Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta
This is the first book-length study in English dedicated to an exploration of the events traditionally known as the two Sicilian Slave Wars. The second-century BC revolts are commonly included among the largest slave uprisings in world history and are considered key milestones in the timeline of Roman slavery. This book offers a re-examination of the so-called Slave Wars from the perspectives of the rebels and argues that these occurrences should be understood not as slave revolts but as rebellions ignited by the socio-economic and political difficulties caused by the Roman-backed status quo on Sicily. 
Analysing a diverse range of sources and material evidence, the book champions the perspectives of the rebels over those of the Graeco-Roman elite expressed in much later configurations of the events and provides radically new assessments of these elite histories while focusing on their status as slave-owner narratives. Opening a new window into the Sicilian rebellions, this book enables the contextualisation of these ancient revolts through uprisings in more recent times in the USA, Brazil and the Caribbean and offers a unique opportunity not only to study how the Roman Empire was formed and challenged but also to reconfigure our modern understanding of rebellions involving the enslaved.

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Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta
This is the first book-length study in English dedicated to an exploration of the events traditionally known as the two Sicilian Slave Wars. The second-century BC revolts are commonly included among the largest slave uprisings in world history and are considered key milestones in the timeline of Roman slavery. This book offers a re-examination of the so-called Slave Wars from the perspectives of the rebels and argues that these occurrences should be understood not as slave revolts but as rebellions ignited by the socio-economic and political difficulties caused by the Roman-backed status quo on Sicily. 
Analysing a diverse range of sources and material evidence, the book champions the perspectives of the rebels over those of the Graeco-Roman elite expressed in much later configurations of the events and provides radically new assessments of these elite histories while focusing on their status as slave-owner narratives. Opening a new window into the Sicilian rebellions, this book enables the contextualisation of these ancient revolts through uprisings in more recent times in the USA, Brazil and the Caribbean and offers a unique opportunity not only to study how the Roman Empire was formed and challenged but also to reconfigure our modern understanding of rebellions involving the enslaved.

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Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta

Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta

by Peter Morton
Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta

Slavery and Rebellion in Second-Century BC Sicily: From Bellum Servile to Sicilia Capta

by Peter Morton

Hardcover

$130.00 
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Overview

This is the first book-length study in English dedicated to an exploration of the events traditionally known as the two Sicilian Slave Wars. The second-century BC revolts are commonly included among the largest slave uprisings in world history and are considered key milestones in the timeline of Roman slavery. This book offers a re-examination of the so-called Slave Wars from the perspectives of the rebels and argues that these occurrences should be understood not as slave revolts but as rebellions ignited by the socio-economic and political difficulties caused by the Roman-backed status quo on Sicily. 
Analysing a diverse range of sources and material evidence, the book champions the perspectives of the rebels over those of the Graeco-Roman elite expressed in much later configurations of the events and provides radically new assessments of these elite histories while focusing on their status as slave-owner narratives. Opening a new window into the Sicilian rebellions, this book enables the contextualisation of these ancient revolts through uprisings in more recent times in the USA, Brazil and the Caribbean and offers a unique opportunity not only to study how the Roman Empire was formed and challenged but also to reconfigure our modern understanding of rebellions involving the enslaved.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399515733
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 12/06/2023
Series: Edinburgh Studies in Ancient Slavery
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Peter Morton is a teacher of Social Studies and Latin at William Penn Charter School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. His research areas include Roman slavery, the history of slave revolts, and ancient historiography, especially Diodorus Siculus’ Bibliotheke.

Table of Contents

AcknowledgementsAbbreviationsList of Illustrations

Introduction: The Problem with ‘the Sicilian Slave Wars’

Part 1: The Wars in Sicily Reassessed

1. The Coinage of King Antiochus: The War in Sicily of 136–132 BC through Rebel Eyes

2. The Slave-Owner Narratives of the ‘First Sicilian Slave War’: Eunus and his Rebels

3. The Creation of an Alternate State: Reassessing the Rebels in the War of 104–100 BC

Part 2: Slave Revolts in Ancient Historiography and the Wider Historical Context

4. The Slave Revolt topos: Thinking with Servile Unrest in Ancient Historiography

5. How to Define Revolt? Ancient Slave Rebellions in the Global Context

Conclusion: The Romano-Sicilian Wars in Context

Appendix 1: The ΦΙΛΙΠΗΙΟΝ Gold CoinageBibliographyIndex

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