Frank M. Snowden, Jr. Annual Lectures 
Keith Bradley, Frank M. Snowden, Jr. Lectures, Howard University, 
'The Bitter Chain of Slavery': Reflections on Slavery in Ancient Rome, 
http://chs.harvard.edu/publications.sec/online-print-books.ssp/frank-m.-
snowden-jr./. Center for Hellenic Studies, Washington, DC. November, 
2005 
 
'The Bitter Chain of Slavery': Reflections on Slavery in Ancient Rome 
Keith Bradley 
 
Towards the middle of the fifth century AD the Christian presbyter and 
moralist Salvian of Marseilles composed a highly polemical tract, On 
the Governance of God, in which he explained to the decadent Romans 
around him how it was that the destructive presence in their midst of 
barbarian invaders was the result not of God's neglect of the world but 
of their own moral bankruptcy. In their general comportment the 
Romans, though Christians, were full of moral failings and were far 
more morally culpable than the slaves they owned. Their slaves 
committed crimes such as stealing, running away, and lying, but they 
did so under the comprehensible and forgivable compulsion of hunger 
or fear of physical chastisement, whereas the Romans were simply 
wicked and had forfeited all claims to forgiveness because of their 
terrible behaviour. Among other things the Christian slaveowners had 
completely desecrated the institution of marriage: regarding their 
female slaves as natural outlets for their sexual appetites and 
considering adultery unexceptional, they thought nothing of acting 
upon their impulses and of satisfying their desires. As a result, Salvian 
said in an ironic metaphor, they had become the bad slaves of a good 
Master, which meant that the barbarian invaders, while pagans, were in 
fact their moral superiors. In Salvian's judgement it was this moral
superiority that accounted for the barbarians' stunning invasionary 
success (On the Governance of God 4.13-29; 6.92; 7.16-20; cf. 3.50; 
8.14). 
Despite his critical assault on Roman slaveowners, Salvian makes very 
clear the low esteem in which slaves were held in his society. Slaves 
were naturally inferior, criminous, and corrupt, they lived only to 
satisfy their base wishes, and they were expected to show 
unquestioning obedience to their owners, including sexual obedience. 
In recognising the motives that drove them to steal, lie, and run away, 
Salvian was notably sympathetic to them and he maintained that kindly 
treatment was a useful alternative to physical coercion in rendering 
slaves submissive. But he never questioned the reality of slavery, and 
he could proclaim without any sign of discomfort: 'It is generally 
agreed that slaves are wicked and worthy of our contempt' (4.29). 
Such views were hardly new. Images of immoral and criminous slaves, 
appeals for adopting a carrot-and-stick approach to handling them, and 
statements that obedience should be expected of them can be found in 
any number of earlier Greek and Latin writers. The precise form of 
slavery Salvian knew in fifth-century Gaul is a matter of controversy, 
but the terms he used to describe it, and the conceptual attitudes 
underlying them, were those which Greek and Roman slaveowners had 
used and drawn on for centuries past. 
His remarks nonetheless are striking. Salvian was writing at a very late 
date in classical history, and while directed to Romans in general his 
audience in the first instance was an entirely local body of men, the 
wealthy lords of southern Gaul--and both he and his local audience 
were of course Christian. Despite its conventional aspects, therefore, 
Salvian's evidence brings into sharp focus two well-known but 
important facts. The first is that there was no time or place in 
Greco-Roman antiquity, even on the margins of time and place, that 
was altogether free from the presence or influence of slavery. Across 
the vast chronological interval from the Mycenaeans to the Roman 
Empire of the fifth century and beyond, and in all the regions where 
Greco-Roman culture took root--Europe, the Near East, North
Africa--slavery in one form or other was an integral part of the social 
order. The second is that across time and space no one, not even 
Christians, ever seriously thought to question slavery and slaveowning. 
To moderns living in societies in whose democratic traditions the 
abolition of slavery in the nineteenth century is a landmark event, it 
may seem problematical that a call to end slavery never arose, 
especially in view of the appearance in late antiquity of a socially 
sensitive attitude like Salvian's. But this is a modern not an ancient 
problem, and it is not the absence of an abolitionist movement in 
classical antiquity, even Christian antiquity, that is historically peculiar 
so much as the rise of abolitionism in post-Enlightenment Europe and 
North America. For most of human history, the enslavement of one 
group in society by another, or of one people by another, has been a 
quintessential element of normal social relations. Western liberalism 
cannot be allowed to obscure this fundamental truth, or to justify the 
assumption that the absence of slavery is in any sense socially 
normative,    
    
		
	
	
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