Recommendations from our site
“Spartacus was originally from Thrace, northeast of Greece, on the Black Sea. It was a land of warrior horsemen that had just been conquered by Rome. Spartacus survived and was welcomed into the Roman cavalry – he fought campaigns in Greece on Rome’s side. He learned Roman-style combat as a legionary in the Roman Empire. But somehow, and we don’t know how this happened, he lost his status. Maybe he was captured, or he was insubordinate, that would seem quite likely. Anyway, he was sold as a slave, and was such a good fighter that he was sent to gladiator school in Italy. There he was trained in brutal fighting skills and became a champion in them – and then he rebelled. He starts with 70 fellow gladiator slaves in Italy, and incites this rebellion which grows until he’s got an army of 60,000” Read more...
The best books on Enemies of Ancient Rome
Adrienne Mayor, Classicist
Our most recommended books
-

The Return: Fathers, Sons and the Land In Between
by Hisham Matar -

Winston S Churchill
by Martin Gilbert -

Churchill and the Dardanelles
by Christopher M Bell -

American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer
by Kai Bird & Martin Sherwin -

Hitler’s Vienna
by Brigitte Hamann -

The First European: A History of Alexander in the Age of Empire
by Pierre Briant






