SLAVE room in Pompeii

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Ocatarinetabellatchitchix, Nov 7, 2021.

  1. Ocatarinetabellatchitchix

    Ocatarinetabellatchitchix Well-Known Member

    Archaeologists in Pompeii announced on Saturday that they had unearthed the remains of a "slave room", an exceptionally rare find in a Roman villa destroyed by the eruption of Vesuvius nearly 2,000 years ago.

    CE3031D2-9317-46C7-99D9-3DFCC439DE53.jpeg

    The small bedroom, which houses three beds, one of which is the size of a child, eight amphorae, a ceramic pot and a wooden chest, was discovered during excavations in a villa in Civita Giuliana, a district located a few steps hundreds of meters north of the Pompeii archaeological park, buried in 79 AD. The 170 square feet room was located between a bedroom and a storage room.

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    The beds are made from several roughly worked wooden planks, which could be adjusted to suit its occupant, and their webbed feet are made of ropes covered with blankets. Two beds were 5.7 feet long and the third was 4.7 feet long. According to the park authorities, the three slaves may have formed a family. Under the beds, personal items were found, including amphorae and what could be a chamber pot. The room was lit by a small upper window. There are no traces of wall decorations, just a mark possibly left by a lantern.

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    The excavations were carried out as part of a program to fight against grave robbers, particularly active in this area of Italy, full of archaeological treasures yet to be discovered.

    0CED488E-9F30-4661-9F59-E36D7D0D1D31.jpeg

    Please show me your coins depicting SLAVES, CAPTIVES or anything you feel relevant !

    F996BD6A-A55D-4955-8D92-F5D751AD4E4A.jpeg

    9C4A74B7-E215-42D4-9AAD-2BA856962E4B.jpeg
     
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  3. ancient coin hunter

    ancient coin hunter 3rd Century Usurper

    Interesting piece... thanks for the share.
     
  4. Deacon Ray

    Deacon Ray Well-Known Member

    Last edited: Nov 7, 2021
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  5. savitale

    savitale Well-Known Member

    Cool discovery. Thanks for posting.
     
  6. robinjojo

    robinjojo Well-Known Member

  7. Marsden

    Marsden Well-Known Member

    Amazes me that timber can remain intact for two millennia. Though volcanic ash probably acts as a good preservative, in addition to reducing the humidity to approximately nil.

    Alas, throughout human history enslavement was more often the rule than the exception.
     
  8. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    Rats; once again, this was too long ago to have pictures, but I have one of these. ...Gives me permission to post a better example, via ACSearch.
    CONDER, DUBLIN, ABOLITIONIST, AM I NOT A MAN AND A BROTHER.jpg
    Britain, Abolitionist conder token, c. late 18th century (time of the decades-long campaign of William Wilberforce to end the British slave trade). There are variants; mine was 'payable' (from the edge legend) in London and Dublin.
     
  9. hotwheelsearl

    hotwheelsearl Well-Known Member

    Cant go wrong with the common captive under the hut
    Constantius II RIC VIII 156 (2020_11_18 03_38_31 UTC).JPG
     
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  10. mikebell

    mikebell Well-Known Member

    In a similar vein, and from the same period. Issued for the colony of freed slaves in Freetown, Sierra Leone. Borrowing design elements as well.
    292052042094.jpg
    Ex eBay
     
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  11. Al Kowsky

    Al Kowsky Well-Known Member

    The British Museum has some interesting objects related to slavery in ancient Rome, pictured below are photos of a few of these.

    Flask shaped like a crouching African captive_1.jpg
    This is a pottery flask of an African captive who was offered as a slave, Rome, 1st century AD. The titulus hanging around his neck identifies him as a slave.

    Inscribed plate and slavery tag found in Rome (1).jpg
    Inscribed plate, 4th century AD, found in Rome, 58 mm. This object was attached to a metal collar around the neck of a slave, not unlike a modern dog tag. The inscription reads: Tene me ne fugia(m) et revoca me ad dom(i)num Viventium in ar(e)a Callisti [Hold me, lest I flee, and return me to my master Viventius on the estate of Callistus].

    funerary relief  former enslaved individuals Philonicus and Demetrius.jpg
    Marble funerary relief, Italy, circa 30-10 BC. The men depicted on this relief are Philonicus & Demetrius, formerly enslaved men who are framed by the tools of their trade: carpenter tools & tools for coining money.
     
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  12. galba68

    galba68 Well-Known Member

    Valentinian I, Gold medallion, 80.45 gr, National Museum, Belgrade, Serbia

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    upload_2021-11-8_18-49-26.jpeg
     
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  13. Marsman

    Marsman Well-Known Member

    My ‘dragging captive’ coin. What a brutal scene.

    B10E7CAE-D1A9-4E6F-A4FA-AE56DFE2BCC3.png
    Valentianus. AE.
    Siscia mint.
    2.52 g. 18 mm.
    Obv. D N VALENTINI-ANVS P F AVG, pearl-diademed, draped and cuirassed bust of Valentinian to the right.
    Rev. GLORIA RO-MANORVM, Q - RK, Valentinian in military dress, walking right, head left, dragging captive and holding labarum. Mintmark B SISCV.
    RIC IX 14a.
     
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  14. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    Very cool discovery! I have the same type as the OP Licinius II:
    licinius ii dattari.jpg

    And since there's some moderns in the thread, how about this Haitian coin featuring the first president of Haiti, Alexandre Pétion, after the first ever successful slave uprising aka the Haitian Revolution:
    haiti an 14.jpg
    12 centimes, An 14 = 1817
     
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  15. Hrefn

    Hrefn Well-Known Member

    The type of the emperor or a soldier dragging a captive seems to disappear by the end of the fifth century, and sooner from the solidi than from the bronze. Who struck the last example in the gold, and who did so in the bronze?
     
  16. Severus Alexander

    Severus Alexander find me at NumisForums

    I think the latest bronze is Zeno (2nd reign, 476-91). You can just barely see the captive at the bottom right on this Cherson coin which I owned until recently:
    373.jpg
     
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  17. +VGO.DVCKS

    +VGO.DVCKS Well-Known Member

    Many Thanks, @Severus Alexander, for some of the Haitian shit. (/Love. Put 'em together, in certain culturally favorable contexts, and you might get Funk. --Nope, wrong thread for a demonstration.)

    All of this goes too far back for me to have any pictures. But in the collecting, this was where, working backward into what was, even then, the rarer and more expensive stuff, it felt good to stop here. Here's a better example, of the same year. All I can do is to promise you that my example is sweet enough.
    https://www.acsearch.info/search.html?id=536691
     
    Last edited: Nov 8, 2021
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