Grk. naming conventions for slaves
What was basically naming them after the places they were from, with examples being Syrian, (Phrygian Name), Carian, Blond?
Specific cities Southerners looked to for support of slavery
What were Rome and Athens?
Manumission
What had as its reason is that the slave would still have explicit legal obligations and implicit social obligations, and if not a Roman citizen already would become one, and take on the family name of the person you'd been freed by, and became like a client to your former master?(all) ?
Why wealthy Roman villa owners might have located kitchens far away from dining rooms (according to Joshel)
What allowed the master to show off his power and prestige by making them walk a long way so that they would be seen/shown off for longer?
The percentage of ITA's population in the 20s BC Scheidel believes was enslaved
What is 25%?
Ideas about slavery that Southerners adopted from Aristotle
What were that "some men were born to lead and others to follow" and that people shouldn't enslave people of their own race but only "barbarians"?
Sources of slaves
What were war as the biggest one (debt slavery was very rare in Rome and essentially not practiced in GRC), also exposure; all 3 being able to be purchased from neighboring regions as well?
What were they tried to say that it was one of the ancients' few flaws, tried to point out how favorably Greeks viewed Egyptians (whom the abolitionists believed to be dark-skinned), stated that there had been a few anti-slavery people in antiquity, and pointed back to Cicero's use of a higher natural law that must be obeyed?
Ethnic composition of slaves in Classical GRC v. Rome
Roman conventions for naming slaves
What was ethnic, regional, geographical, and natural names were generally correlated with being a slave; examples being Eos, Felix, Syrian, and (Phrygian name)?