Jason Sands

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By the time Apuleius was writing, Rome had been a slave society for nearly half a millennium. Slavery became a vital pillar of Roman life from the second century b.c., when the republic began its period of rapid expansion around the Mediterranean. With dazzling military victories—in the Balkans, the Greek islands, north Africa, and elsewhere—came the opportunity to take vast plunder, including human bounty.
Powers and Thrones: A New History of the Middle Ages
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