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  2. Slavery in ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_ancient_Greece

    Slavery was a widely accepted practice in ancient Greece, as it was in contemporaneous societies. [2] The principal use of slaves was in agriculture, but they were also used in stone quarries or mines, as domestic servants, or even as a public utility, as with the demosioi of Athens.

  3. Slavery in ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_ancient_Rome

    Roman mosaic from Dougga, Tunisia (2nd/3rd century AD): two large slaves carrying wine jars each wear an amulet against the evil eye on a necklace, with one in a loincloth (left) and the other in an exomis; [1] the young slave to the left carries water and towels, and the one on the right a bough and a basket of flowers [2]

  4. Slavery in antiquity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slavery_in_antiquity

    Rome differed from Greek city-states in allowing freed slaves to become Roman citizens. After manumission, a slave who had belonged to a citizen enjoyed not only passive freedom from ownership, but active political freedom (libertas), including the right to vote, though he could not run for public office. [18]

  5. Ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greece

    Marble bust of Pericles with a Corinthian helmet, Roman copy of a Greek original, Museo Chiaramonti, Vatican Museums; Pericles was a key populist political figure in the development of the radical Athenian democracy. [80] Ancient Greece consisted of several hundred relatively independent city-states .

  6. Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrington_Atlas_of_the...

    Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. The Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World is a large-format English language atlas of ancient Europe, Asia, and North Africa, edited by Richard J. A. Talbert. The time period depicted is roughly from archaic Greek civilization (pre-550 BC) through Late Antiquity (640 AD).

  7. Culture of ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_ancient_Rome

    By the time of Augustus, cultured Greek household slaves taught the Roman young (sometimes even the girls); chefs, decorators, secretaries, doctors, and hairdressers all came from the Greek East. Greek sculptures adorned Hellenistic landscape gardening on the Palatine or in the villas, or were imitated in Roman sculpture yards by Greek slaves.

  8. Asylum (antiquity) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asylum_(antiquity)

    By a constitutio of Antoninus Pius, it was decreed that if a slave in a province fled to the temples of the gods or the statues of the emperors to avoid the ill-usage of his master, the praeses could compel the master to sell the slave, [7] and the slave was not regarded by the law as a runaway .

  9. Greco-Roman world - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greco-Roman_world

    A map of the ancient world centered on Greece. Based on the above definition, the "cores" of the Greco-Roman world can be confidently stated to have been the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea, specifically the Italian Peninsula, Greece, Cyprus, the Iberian Peninsula, the Anatolian Peninsula (modern-day Turkey), Gaul (modern-day France), the Syrian region (modern-day Levantine countries, Central ...