Photograph of Spartacus.
Spartacus

Overview

Spartacus (ca. 120 BC – ca. 70 BC), according to Roman historians, was a gladiator-slave who became the leader (or possibly one of several) in the unsuccessful slave uprising against the Roman Republic known as the Third Servile War. Little is known about Spartacus beyond the events of the war, and the surviving historical accounts are sketchy and often contradictory. Spartacus' struggle, often perceived as the struggle of an oppressed people fighting for their freedom against a slave-owning aristocracy, has found new meaning for modern writers since the 19th century. The figure of Spartacus, and his rebellion, has become an inspiration to many modern literary and political writers, who have made the character of Spartacus an ancient/modern folk hero.

Ancient depictions of Spartacus

Spartacus' origins
The ancient sources agree that Spartacus was a native Thracian who had served as an auxiliary in the Roman army. Plutarch describes him as "a Thracian of nomadic tribe," and says his wife, a prophetess of the same tribe, was enslaved with him; Appian says he was "a Thracian by birth, who had once served as a soldier with the Romans, but had since been a prisoner and sold for a gladiator"; and Florus says he was "a mercenary Thracian [who] had become a Roman soldier, of a soldier a deserter and robber, and afterwards, from consideration of his strength, a gladiator"; However, "Thracian" was a style of gladiatorial combat in which the gladiator fought with a round shield and a short sword or dagger, and it has been argued that this may have confused the sources about his geographical origins, although no alternative origin is attested.

The name "Spartacus" is otherwise attested in the Black Sea region: kings of Cimmerian Bosporus and Pontus are known to have borne it, and a Thracian "Spardacus" or "Sparadokos", father of Seuthes I of the Odrysae, is also known.

<i>
Third Servile War
Capuan revolt
Spartacus was trained at the gladiatorial school (ludo) near Capua, belonging to Lentulus Batiatus. In 73 BC, Spartacus and some 70 followers escaped from the gladiator school of Lentulus Batiatus. Seizing the knives in the cook's shop and a wagon full of weapons, the slaves fled to the caldera of Mount Vesuvius, near modern day Naples. There they were joined by other rural slaves.

The group overran the region, plundering and pillaging, although Spartacus apparently tried to restrain them as his main intention was to leave Italy and return home. His chief aides were gladiators from Gaul, named Crixus, Castus, Gannicus and Oenomaus. Other runaway slaves joined, increasing the numbers to several hundred.

The slave-to-Roman citizen ratio at that time was very high, making this slave rebellion a very serious threat to Rome. However Rome did not believe slaves could defeat their legions so failed to take adequate action. All of Rome's experienced legions were away so the Senate sent an inexperienced praetor, Claudius Glaber (his nomen may have been Clodius; his praenomen is unknown), against the rebels, with a militia of about 3,000. They besieged the rebels on Vesuvius blocking their escape, but Spartacus had ropes made from vines and with his men climbed down a cliff on the other side of the mountain, to the rear of the Roman soldiers, and staged a surprise attack. Not expecting trouble from a handful of slaves, the Romans had not fortified their camp or posted adequate sentries. As a result, most of the Roman soldiers were still sleeping and killed in this attack, including Claudius Glaber. After this success many runaway slaves joined Spartacus until the group grew into an army of allegedly 120,000 escaped slaves.
Military success continues
Spartacus is credited as a excellent military tactician and his experience as a former auxiliary soldier made him a formidable enemy but his men were mostly former slave labourers who lacked military training. Due to the short time expected before needing to face battle, Spartacus delegated training to the Gladiators who trained small groups who then trained other small groups themselves and so on leading to a basically trained army in only a few weeks. Spartacus' forces then defeated two more Roman legions sent to crush them, then settled down for the winter on the south coast, making weapons. By now, Spartacus' many followers included women, children, and elderly men who tagged along. By spring they marched north towards Gaul.

The Senate, alarmed, sent two consuls, Gellius Publicola and Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus, each with a legion, against the rebels. Crixus wanted to stay in Italy and plunder but Spartacus wanted to continue North and so, along with around 30,000 Gaul and Germanic supporters, Crixus left Spartacus and was later defeated by Publicola. Crixus was killed in battle. Spartacus first defeated Lentulus, and then Publicola. At Picenum in central Italy, Spartacus defeated the consular armies, then pushed north. At Mutina (now Modena) they defeated yet another legion under Gaius Cassius Longinus, the Governor of Cisalpine Gaul ("Gaul this side of the Alps").
Choice to remain in Italy
Apparently, Spartacus had intended to march his army out of Italy and into Gaul (now Belgium, Switzerland and France) or maybe even to Hispania to join the rebellion of Quintus Sertorius. <!-- Is this speculation about Hispania or Sertorius, or is there a source? Pompey was eding the Sertorian revolt about the same time as the end of the third servile war. -- >But he changed his mind and turned back south, the sources say , under pressure from his followers, for they wanted more plunder. Although it is not known for certain why they turned back when they were on the brink of escaping into Gaul, it is regarded as their greatest mistake. There are theories that some of the non-fighting followers (some 10,000 or so) did, in fact, cross the Alps and return to their homelands.

The rest marched back south, and defeated two more legions under Marcus Licinius Crassus, who at that time was the wealthiest man in Rome. At the end of 72 BC, Spartacus was encamped in Rhegium (Reggio Calabria), near the Strait of Messina (the "toe of the Italian boot").

Spartacus' deal with Cilician pirates to get them to Sicily fell through. In the beginning of 71 BC, eight legions of Crassus isolated Spartacus's army in Calabria. With the assassination of Quintus Sertorius, the Roman Senate also recalled Pompey from Hispania; and Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus from Macedonia.

Spartacus managed to break through Crassus's lines and escape towards Brundisium (now Brindisi), but Pompey's forces intercepted them in Lucania, and the slaves were routed in a subsequent battle at the river Silarus. Spartacus is believed to have fallen at Silarus, but his body was never identified. After the battle, legionaries found and rescued 3,000 unharmed Roman prisoners in their camp. 6,600 of Spartacus's followers were crucified along the via Appia (or the Appian Way) from Brundisium to Rome. Crassus never gave orders for the bodies to be taken down, thus travelers were forced to see the bodies for years, perhaps decades, after the final battle.

Around 5,000 slaves, however, escaped the capture. They fled north and were later destroyed by Pompey, who was coming back from Roman Iberia. This enabled him also to claim credit for ending this war. Pompey was greeted as a hero in Rome while Crassus received little credit or celebration.

Modern depictions of Spartacus

Politics
* Toussaint L'Ouverture and his successor Jean-Jacques Dessalines led the slave rebellion of the Haitian Revolution (1791—1804), where the armies of Spain, Britain and Napoleon Bonaparte's France were defeated. Toussaint was called the "Black Spartacus" by one of his defeated opponents, the Comte de Lavaux. * Spartacus has been a great inspiration to revolutionaries in modern times, most notably the Spartacist League of Weimar Germany. * Karl Marx said Spartacus was his hero, citing him as the 'finest fellow' antiquity had to offer. *Noted Latin American Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara was also a strong admirer of Spartacus.
Artistic
Film
* Most famously, Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Howard Fast's novel, as </i>Spartacus, in 1960. The catchphrase "I'm Spartacus!" from this film has been referenced in a number of other films, television programs, and commercials. * In 2004, Fast's novel was adapted as Spartacus<i>, a made-for-TV movie or miniseries by the USA Network, with Goran Višnjić in the main role.
Literature
* Howard Fast wrote the historical novel </i>Spartacus. * Arthur Koestler wrote a novel about Spartacus called The Gladiators. * There is a novel Spartacus by the Scottish writer Lewis Grassic Gibbon. * Spartacus is a prominent character in the novel Fortune's Favorites by Colleen McCullough. McCullough subscribes to the theory that Spartacus was a renegade Roman soldier, but sticks to the historical account that his body was never found. * The Italian writer Rafaello Giovagnoli wrote his historical novel, Spartacus, in 1874. His novel has been subsequently translated and published in many European countries. * There is also a novel The students of Spartacus (Uczniowie Spartakusa) by the Polish writer Halina Rudnicka. * The Reverend Elijah Kellogg's Spartacus to the Gladiators at Capua has been used effectively by schoolboys to practise their oratory skills for ages. * Spartacus also appears in Conn Iggulden's Emperor Series in the book The Death of Kings. * Spartacus and His Glorious Gladiators, by Toby Brown, is part of the Dead Famous (series) of children's history books * In the Bolo novel Bolo Rising<i> by William H. Keith, the character HCT "Hector" is based on Spartacus.
Music
* </i>Spartacus is a ballet, with a score by composer Aram Khachaturian.

* Jeff Wayne released his musical retelling,
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of Spartacus<i> in 1992.
Videogames
* Spartacus was featured in the board game </i>Heroscape in the wave known as Thora's Vengeance. * In the popular real-time strategy game Rome: Total War<i>, Spartacus can be unlocked and fought against. If a player builds a colosseum or arena in a conquered city, then lets the city revolt, Spartacus will be the general of the revolted city. The rebel army led by Spartacus is extremely difficult and the player will have to use superior tactics to defeat it and reclaim the city. Others contradict this by saying that those with superior troop types such as archers, elephants, or ballistae make the fight against Spartacus rather easy.
Sport
*Spartak football club and Spartak sport society are named in honour of Spartacus. * The Spartakiad was a competition similar to the Olympic games for countries of the Soviet bloc.,
Other

References

<div class="references-small"></div>

Bibliography

Classical authors
* Appian. </i>Civil Wars. Translated by J. Carter. (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1996) * Florus. Epitome of Roman History. (London: W. Heinemann, 1947) * Orosius. The Seven Books of History Against the Pagans. Translated by Roy J. Deferrari. (Washington, DC: Catholic University of America Press, 1964). * Plutarch. Fall of the Roman Republic. Translated by R. Warner. (London: Penguin Books, 1972), with special emphasis placed on "The Life of Crassus" and "The Life of Pompey". * Sallust. Conspiracy of Catiline and the War of Jugurtha<i>. (London: Constable, 1924)
Modern historiography
* Bradley, Keith R. </i>Slavery and Rebellion in the Roman World, 140 B.C.–70 B.C. Bloomington; Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1989 (hardcover, ISBN 0-253-31259-0); 1998 (paperback, ISBN 0-253-21169-7). [Chapter V] The Slave War of Spartacus, pp. 83–101. * Rubinsohn, Wolfgang Zeev. Spartacus' Uprising and Soviet Historical Writing. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 1987 (paperback, ISBN 0-9511243-1-5). * Spartacus: Film and History, edited by Martin M. Winkler. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2007 (hardcover, ISBN 1405131802; paperback, ISBN 1405131810). * Trow, M.J. Spartacus: The Myth and the Man''. Stroud, United Kingdom: Sutton Publishing, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 0-7509-3907-9). * Genner, Michael. "Spartakus. Eine Gegengeschichte des Altertums nach den Legenden der Zigeuner". Two volumes. Paperback. Trikont Verlag, Munchen 1979/1980. Vol 1 ISBN 3-88167-053-X Vol 2 ISBN 3-88167-060-2

Honours

Who is Spartacus connected to?
Add a Connection

That biography says:

...Notorious mass crucifixions followed the Third Servile War (the slave rebellion under Spartacus), the Roman Civil War, and the destruction of Jerusalem. Josephus tells a story of the Romans crucifying people along the walls of Jerusalem...

This biography says:

...* Spartacus has been a great inspiration to revolutionaries in modern times, most notably the Spartacist League of Weimar Germany. * Karl Marx said Spartacus was his hero, citing him as the 'finest fellow' antiquity had to offer. *Noted Latin American Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara was also a strong admirer of Spartacus.

That biography says:

...He is noted for being one of the consular generals who lead Roman legions against the slave armies of Spartacus in the Third Servile War....

This biography says:

...The rest marched back south, and defeated two more legions under Marcus Licinius Crassus, who at that time was the wealthiest man in Rome. At the end of 72 BC, Spartacus was encamped in Rhegium (Reggio Calabria), near the Strait of Messina (the "toe of the Italian boot")...

That biography says:

...115 BC – 53 BC) was a Roman general and politician who commanded Sulla's decisive victory at Colline gate, suppressed the slave revolt led by Spartacus and entered into a secret pact, known as the First Triumvirate, with Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and Gaius Julius Caesar...

That biography says:

...1879) *Tomb of Anatole de la Forge (1893) At the Jardin des Tuileries: *The Oath of Spartacus (1869, illustrated) At La Défense: *La Défense (bronze) Monument to the defenders of Paris in 1870 (1880 - 1883) The plaster model was shown at the Paris salon of 1881...

This biography says:

...With the assassination of Quintus Sertorius, the Roman Senate also recalled Pompey from Hispania; and Marcus Terentius Varro Lucullus from Macedonia....

That biography says:

...As proconsul of Macedonia in 72 BC, he defeated the Bessi in Thrace and advanced to the Danube and the west coast of the Black Sea. In addition, he was marginally involved in the Third Servile War (a.k.a. Spartacus War).

This biography says:

...* Karl Marx said Spartacus was his hero, citing him as the 'finest fellow' antiquity had to offer. *Noted Latin American Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara was also a strong admirer of Spartacus.

That biography says:

...This infuriated the Emperor who felt insulted that a former Roman army deserter dared to treat Rome as his equal. "Not even Spartacus", declared Tiberius, "had dared to send envoys." Tiberius responded by sending the VIIII Hispana to help the III Augusta...

That biography says:

...His movie adaptations included: Robin Hood (Disney-Movie) (Four Color #413, 1952), Quentin Durward (Four Color #672, 1956), The Animal World (Four Color #713, 1956), Around the World in 80 Days (Four Color #784, 1957), The Story of Mankind (Four Color #851, 1958), Seventh Voyage of Sinbad (Four Color #944, 1958), Last Train from Gun Hill (Four Color #1012, 1959), The Horse Soldiers (Four Color #1048, 1959), Solomon and Sheba (Four Color #1070, 1959), Spartacus (Four Color #1139, 1960), The Story of Ruth (Four Color #1144, 1960), North to Alaska (Four Color #1155, 1960), Master of the World (Four Color #1157, 1961), Dondi (Four Color #1176, 1962), Pepe (Four Color #1194, 1961); and Lord Jim (Gold Key #10156-509, 1965)...

This biography says:

...<!-- Is this speculation about Hispania or Sertorius, or is there a source? Pompey was eding the Sertorian revolt about the same time as the end of the third servile war. -- >But he changed his mind and turned back south, the sources say , under pressure from his followers, for they wanted more plunder...

That biography says:

...Fair and generous terms extended his patronage throughout Hispania and into southern Gaul. While Crassus was facing Spartacus late in the Third Servile War in 71 BC, Pompey returned to Italy with his army. In his march toward Rome he came upon the remains of the army of Spartacus and captured five thousand Spartacani who had survived Crassus and were attempting to flee...

This biography says:

...* Jeff Wayne released his musical retelling, Jeff Wayne's Musical Version of Spartacus<i> in 1992.

That biography says:

...In 1992 Jeff Wayne released Spartacus, his first major release since The War of the Worlds. It had many of the ingredients for success: a stellar cast, including Anthony Hopkins, Catherine Zeta Jones, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, and Marillion's Fish; a libretto by Gary Osborne, who had produced most of the haunting lyrics of The War of the Worlds; and a story combining powerful themes of oppression, desperation, love and death...

That biography says:

...She wrote her first children's book in 1822, and published other children's stories in London, including books about Spartacus and Jugurtha. In London she was also involved in the anti-slavery movement. On 4 April 1831, she married John Moodie, a retired officer who had served in the Napoleonic Wars...

That biography says:

...He was commissioned by the Senate on his way to Macedonia to disperse a rebellion of slaves who had previously taken part in the rebellions under Spartacus and Catiline. He proved a capable administrator in Macedonia, governing "courageously and justly", his deeds including victory in a battle against the Thracian Bessian tribe...

That biography says:

...On the 5 August 1914, Karl Liebknecht, Clara Zetkin, Franz Mehring, and she founded the Internationale group; it became the Spartacist League on January 1, 1916. They wrote illegal, anti-war pamphlets pseudonymously signed "Spartacus" (after the slave-liberating Thracian gladiator who opposed the Romans); Luxemburg's pseudonym was "Junius" (after Lucius Junius Brutus, founder of the Roman Republic)...

This biography says:

* Howard Fast wrote the historical novel </i>Spartacus. * Arthur Koestler wrote a novel about Spartacus called The Gladiators. * There is a novel Spartacus by the Scottish writer Lewis Grassic Gibbon...

That biography says:

...* 1939. The Gladiators, 1967 reprint, ISBN 0-02-565320-2. A novel on the revolt of Spartacus. * 1940. Darkness at Noon, ISBN 0-09-942491-6 * 1942. Dialogue with Death. Abridgement of Spanish Testament...

This biography says:

* Most famously, Stanley Kubrick's adaptation of Howard Fast's novel, as </i>Spartacus, in 1960. The catchphrase "I'm Spartacus!" from this film has been referenced in a number of other films, television programs, and commercials...

That biography says:

...Kubrick languished working on unproduced screenplays (including, notably, Jim Thompson's treatment, Lunatic at Large) until Kirk Douglas asked him to assume direction of Spartacus (1960) from Anthony Mann who, two weeks into shooting, was fired by the studio because he lacked leadership (or, more likely, for disagreeing with producer-star Kirk Douglas)...

That biography says:

...On his return to Rome he was elected military tribune, a first step on the ''cursus honorum'' of Roman politics. The war against Spartacus took place around this time (73 - 71 BC), but it is not recorded what role, if any, Caesar played in it...

That biography says:

...According to Flair, Herd also proposed changes in his appearance (i.e. by shaving his hair, wearing a diamond earring and going by the name "Spartacus") as well as his in-ring name in order to "change with the times", a move that Kevin Sullivan equated with "changing Mickey Mantle's (uniform) number" as an example of unnecessarily altering a legend...

This biography says:

* </i>Spartacus is a ballet, with a score by composer Aram Khachaturian....

That biography says:

Khachaturian's works include concertos for violin, cello, flute (transposition of violin concerto), and piano (the latter originally including an early part for the flexatone), concerto-rhapsodies for the same instruments, three symphonies—the third containing parts for fifteen additional trumpets and organ, and the ballets Spartak (AKA Spartacus) and Gayane (music of which was used in Stanley Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey)...

That biography says:

...*In keeping with its Roman conceptual nature, the opening riff to "Blood Slakes The Sand At The Circus Maximus" is almost identical to the beginning of the score to the classic film Spartacus....

This biography says:

The ancient sources agree that Spartacus was a native Thracian who had served as an auxiliary in the Roman army. Plutarch describes him as "a Thracian of nomadic tribe," and says his wife, a prophetess of the same tribe, was enslaved with him; Appian says he was "a Thracian by birth, who had once served as a soldier with the Romans, but had since been a prisoner and sold for a gladiator"; and Florus says he was "a mercenary Thracian [who] had become a Roman soldier, of a soldier a deserter and robber, and afterwards, from consideration of his strength, a gladiator"; However, "Thracian" was a style of gladiatorial combat in which the gladiator fought with a round shield and a short sword or dagger, and it has been argued that this may have confused the sources about his geographical origins, although no alternative origin is attested...
How is Spartacus connected to Jean-Jacques Dessalines? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Goran Višnjić? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Livy? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Carlos Hathcock? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Sallust? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Cato the Younger? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Alfred Molina? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Quintus Sertorius? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to William Smith (lexicographer)? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Verres? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Orosius? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Gaius Cassius Longinus (consul 73 BCE)? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Diodorus Siculus? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Ian Dury? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Appian? Tell the world.
How is Spartacus connected to Florus? Tell the world.