Greek and Roman Slaveries. Eftychia Bathrellou

Greek and Roman Slaveries - Eftychia Bathrellou


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done such a thing, you idiot. You had so much gold, and slaves, and you’ve returned bringing them back for your master? And you didn’t run away? Where on earth are you from?

      Daos: From Phrygia.

      Waiter: A good for nothing! A sissy! Only we, Thracians, are men! Oh Apollo, the Getai are the manly sort! That’s why the mills are full of us.

       What does the waiter expect Daos to have done after his master’s death on campaign? How does he explain Daos’ behavior? If this was a serious conversation and not a buffoonish scene from a comedy, how do you think Daos could have justified his decision?

       What are the ethnic identities of these two slaves?

       How does the waiter present his own ethnic identity? What evidence does he bring in favor of his argument?

       Can we take this dialogue as a realistic representation of how slaves perceived their ethnic identities and conversed with each other? Or is this merely the mirror image of Athenian assumptions about barbarian slaves?

      2.19 Menander, Men at Arbitration, 538–49 and 557–66:34 Greek Comedy (End of Fourth/Early Third Century BCE)

      The interlocutors here are two slaves: Habrotonon, a musician and hetaira working for a pimp, hired temporarily by a young Athenian man, and Onesimos, the valet of that Athenian man. The two are concocting a plan. Habrotonon, whose sexual advances have been rejected by the Athenian, will pretend to be the mother of a baby fathered by him. Then, she will look for the real mother.

      Literature: Bathrellou 2012; Cox 2013; Vester 2013.

       Onesimos:

      But you don’t mention that you will become free. For as soon as he acknowledges you as the child’s mother, he will immediately free you, of course.

      Habrotonon: I don’t know. But I’d like it to happen.

      Onesimos: Don’t you know?! But what thanks will I get for this, Habrotonon?

      Habrotonon: By Demeter and Persephone, I will regard you as the cause of all I might achieve.

      Onesimos: But if you stop searching for her on purpose and let it drop, having thus deceived me, what will happen then?

       Onesimos:

      I wish you would get it. […]

       (Habrotonon exits; Onesimos remains alone on stage.)

      Onesimos: The woman is full of ideas. When she saw that it’d be impossible to achieve freedom by the way of love and that she’s struggling in vain, she goes off on a new tack. I, however, will be a slave all my life – driveling me, senseless, completely incapable of planning such things! But, possibly, I will get something from her, if she succeeds. It would be right. How worthless even my calculations are, wretched me, expecting to receive thanks from a woman! Just let me avoid further trouble!

       What strategies has Habrotonon used to gain her freedom?

       As far as can be judged from this excerpt, is the wish of these two slaves to become free represented in a negative light or sympathetically?

       What would the free audience think in hearing this slave dialogue on freedom? Would such a depiction conflict with ideas about the servile and dishonored nature of slaves?

       Can we take this passage as a realistic depiction of slave mentalities?

      2.20 Menander, Hero, 15–44:35 Greek Comedy (Late Fourth/Early Third Century BCE)

      Daos and Getas, two male slaves, are friends.

      Literature: Harris 2002.

      Getas: What are you saying? Are you in love?!

      Daos: I am.

      Getas: Your master is giving you a double share of grain. That’s bad, Daos. You probably eat too much.

      Daos: My heart aches when I see this girl who lives with us. A very good girl, of my own station, Getas.

      Getas: Is she a slave?

      Getas: Now I see.

      Daos: And the lad, Gorgias.

      Getas: He who is now looking after the sheep here, at your place?

      Getas: Possibly because your master would not give him a third mina.

      Daos: Perhaps. When he died, Gorgias took a little more cash, buried him, performed the usual rites, and came here to us, bringing his sister along. He is staying on here, working off the debt.

      Getas: And what of Plangon?

      Daos: She works the wool together with my mistress and does some housework too. A girl so … – Getas! Are you laughing at me?!

      Getas: No! By Apollo!

      Daos: Getas, she is so much like a free girl; really decent.

      Getas: And you? What are you doing for your case?

      Daos: I’ve attempted nothing in secret, by Herakles! But I’ve spoken to my master, and he’s promised to let her l[ive with me], after he discusses it with [her brother].

       What is the family history of Plangon and Gorgias? Are they slaves?

       How do the children of Tibeios try to pay back their debt obligations?

       How does Daos try to sort out his love life?

       How credible is this fictional source for understanding the lives of slaves and their descendants?

      2.21 Plautus, Persian, 251–71:37 Latin Comedy (Second Century BCE)

      Toxilus, a slave, has asked his good friend Sagaristio, another slave, for a loan. With the money, he wants to buy off from her master, a pimp, the slave girl he is in love with.

      Literature: Segal 1968: 102–36; Parker 1989; McCarthy 2000: 122–66; Richlin 2014.


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