnsey 1996: 107ā€“27; Millett 2007; Vlassopoulos 2011a.
Because property is part of the household, so the art of acquiring property is part of household management ā€“ for both living and living well are impossible without the necessaries. Now, as a specific art would have to have its own proper tools, if its work is to be accomplished, so is the case with the person practicing household management. Tools can be inanimate or animate. For example, for the helmsman, the helm is an inanimate tool, while the look-out man an animate one (for when an art is concerned, an assistant is a kind of tool). Accordingly, a possession is a tool for maintaining life; property is a multitude of tools; a slave is a kind of animate possession; and every assistant is like a tool before tools. For if every tool could accomplish its own task when ordered or by sensing in advance what it should do [ā€¦], then master-builders would not need assistants, nor would masters need slaves.
ā€œPossessionsā€ are spoken of in the same way as ā€œparts.ā€ A part is not merely a part of another entity but also is wholly of that other entity. The same is true of a possession. This is why a master is just the master of his slave, not ā€œhis slaveā€™sā€ without qualification, but a slave is not merely the slave of his master but also wholly his. It is clear from these considerations then what the nature and the essential quality of a slave are. For anyone who, while being human, is by nature not of himself but of another, is by nature a slave; now, a human being is of another when, while being human, he happens to be a possession.
  • Property, tool, nature: how does Aristotle use these concepts to characterize slavery?
  • What does he mean when he claims that the master is just the master of the slave, but the slave belongs to the master completely?
  • Under what conditions does Aristotle think that slavery would be superfluous?

1.2 Digest, 1.5.3ā€“4: Collection of Latin Juristic Texts (Sixth Century CE)

The Digest is a collection of excerpts from the works of republican and early imperial Roman jurists made during the reign of the emperor Justinian in the sixth century ce.
Literature: Lambertini 1984; Cavallini 1994; Garnsey 1996: 23ā€“34; Welwei 2000; Lenski 2016.
Gaius, Institutes, Book 1: Certainly, the most important division in the law of persons is the following: all men are either free or slave.
Florentinus, Institutes, Book 9: Freedom is oneā€™s natural ability to do what one pleases unless this is prevented by force or by law. Slavery is an institution of the law of nations12 whereby a person is subjected against nature to the ownership (dominium) of another. Slaves (servi) are thus named because commanders tend to sell captives, and thus to preserve them, rather than kill them. They are, indeed, said to be mancipia because they are captured from the enemy by force (manus).
  • What is freedom according to these passages?
  • What is the cause of slavery?
  • What conception of slavery underlies these passages? How does it relate to the view expressed in 1.1?

1.3 Pollux, Onomastikon, 3.83: Greek Thesaurus (Second Century CE)

Literature: Lotze 1959; van Wees 2003; Paradiso 2007; Lewis 2018: 143ā€“6.
Between free men and slaves are the helots of the Lacedaemonians, the penestai of the Thessalians, the klarĆ“tai (i.e. ā€œthose belo...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Series page
  3. Title page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Table of Contents
  7. List of Figures and Maps
  8. Note to the Reader
  9. Acknowledgements
  10. Abbreviations
  11. Introduction
  12. 1 What Is Slavery?
  13. 2 Studying Slavery: The Variety of Evidence and Its Interpretative Challenges
  14. 3 Living with Slavery and Its Consequences
  15. 4 Slaving Strategies
  16. 5 Masters and Slaves
  17. 6 Free and Slave
  18. 7 Enslaved Persons and Their Communities
  19. 8 Slavery and the Wider World
  20. 9 Experiencing and Resisting Enslavement
  21. 10 After Slavery: Manumission, Freedmen, and Freedwomen
  22. 11 Slavery and Historical Change
  23. 12 Comparing Ancient Slaveries
  24. Bibliography
  25. Index of Passages Cited
  26. Index of Places and Peoples
  27. Index of Names
  28. Thematic Index
  29. End User License Agreement