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HUI216 Italian Civilization Andrea Fedi HUI216 (Winter 2007) 1 5.1 Rome vs. Carthage (270 BCE) HUI216 2 5.1 The 3 Punic wars • One of the pivotal moments in the expansion of the Roman republic was the wars against the Carthaginians, wars which soon became part of Roman culture and folklore (see Vergil's poem, The Aeneid) • Carthage was, long before Rome, the power to reckon with in the Western Mediterranean Sea • Rome, in contrast, was lagging behind in the technology of naval warfare, so much so that according to Roman historians the Romans studied a captured Carthaginian ship to improve the characteristics of their warships HUI216 3 5.1 264-241 BCE: the First Punic War • Rome and the Greek colonies of Eastern Sicily fought against Carthage • Rome played the role of big brother, pretending to come to the rescue of Sicilian cities which were very important to the Romans, strategically (because of their central position in the Mediterranean), and economically (because of their thriving commerce and agriculture) • At the end of this war Rome assumes control of Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica HUI216 4 5.1 The next 2 Punic wars • 218-201 Second Punic War • Famous Carthaginian general Hannibal crosses the Alps • Rome becomes the new ruler of Western Mediterranean • 149-146 Third Punic War • Destruction of Carthage, Africa annexed as a province • War against the league of Greek cities • Fearing that Carthaginians, whose powers were already fading, might come back to pose new threats, Romans fought another war and concluded it with the complete destruction of Carthage • Some historians, even among the Romans, argued that this war was an easy political victory, and that it was initiated to enhance the reputation of Roman leaders HUI216 5 5.1 After the first Punic war (220 BCE) HUI216 6 5.1 Roman historian Livy on the 2nd Punic war (bk. 21) • A number of things contributed to give this war its unique character: • in the first place, it was fought between peoples unrivaled throughout previous history in material resources, and themselves at the peak of their prosperity and power; • secondly, it was a struggle between old antagonists, each of whom had learned, in the first Punic War, to appreciate the military capabilities of the other; • thirdly, the final issue hung so much in doubt that the eventual victors came nearer to destruction than their adversaries. • Moreover, high passions were at work throughout, and mutual hatred was hardly less sharp a weapon than the sword... The intensity of the feeling is illustrated by an anecdote of Hannibal's boyhood... HUI216 7 5.2 Contemporary Italian songs on Hannibal • A 1993 Italian rap song on Hannibal in Italian, and the English translation of its lyrics • http://www.italianrap.com/artists/artists_bios/almamegret ta/lyrics/figli_di_annibale.html • http://www.italianrap.com/artists/artists_bios/almamegret ta/lyrics/figli_english.html • There's another Italian song about Hannibal, "Prova a pesare Annibale," by Giorgio Gaber (composed in 1970, reminiscent of a text written by Roman poet Juvenal) • Niccolò Machiavelli mentioned Hannibal and Scipio in a key passage of the Prince (1512-15) • http://www.constitution.org/mac/prince17.htm (in English) HUI216 8 5.2 The rap on Hannibal • The rap, which some may find inappropriate, is still worth of our attention • It makes reference also to the passage of the American army through Italy and Europe in WWII, and to the children born during that period from interracial relationships • The topic was somewhat popular in the Italian folklore of the postwar era. The most famous example inside the world of popular music is that of a 1944 Neapolitan song whose lyrics were written by Guido Nicolardi (music composed by E.A. Mario), "Tammurriata nera" • you can find the text in Neapolitan here • http://www.dentronapoli.it/Canzoni_Classiche/tammurriata_nera.htm • info about the song, in Italian, at the following link: • http://www.scudit.net/mdcannapolitam.htm • The song became popular all over again during the 1970s, when it was reproposed by a group called Nuova Compagnia di Canto Popolare, under the direction of HUI216 Roberto de Simone 9 5.2 The Roman Republic in 86 BCE HUI216 10 5.2 The Roman Empire in 25 BCE HUI216 11 5.3 The last 100 years of the Roman Republic • The last years of the Roman Republic were characterized by internal fights and social tensions, violence and instability, a situation that is clearly reflected in Latin literature • The following slides illustrate some of the facts that caused concern in Roman society • Eventually, many Romans would be willing to accept the trade-off, which some may have believed to be just temporary, between the peace and stability guaranteed by the Emperors and the military, and democracy (no matter how limited)HUI216 12 5.3 The first Slave war -- Tiberius Gracchus • 135-132 BCE: the first Slave war in Sicily • Tens of thousand of slaves, employed in the area's large farms start a rebellion • They want freedom for themselves, don't have other sociopolitical goals, such as the elimination of slavery • The Roman army has to intervene and fight all-out military battles • 134-133: Tiberius Gracchus, a member of the Roman elite, becomes the people's Tribune and proposes a reform to redistribute large portions of public land (until then leased mostly to the rich landowners), and to assign land more liberally to members of the lower class, giving them a chance to become independent farmers and small entrepreneurs HUI216 13 5.3 Tiberius Gracchus and his reform • His proposal becomes a law, but he is assassinated before provisions necessary to implement that law could be approved • Small farmers were the backbone of the Roman economy during the first centuries of its history • Later on, with the expansion of the Roman republic, large portions of the regions conquered by the Romans were appropriated by the Roman government and leased to Roman citizens, especially to the patricians HUI216 14 5.3 Patrician landowners vs. small farmers • The patrician landowners, thanks to this leased public land and to the land they acquired reinvesting their profits, created huge estates mostly worked by the slaves (which also were made available in large numbers and at cheap prices by wars) • Little by little it became difficult for the small farmers to compete with those large estates, and many of them lost or sold their land, and moved into Rome or other large cities • The expansion of Rome also made it easier to import cheaper wheat from Sicily, North Africa or Egypt, increasing the competition HUI216 15 5.3 Small farmers during the Roman era • In spite of those difficulties, a considerable number of small farmers always got by: for example, retired soldiers would get as a severance package a small parcel of land, often close to the borders of the Roman state, so that they could act as a military reserve in times of crisis, and they would spend the last years of their lives working that land • Towards the end of the Empire, burdened by heavy taxes and with profits eroded by ever growing inflation, the small farmers had to borrow money from the large landowners and when they could not repay those debts, they would offer their services instead • Through this process, the independent small farmers of Italy and Western Europe changed into the serfs of the Middle Ages, while some of the wealthy landowners were able to turn their economic power and their social prestige into political power and they became noblemen. HUI216 16 5.3 Another Gracchus -- 3 more wars • 121: Gaius Gracchus, Tiberius's brother, tries to finish the agrarian reform, but he too is killed, together with hundreds of supporters • 104-100: the Second Sicilian slave war • 91-89: the Social War (Rome vs. its Italian allies, "Social" from the Latin socii, "partners") • At the end of this war all Latins, Etruscans, and Umbrians are given access to Roman citizenship • 82: the first Roman Civil War is fought in Italy by two well-known generals of the Roman army, Sulla and Marius • They both use the troops under their command to support their political agendas, using exchanges of favors and exploiting the soldiers' personal loyalty to them HUI216 17 5.3 Other wars fought too close to Rome • At the end of this civil war Sulla is victorious • Proscriptions are used for the first time in Rome (they are lists containing names of 'public enemies of the State,' whose properties can be seized and whose lives can be terminated without due process or the normal legal consequences) • Sulla becomes dictator, but he soon resignes and inexplicably retires to private life; dies in 78 BCE • 73-71: the Third Slave War (the one the movie Spartacus was based on) • Roger Ebert reviews the movie Spartacus • A selection of primary sources, in translation, on slavery in Roman society and on the three slave revolts • http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/asbook09.html#Slavery • 67: Pompey, skillful general and one of the leaders of Rome's conservative party, sweeps off the pirates operating in the central area of the Mediterranean sea HUI216 18 5.3 The Civil War between Caesar and Pompey • 49-45: large-scale Civil War between the armies of Pompey and of Julius Caesar • 49-48: Caesar marches on Rome, occupies it • Caesar defeats Pompeians in Spain, Greece • Pompey flees to Egypt where he is murdered by the local king, who thought Caesar would appreciate it • Caesar goes to Egypt, and makes Cleopatra Queen of Egypt as a symbolic gesture to dissociate himself from indiscriminate violence and political murder • The theme of clemency dominates Caesar's works (esp. De bello civili) HUI216 19 5.3 Caesar and the Pompeians -- Cato • 46-45: Caesar crushes the remaining Pompeian forces in Africa and Spain • Cato, a famous member of the Pompeian party, commits suicide in Africa, showing that one should value freedom and democracy even more than life itself • For centuries Cato will be referred to as a cultural and political icon, as the defender of republican values (the values of democracy and freedom), and the best example of moral integrity • Medieval poet Dante will even promote him (a pagan and a mortal sinner), to the position of guardian of Purgatory, under the direct jurisdiction of God! • Matilde Asensi, The Last Cato (2006) HUI216 20 5.3 The Roman Empire • 44: before he can become Emperor (if that was indeed his plan), Caesar is murdered by Brutus, Cassius and other high-level conspirators • The fate of Brutus and Cassius, Judas, in Dante's hell • 27: Octavian Augustus becomes the first Emperor • His official title was not Emperor, but rather the less threatening title of Princeps Senatus = First in the Senate • For more than 200 years the Republican institutions (the Senate, the Consuls) are kept alive under the Empire • Emperors feared that too drastic a change could renew fights and internal divisions • Other titles used by the Roman emperors: • Augustus = superior/venerable (from it the month of August) • Caesar (from it the German Kaiser and the Russian Czar) HUI216 21 5.3 Conclusions: time, history, life • Inside the Greco-Roman civilization many believed that communities or social organizations are not different from any other biological organism that exists in nature: they are born, they develop and grow old, then decline and eventually die • According to this view, which was very popular also during the Renaissance, there are cycles in history and politics as there are in nature • It was only with the advent of Christianity and with the spread of biblical ideas which had been first developed inside Jewish culture, that our own image of time as an arrow, speeding constantly in one direction, became prevalent HUI216 22 5.3 The Christian timeline -- Simple progress vs. constant progress • Christians represented the whole of history as a line that originates from the creation of the universe by God, advances towards the pivotal moment of the first coming of Jesus, and will one day reach the final point of arrival, with the second coming of Jesus and the so-called Judgment day, which represents the fullness of time, the time when all humanity is able to rejoin its creator • And even though the Jewish/Christian linear image of time and history, quite different from the cyclical view of Greeks and Romans, already implied the idea of positive developments, it was mostly after the Enlightenment and the introduction of the cultural ideas of the French Revolution, at the end of the 18th-century, that the original Christian idea of time was associated to and almost replaced by the notions of constant, practically unavoidable progress and social evolution HUI216 23 5.3 The cyclical movement of time • The concept of a cyclical evolution of time, and the idea that a community, small or large (a town or a state), is similar to a biological organism, going through various ages like all creatures in nature (youth, adulthood, old age), was indeed common among the Romans and the Greeks, as it was later on in Renaissance Florence (for ex., you find that idea in many passages written by Machiavelli), or Venice • Obviously there are exceptions and apparent inconsistencies: even if you read Aristotle, you can find references both to a cyclical idea of time and to a linear representation of it • The evidence that one finds in literary or historical texts, or in letters and personal journals, is often in the form of pessimistic comments interpreting dramatic historical or political events as symptoms of malaise, signs of the end that is presumed to be inevitable and imminent HUI216 24 5.3 Cyclical time in Machiavelli's politics • Greek historian Polybius and, much later, Florentine historian/politician Machiavelli expressed this idea of the cyclical evolution of political institutions • Machiavelli claimed that sooner or later every democracy is bound to degenerate (naturally, with the passing of time) into a period of anarchy, up to the point when the failing democracy is replaced by monarchy; in turn monarchy will degenerate into tyranny, tyranny may give birth to democracy, etc. • Already some of the 15th century humanists, for example Leonardo Bruni, identified the decline of Roman civilization with the political crises of the first century BCE, which in their opinion derived from the gradual devaluation of the traditional Roman virtues HUI216 25 5.4 Historical novel Pompeii (2003), by Robert Harris -- First quote after the title page • "American superiority in all matters of science, economics, industry, politics, business, medicine, engineering, social life, social justice, and of course, the military was total and indisputable. Even Europeans suffering the pangs of wounded chauvinism looked on with awe at the brilliant example the United States had set for the world as the third millennium began." (Tom Wolfe, Hooking up) HUI216 26 5.4 Historical novel Pompeii (2003), by Robert Harris -- Second quote after the title page • "In the whole world, wherever the vault of heaven turns, there is no land so well adorned with all that wins Nature's crown as Italy, the ruler and second mother of the world, with her men and women, her generals and soldiers, her slaves, her preeminence in arts and crafts, her wealth of brilliant talents…" (Pliny, Natural history) HUI216 27 5.4 A map of Campania with the aqueduct known as Aqua Augusta (from Robert Harris, Pompeii) HUI216 28 5.4 The main characters in the novel • Attilius: aquarius (fourth-generation aqueduct engineer), sent from Rome to replace Exomnius; a widower supporting his mother and sister • Exomnius: engineer of the local aqueduct since the time before the earthquake, a Sicilian from Catania • Ampliatus: freedman, crafty businessman, pater familias • Corelia, his rebel daughter • Pliny the Elder and Pliny the Younger, his nephew • Romans inside caves and underground, caught as they are about to become ghosts from the past HUI216 29 5.4 The plot and the organization of the events: The first day (Aug. 22, 79 CE) • Looking for water, before dawn • Fear and suspicion (directly related to the plot) • Romans vs. locals: competence, work ethics and dedication to the service of the community vs. laziness, religion and superstition (related to the general theme of civilization) • Style and punishment, our hero to the rescue • The individual and society, public and private life, the bella figura (see the work of Gloria Nardini) • Searching for greater meaning or immediate satisfaction (Epicureans vs. Stoics) • "...he had been taught to lead his life according to the Stoic school: to waste of time on nonsense, to do one's job without whining, to be the same in all circumstances -- intense pain, bereavement, illness -- and to keep one’s lifestyle simple" (20) HUI216 30 5.4 The first day (Aug. 22, 79 CE) • The pool of wonders and its present problems • Technology and society • The meeting with Pliny, the educated admiral • Strategic planning and heroic accomplishments (Hollywood-style well-timed "operation") HUI216 31 5.4 The second day (Aug. 23, 79 CE) • On board the ship Minerva, en route to Pompeii • Then and now: the shores • Pompeii • Multiculturalism and capitalism • Roman decadence and sexuality • The baths: technology and architecture, civilization • Corruption (then and now) • Parcelization of power and civic duties • Self-interest, amoral familism (farmers and citizens stealing water) HUI216 32 5.4 The second day (Aug. 23, 79 CE) • The dinner and its sources: Petronius (Satyricon), Tacitus • Epicureanism • Decadence • Emptiness (Nero's moray) • Exomnius's room in the brothel • Work ethics, technology and society ("all to carry water to such brutes as these") • Corelia • Proto-feminism and Victorian love HUI216 33 5.4 The second day (Aug. 23, 79 CE) • Pliny's measures (ancient vs. modern science) • The Empire (power, intrigue, conspiracies) • Riots for the water (the ignorant brutes and the sophisticated intellectual) • Then and now: abusing nature • The expert mind in awe of technology • The operation continues out of Pompeii • Followers and leaders, the mind and the muscles • Puritan work ethics: satisfaction for a work well done • "he would try to fix the Augusta overnight. To confront the impossible: that was the Roman way!" • Our heroine to the rescue (with incriminating evidence) HUI216 34 5.4 The third day (Aug. 24, 79 CE) • Technology: cement underwater • Love and fate • "One was shackled to it from birth as to a moving wagon. The designation of the journey could not be altered, only the manner in which one approached it -- whether one chose to walk erect or to be dragged complaining through the dust" (183) • Pliny's discovery in the pool of wonders • Water back in Pompeii • The never-tired AttiliusHUI216 climbs the Vesuvius 35 5.4 Third and fourth day (Aug. 24-25, 79 CE): the eruption • The destruction of Rectina's library (an entire culture and civilization vanishing under our very eyes) • "Pliny took it from the slave and inhaled it, catching in its musty aroma of the whiff of the old republic: of men of the stamp of Cato and Sergius; of a city fighting to become an empire; of the dust of the Campus Martius; of trial by iron and fire" (243) • "Who knows? Perhaps, two centuries from now, men will be drinking the vintage from this year of ours, and wondering what we were like. Our skill, our courage" (243) • "Popidius's eyes were blank holes in the musk of his face. He looked like one of the ancestral effigies on the wall of his house." (248) HUI216 36 5.4 Historical elements and themes associated with them • Aqua Augusta • technology = civilization? • The Roman fleet • • • • military power the empire triumphant over nature citizenship and multiculturalism cooperation and accomplishments • Pliny and his books • human intelligence and the continuous progress of science HUI216 37 5.4 Historical elements and themes associated with them • The eruption • nature, death and decline • The freedman • the evils of capitalism • social mobility in Roman society • The relationships between Rome and the local administrations • State politics vs. local and individual interests HUI216 38 5.4 Celebrating the might of the aqueduct: Aqua Augusta • Oh, but she was a mighty piece of work, the Augusta -- one of the greatest feats of engineering ever accomplished. • … Somewhere far out there, on the opposite side of the bay, high in the pine forested mountains of the Apenninus, the aqueduct captured the springs of Serinus and bore the water westward -- channeled it along sinuous underground passages, carried it over ravines on top of tiered arcades, forced it across valleys through massive siphons -- all the way down to the plains of Campania, then around the far side of Mount Vesuvius, then south to the coast at Neapolis, and finally along the spine of the Misenum peninsula to the dusty naval town, a distance of some sixty miles, with a mean drop along her entire length of just two inches every one hundred yards. HUI216 39 5.4 The Aqua Augusta: leadership and technology • She was the longest aqueduct in the world, longer even than the great aqueducts of Rome and far more complex, for whereas her sisters in the north fed one city only, the Augusta's serpentine conduit -- the matrix, as they called it: the motherline -- suckled no fewer than nine towns around the bay of Neapolis: Pompeii first, at the end of a long spur, then Nola, Acerrae, Atella, Neapolis, Puteoli, Cumae, Baiae, and finally Misenum. (7) HUI216 40 5.4: The Aqua Augusta: technology and civilization • "... the engineer could stand here, listening and lost in thought, for hours. The percussion of the Augusta sounded in his ears not as a dull and continuous roar but as the notes of a gigantic water organ: the music of civilization. … in those moments, he felt himself to be not in a reservoir at all, but in a temple dedicated to the only God worth believing in." (18) HUI216 41 5.5 James Hay, Popular Film Culture in Fascist Italy (1987) • A number of historical movies were produced in Italy during the 1920s and 1930s • Some of the most interesting examples of that historical genre, so popular then, were movies based on Roman history • It is not by chance that some of those movies were produced with the financial support of the Italian government HUI216 42 5.5 James Hay, Popular Film Culture in Fascist Italy (1987) • Even when Fascist dictator Mussolini appeared in newsreels, he often presented himself like a cinematic character, the warrior/leader typical of those historical movies • Fascist propaganda revived the idea, already introduced in Italian culture and society at the time of Italy's unification, that the newly formed Italian nation was called to a mission of civilization, to renew the glory, together with the victories and the conquests of the Roman State HUI216 43 5.5 Roman civilization became very popular in Fascist Italy • References to Roman civilization became very common in Fascist Italy, in the arts, architecture and most prominently in the language • The word fascismo derives from the fasces, "A bundle of rods bound together around an ax with the blade projecting, carried before ancient Roman magistrates as an emblem of authority. [Latin, pl. of fascis, bundle.]" (The American Heritage Dictionary) • To learn more about the Roman fasces, visit this page • http://www.livius.org/fa-fn/fasces/fasces.html • The self-imposed title of Mussolini, "Duce," derives from the Latin Dux [=leader] • Consider also the words used to designate various fascist paramilitary units and their rankings (milizia, manipolo, centurione, etc.) HUI216 44 5.5 Fasces and other Roman icons (from http://www.hist.uib.no/antikk/eftertid/fascdiv/page _01.htm) HUI216 45 5.5 The Roman fasces were the main icons of Fascist Italy (http://www.hist.uib.no/antikk/eftertid/fascdiv/page_01.htm) HUI216 46 5.6 Scipione l'africano (dir. Carmine Gallone, 1937) • Relatively few historical films about the ancient world were produced during the 1930s, but one in particular -Scipione l'Africano, which involves Scipione's (Scipio Africanus's) conquests in Africa during the Second Punic War -- received substantial public attention, having been the subject of one of the most extensive promotional campaigns in the Italian film industry during the 1930s • The government helped procure astronomical investment capital for Scipione (about 12.6 million liras, the most ever spent on an Italian film before the war) • Mussolini had taken great pride in the film before its release, once visiting the set, where he was hailed with chants of "Duce, Duce" by a costumed cast of thousands (many of whom were draftees for the Ethiopian campaign) HUI216 47 5.6 Fascism and the ancient Romans • Despite much unfavorable aesthetic criticism about the film, critics and children alike seem to have recognized its cultural importance • In a highly publicized special issue in August 1939, Bianco e nero published interviews with elementary-age school children about the film • One young student explained that • The film illustrates the valor with which the ancient Romans fought and the courage that they exhibited. Now our Duce has reeducated the Italian people about the love of country and about the spirit of sacrifice, about order and discipline, restoring to Italy a new international prestige and reviving the Roman Empire. HUI216 48 5.6 Scipione l'africano and Mussolini • There are few overt connections between the hero of the film, Scipione, and Mussolini • Nevertheless, it is difficult to ignore the similarity between this movie's version of Scipione and the image that Mussolini held in the minds of the Italian public • As one of the children interviewed for Bianco e nero attests • When you see the battlefield at Zama and a soldier says, "Troops, we have conquered Canne!" I thought about our Duce who said, "Let's conquer Adua!" And a few months later he said, "We've conquered Adua!" When Scipione talked to his soldiers before the battle, I remembered the Duce. In the movie house we always applauded Scipione and his men. I want to see the film again. HUI216 49 5.6 Scipio and the future glory of Italy • In the film's epilogue, Scipione returns to his villa, where he is transformed again to a family man, surrounded by his wife and children • His conquest and return invest the Empire with a new vitality, and in the final scene Scipione stands with a shaft of wheat (a symbol of fertility), exclaiming • Good grain; and tomorrow, with the help of the gods, the seed will begin HUI216 50 5.6 Mussolini as a classical hero • Mussolini's appearances in early Italian newsreels and documentaries (and his public personality in general) conjure a pedigree of acrobats and "strongmen" from 1920s Italian films • Ajax, Samson, and above all, Maciste (often described in his films as "the good giant") • And, like the heroes of popular literary romances, these strongmen appeared in different films as basically the same personality (Maciste in Hell, Maciste on Vacation, Maciste Against Death, Maciste in Love, etc.) HUI216 51 5.6 Maciste -- Bartolomeo Pagano, the first actor to play the part of Maciste in Cabiria (dir. Giovanni Pastrone, 1914) HUI216 52 5.6 Mussolini and the Greco-Roman movie heroes • Like these strongmen from the 1920s, Mussolini was part of an ongoing serial of movie appearances to which were attached such epitaphs as Mussolini-aviator, Mussolini at the thresher, Mussolini-athlete, and so forth • One of Mussolini's most common personae in the newsreels and documentaries was that of the warrior • During the late 1920s and the 1930s, Mussolini appears in a variety of military uniforms • It is no coincidence either that Mussolini consciously associated himself with other warriors from Italian films of the mid-1930s, visiting the set of Scipione and lauding the spirit of Trenker's Condottieri HUI216 53 5.6 Mussolini and the Greco-Roman movie heroes • In "Il Duce trebbia il grano nell'Agro Pontino" ("The Duce Threshes Wheat in the Pontine Fields," 1938) Mussolini appears bare-chested (itself a sign or a persona), inspiring his in-film audience of peasant workers with his prodigious display of strength and endurance, and demonstrating the "progress" of efforts to revitalize what was once a marshland • The narrator all the while explains • "The Duce threshes without even the slightest signs of tiring. . . . It seems that work gives him greater vigor." • It is this documentary that, as a number of Italian film historians have noted, aligns his role here with that of Scipione at the end of Scipione l'Africano HUI216 54 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano (from the notes of Regina Marcazzò-Skarka) • Scipione l'africano is a long film with scenes that abruptly change from the Carthaginians to the Romans. • Sometimes it may seem difficult to tell who is who. One clear distinction is the more elegant stance and demeanor of the Romans. • The film begins showing text with an historical explanation of the two enemies attempting to be the rulers of the Mediterranean, Rome and Carthage. It explains how Carthage is winning with Hannibal's success at entering Rome's territory. The written introduction ends telling how 20,000 Roman soldiers were killed. • (In the credits in the beginning it is stated that soldiers of the Italian army were used as extras in the film.) • The first scene begins with the fasces raised high into the sky, and the clouds as a backdrop. HUI216 55 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • Members of the Roman Senate talk about Scipio, and how he wants to meet with them. He plans to bring the war to Africa. The senators are skeptical. • Then a man hints jovially that it would be good to send Hannibal out of Italy. His comments are met with unanimous cheers and hands raised in the air. The cheering continues with arms raised when Scipione appears and walks down steps with the crowds making room for him. The procession lasts about a minute with dramatic music. • One soldier tries desperately to get through the crowd to get a glimpse of Scipio, saying, "I followed him through the war in Spain, at the very least I should get to look at him." HUI216 56 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • Then there's a dramatic scene with Scipio trying to convince the Senate to fight Hannibal in Africa. He tells them that Rome has to be free of him for once and for all, and that the only way to accomplish the victory would be to bring the Roman army to Africa. • Someone expresses a concern that if the army goes to Africa to fight, there will be no one left to protect Rome. • If the senators don't agree with Scipio, will he take it to the people? Scipio responds that he will do whatever he has to for Italy. Lots of arguing takes place and eventually many are yelling "Carthage! Carthage!" • He walks surrounded by soldiers holding fasces and to cheers of thousands yelling "Scipione! Scipione!" There's a long scene with crowds of thousands with their hands raised like he is a God, and the music in the background is celebratory. HUI216 57 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • Then there's a surreal scene with Scipio with a woman and a baby, then a young boy. It's a scene of the perfect loving family: Scipione is dressed aristocratically and looking ready for battle, while his son puts on a special hat, trying to look like his dad. • Next there's a scene with Hannibal and his people looking simple, low class and gruff. • The Carthaginian soldiers leave their camp running haphazardly. Someone tells Hannibal about Scipio's plans. • In the next scene the Carthagian soldiers come along grabbing women and terrorizing them, ripping their clothing and groping at their breasts. A little boy sits crying by a large column. HUI216 58 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • Next there is Scipio talking to his soldiers, then the soldiers marching and peasants running to see with excitement. Fasces are held high and people walk forward in slow motion looking proud at them. Scipio speaks of a real "patria" asking who will follow. Scores run forward trying to grab hold of one fascis. • Then there's a scene where a woman is brought to Hannibal. She tells him how she heard he wanted children and she tells him she's not afraid. He grabs her and starts kissing her then the scene abruptly changes to the Romans boarding the ships to go to Africa. There's a wonderful send off with right hands raised and music. HUI216 59 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • There are a number of scenes with meetings of both the Romans and Carthaginians. There's also a jovial scene of Roman soldiers singing and cooking outside. There's a scene with Scipio then Hannibal talking to their own about strategy. • Scipio and Hannibal meet on horseback but peace is not the choice of Scipio: he chooses to fight. He turns down Hannibal's proposal for peace and tells him to prepare for war, then scores of fasces are raised with dramatic music. • The start of the battle is very dramatic with trumpets blown, Hannibal's troops on foot, elephants and Scipio sitting regally on his horse. • The Romans shoot at the elephants and blood is squirting out. It gets very chaotic, the elephants are squealing and the soldiers are falling dramatically. HUI216 60 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • A soldier is seen being carried in an elephant's trunk. An elephant gets shot in the leg and falls to the ground dropping the soldier on its back. There is screaming. • The Roman horsemen are told to advance. "Vittoria avanti" is the command. "Italia avanti!" (Move forward to victory, Italy forward). All of the different units move forward at a high rate of speed. They meet with the opposition and they fight from their horses, wounding their opponents with swords. • "Chi vince?" the townspeople ask (who is winning?). One says Roman soldiers, seemingly surprised. A woman dramatically lifts a soldier's head and says who's winning, but the soldier is dead. HUI216 61 5.7 The plot of Scipione l'africano • The battle continues with some soldiers on horseback and others on foot. The Romans look graceful and almost elegant while the Carthaginians look gruff and clumsy. • In an intense battle on the ground, a Roman soldier holds the fasces high with great determination. • After victory, Scipio is seen with classical Roman architecture in the background gracefully embracing his loved ones and the film ends. • He says, "Good grain, and tomorrow with the help of the gods the seed will begin." HUI216 62 5.8 Italy in the movie Scipione l'Africano • The movie Scipione l'Africano warns the viewer from the very beginning that the movie was filmed with the participation of soldiers from the Italian army, and that it was produced in Rome • In the written scroll that sets the story before the opening scene, the fight between Rome and Carthage is characterized as a war between two nations ("nazioni"), two peoples ("popoli"), i.e. two civilizations, not just two states or two military powers • From the very beginning the connections to Italy are multiplied, even exaggerated: for one thing all the actors speak the Italian language, and in fact right away, in the opening scenes, there are hints of different dialects (from the North, the center and the South of Italy!) in the pronunciation of various characters from the street HUI216 63 5.8 Italy in the movie Scipione l'Africano • One of the men on the street discusses Rome's politics and the deeds of general Scipio, and says that he comes from Arezzo, using the Italian modern name of the city instead of its Latin name "Aretium" • He also remarks that in his city they are preparing for the imminent fight, while in Rome all they do is talk • Before the scene is over we also learn that volunteers in other parts of Italy are getting ready to defend Rome • Clearly the fate of Rome is a major concern for all Italians, an exaggeration, historically inaccurate, but one which shows how the cultural connection with ancient Rome was played out in Italy in the first half of the 20th-century HUI216 64 5.8 Italy past and present in the movie Scipione l'Africano • In fact the word "Italy" is heard in many scenes of this movie, while it is rarely if ever mentioned in Spartacus, and never once mentioned in Gladiator (if I'm correct) • The continuity between past and present is insured also by references to the war fought by the Romans in Spain (at a time when Italian Fascists had recently volunteered to fight in Spain alongside Franco's army), and to the conquest of Africa (Italy had just conquered Ethiopia between 1935 and 1936) • Numerous scenes have large crowds saluting general Scipio with their right hand lifted straight in front of them, a detail that, while being historically accurate, was also connected to the salute reintroduced in Italy by the Fascists HUI216 65 5.8 Italy past and present in the movie Scipione l'Africano • The gatherings of large mobs in Rome must also have reminded the viewers of that time of the gatherings of similar mobs to hear and honor Mussolini or the heroes of the Italian army, the veterans of the various military campaigns that I mentioned before • The Roman soldiers in the movie make reference to the fact that they are farmers and shepherds by trade, occupations still very common throughout Italy during the 1930s • In this movie Rome represents the whole of Italy and its common interests, rather than the interests of the Roman citizens and of the Senate • In fact it is evident that even the people from the lower classes are following very carefully the discussions that take place in the Roman Senate, and carefully evaluate all political decisions and their consequences HUI216 66 5.8 Italy past and present in the movie Scipione l'Africano • When Scipio is organizing an expeditionary force to invade Africa and bring the war closer to Carthage, the Roman soldiers are shown marching at the rhythm of a quasi-operatic song with the following refrain: • "Chi ha chiamato? Scipione, Scipione... Chi ha risposto? L'Italia, l'Italia..." (= Who called? Scipione, Scipione... Who replied to that call? Italy, Italy...) • While "Romans" is the term used more often to indicate the soldiers, at times we also hear the term "Italici" (Italics), a word commonly used to designate the peoples living in Italy in the pre-modern era, but also one that would have been used properly only at the end of the Roman republic, or at the beginning of the empire, when a real sense of unity inside the Italian peninsula was first developed, with the full support of the government and the backing of literature and the arts HUI216 67 5.8 Italy past and present in the movie Scipione l'Africano • Rome and Italy are closely associated inside the speech given by Scipio before he leaves Italy to go fight in Africa • Even Hannibal at one point says "La mia patria è l'Italia" (=My homeland is Italy), a remark which seems almost paradoxical, but is justified by the character who he makes it clear that only Italy is a land able to excite lively passions and strong feelings • Living in Italy for 15 years to fight the war against the Romans, even he, Hannibal, has grown attached to that land. He says this with a strange sense of nostalgia, before leaving Italy to go back to Africa to defend Carthage, which he finds an ungrateful and unsupportive fatherland, not the ideal country that one could live or die for HUI216 68 5.9 Movie projects on Hannibal, to be produced by Sony, Fox • I found some information on the Internet about Vin Diesel's biopic Hannibal the Conqueror (2008?), whose script is based on the novel written by Ross Leckie. David Franzoni, from Gladiator, should provide the script • http://filmforce.ign.com/articles/365/365989p1.html • The next article, from the Internet, mentions another movie project focusing on Hannibal, with Denzel Washington as the protagonist • http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2002/07/26/10274974 10589.html HUI216 69 5.10 Spartacus is a movie based on a 1951 novel by Howard Fast • What Fast had to say in 2000 interview • I was imprisoned for contempt of Congress for refusing to "name names" to the House UnAmerican Affairs Committee. • This set me to thinking a great deal about prison, and when I was released, I began a very intense study of ancient slavery and imprisonment, particularly with a set of books (rare books today) called "The Ancient Lowly." [Cyrenus Osborne Ward, Charles H. Kerr & Company, Chicago. 1888. 2 vols.] In these books, extensive information on the Spartacus revolt was available. (from http://trussel.com/hf/ancient.htm) HUI216 70 5.11 The plot of the movie Spartacus (from the notes of John Barodin): Spartacus, the gladiatorial school • Spartacus tells the story of a slave revolt led by the title character • Initially, Spartacus was a slave in a Thracian slave camp where he is bought by Batiatus, who runs a gladiator school • At the school, the men are taught how to fight but do not fight to the death, as this would be bad for the morale of the camp • For good behavior, the gladiators are permitted the company of a woman. Spartacus is assigned a Britton, named Varinia, whom he treats with respect. As a result, a relationship forms between the two, and they soon fall in love. HUI216 71 5.11 The plot of Spartacus: Crassus, the revolt • When Roman senator Crassus visits the school with his wife and another couple, the two women demand that four of the gladiators fight to the death. Although Spartacus is defeated in the fight, his opponent refuses to kill him and instead hurls a spear in Crassus's direction. The slave is immediately killed for his behavior. • While at the school, Crassus buys Varinia from Batiatus, and, when Spartacus finds out, he is outraged and starts an uprising by the gladiators who eventually overrun the school • With Spartacus as their leader, the escaped gladiators travel through southern Italy freeing other slaves who join their ranks. His plan is to leave Italy and return home with the help of pirates. It is while traveling through Italy that Spartacus reunites with Varinia, who also escaped. The two marry and Varinia is soon pregnant with Spartacus' baby. HUI216 72 5.11 The plot of Spartacus: Glabrus, Crassus • The Roman senate dispatches a small Roman force, led by Glabrus, to deal with Spartacus. However, Spartacus gets word of this and attacks the Romans while they are sleeping and destroys the Roman force. Glabrus is freed to return to the senate, where he is forced to admit his incompetence in handling his forces. As a result, he is banished from Rome by Crassus, his political ally. • Crassus, wanting to increase his political power by destroying Spartacus, convinces the senate to deploy a much larger army to deal with the slave army. However, this one is also destroyed, this time with more than 19,000 casualties. • The senate, humiliated by the Roman army's inability to defeat slaves, deploys another army, this time led by Crassus himself. HUI216 73 5.11 The plot of Spartacus: defeat, crucifixions • This army leaves from Rome, while another two armies are coming up from the south behind Spartacus. • Seeing that he is trapped, he wills his troops north and into battle against the army led by Crassus. Spartacus and his army are defeated, and he is captured along with Varinia and their newborn son. • Crassus, determined to find Spartacus, threatens the captured gladiators by saying that if Spartacus does not reveal himself, the prisoners will be executed. As Spartacus begins to admit his identity, hundreds of other slaves yell, "I am Spartacus!“ • With Spartacus' identity still hidden, Crassus demands that the 6,000 slaves be crucified on the road to Rome. HUI216 74 5.11 The plot of Spartacus: the ending • In the walk back to Rome, Crassus recognizes Spartacus from the fight at the gladiator school and spares him so that he can entertain Crassus by fighting to the death in Rome. Spartacus wins the fight but is the last slave to be crucified and is nailed up to a cross just outside the gates to Rome. • In the end, Varinia achieves her freedom and, while leaving Rome, sees Spartacus nailed up on a cross just outside the gates. She brings her newborn son to the dying gladiator, the first time Spartacus sees his son. She pleads with him to die and end his suffering, which he does as she rides off a free woman. HUI216 75 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: Spartacus (1960; dir. Stanley Kubrick) • A peculiar feature of the big historical movies produced in Hollywood and dedicated to crucial events in the history of Rome is how little they look connected to Italy, and how much they seem to emphasize the disconnect between Roman history and Italian history • In the case of Spartacus, for example, the only references to Italy in the entire movie seem to be the map of the Italian peninsula shown on the background during the scenes shot in Spartacus' tent, while his army of slaves is waiting for the Pirates to put together enough ships for them to escape from Italy HUI216 76 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: Spartacus and Italian geography • With the exception of Rome, the few names of Italian cities that are quoted in the movie (Brindisi, for example) are quoted with their Latin names: a justifiable decision, in favor of historical accuracy (although, one wonders, why it does not apply to Rome itself), yet interestingly very different from the choice of a significant Italian counterpart such as Scipione l'Africano • Even the places, the steep mountains and the open plains practically bare of any vegetation, add to the movie a generic imperial grandeur (the movie was shot in Spain, with the participation of soldiers from the Spanish army, at that time under the command of fascist dictator General Franco), a sense of greatness that is commonly associated with the very idea of an empire (be it the Roman Empire or the one in Star Wars) HUI216 77 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: Spartacus and the Roman empire • Scenes shot in a natural setting alternate with others shot inside the residences of Roman senators in the city of Rome, characterized by generic interiors, where the idea of Roman civilization is simply conveyed by an abundance of marble and, once again, by the size of every hall and room. Practically no scenes are shot in the streets of Rome, instead. • The Roman empire here does not fully represent a historical reality, it seems, rather it is transformed into an abstract political entity: even the widespread use of the term empire, instead of the technically more accurate term republic, reinforces that idea (the Latin term imperium meant domination, or the power of the government over a land) HUI216 78 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: Romans in Spartacus • All the Romans that we see portrayed on the screen are either members of the Roman government (senators and soldiers), or are connected to it through a relationship marked by power and authority • E.g. Peter Ustinov's character, who provides slaves and gladiators for the entertainment of the wealthy and powerful Romans, and yet is always fearful and subject to the prevarication of those who represent the state. • Everybody else in the movie is a servant or a slave. • Average Romans are nowhere to be found. HUI216 79 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: the Roman senators in Spartacus • The senators that we see on the screen are rather Machiavellian, constantly trying to outsmart each other with no care whatsoever for the idea of serving the state and the common interests of Roman society. • The actors who play the part of senators (Lawrence Olivier is Crassus, and Charles Laughton is Graccus) with all probability would not have been cast to act as Italians in a movie on modern-day Italy. • They were chosen to play the part of Roman Senator simply because they were British, and with their British accent they evoked the might of the most recent empire in history, the British Empire HUI216 80 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: sex in Spartacus • To contribute to the generic idea of an empire there are also hints to the "sexual decadence" of the Romans, going after female as well as male slaves • In a famous scene which was cut from the movie when it was released originally, Lawrence Olivier is bathing assisted by his personal slave Antoninus (Tony Curtis), and he enters into a dialogue about "snails and oysters" which is based on double entendres of a sexual nature. • That scene has been restored in the recently released DVD edition, and since the studios had lost the original audio tracks, Tony Curtis was called in to give voice to his character once again, while Anthony Hopkins replaced the voice of the deceased Lawrence Olivier. HUI216 81 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: greatness • Connected to the theme of the "perversion of morals" presumed to be common in imperial societies is also the behavior displayed by the two women accompanying Crassus to see the gladiators in Capua • They are constantly jiggling while they insist on having the men fight to the death for their entertainment, and without too many clothes on, allegedly to save them from the unbearable heat. • "Greatness" is one of the keywords of the movie, which is repeated in many dialogues. • From the point of view of the mighty Romans, the question is: can there be greatness in a state that has adopted slavery? • From the point of view of the movie's hero, Spartacus, the question is: can one achieve greatness, having been born a slave? HUI216 82 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: the disconnect between Roman civilization and Italian history • It is worthwhile to consider how the movie was presented in the original trailers, now included with bonus material inside the DVD. One says: "In the year 70 B.C. Rome, colossus of the world, faced its greatest challenge". • In another Senator Crassus (Lawrence Olivier) is presented to the audience as "the symbol of Rome's power and might". The pitch describing the story in 25 words or less, as required, is the same in all trailers: "the powerful story of the gladiator rebel who sprang from slavery to challenge the awesome might of imperial Rome". • The opening titles of the movie show a series of GrecoRoman statues, mostly heads, and the last one before the opening scene falls to pieces suggesting the idea of decadence, of a civilization nearing its tragic end. HUI216 83 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: the first scene of Spartacus • While the camera moves from a Roman soldier on top of a wooden tower-post to a line of slaves carrying rocks over the mountains of the Roman province of Thracia, we hear these words solemnly spoken: • "In the last century before the birth of the new faith called Christianity, which was destined to overthrow the pagan tyranny of Rome and bring about a new society, the Roman republic stood at the very center of the civilized world. 'Of all things fairest,' sang the poet, 'first among cities and home of the gods is golden Rome.' Yet, even at the Zenith of her pride and power, the republic lay fatally stricken with a disease called human slavery." • The coming of Christ and the spreading of Christian religion may certainly be what marks the actual difference between the Roman world and Italy or the modern world in general. Still… HUI216 84 5.12 Hollywood's Rome: ethnicity in Spartacus • In Spartacus there is a Spanish gladiator, there is an English slave (years before the Romans actually conquered England!), and the protagonist is a Thrace • Only Italy is missing from the picture, with the exception of the fact that Spartacus' friend Antoninus once, when interrogated, says that he is a Sicilian • It is easy to notice that he is physically smaller and less muscular than most other characters, and in the story his special talents are singing and recitation of poems! HUI216 85 5.13 The plot of the movie Gladiator (from the notes of John Barodin): Maximus the soldier vs. Commodus the son of the Emperor • "Gladiator" details the fall of the great Roman general Maximus, who after learning that he will be succeeding Marcus Aurelius as emperor of the Roman Empire, is deceived by Aurelius's son Commodus • Although Maximus wants nothing to do with assuming the throne, he accepts so that he can right the wrongs of the current Empire • Commodus, outraged by the fact that his father would give the throne to someone other than he, deceives Maximus and sends him to be executed • However, Maximus escapes and returns home to find his wife and son dead • Distraught by this, Maximus flees and is eventually captured and sold into slavery, where he becomes a gladiator HUI216 86 5.13 The plot of Gladiator: Maximus the gladiator • Fighting not for the crowd's satisfaction but for survival, Maximus and the other gladiators bond together and soon become a crowd favorite • Maximus' band of gladiators eventually fight at the Colosseum where Emperor Commodus is a spectator • Commodus, impressed by the passion and skill with which Maximus fights, makes his way to the Colosseum floor after the battle to meet the impressive gladiator • Commodus demands Maximus helmet be removed to show his face, and Maximus' identity is revealed • Commodus, thinking his rival was murdered long ago, is outraged to see Maximus alive and immediately schemes to have him eliminated HUI216 87 5.13 The plot of Gladiator: the final fight • However, the task is more difficult than it seems, as Maximus has quickly become popular and thousands of people flock to the Colosseum to see him fight • Commodus, jealous of the popularity Maximus has attained, arranges for a battle between himself and Maximus, hoping to win over the crowd • However, Commodus knows he is no match for the gladiator in the arena. As a result, he wounds Maximus before the battle and conceals the wound under his armor • The two Romans battle until Maximus, near death, defeats Commodus and fatally stabs him, not long before he too succumbs to death HUI216 88 5.14 Hollywood's Rome: Gladiator (2000; dir. Ridley Scott) • What I said about Spartacus, can be repeated about Gladiator • Even in this movie the idea of the Empire translates into the generic political ambitions of a few individuals • No relevant mention of the systems that govern the administration of a large state • On screen are the political maneuvers of scheming senators and Machiavellian members of the imperial family • Sexual deviance is also brought forth to reinforce the idea of the decadence of the Roman empire • Commodus and his sister Lucilla have an incestuous relationship, which is consummated at the end of the movie • Commodus is portrayed as a sadist in a very crude, almost grotesque way (see how Joaquin Phoenix jumps around and sticks his tongue out at the sight of blood during the gladiatorial games in the Colosseum, or how he looks at his sister's son Lucius) HUI216 89 5.14 Hollywood's Rome: Gladiator and the greatness of Rome • Central to the thematic development of this movie is the "idea," the "vision" of the idealistic "greatness of Rome," better characterized by the Shakespearean motto "there was once a dream that was Rome" • The idealist Maximus attempts to "give power back to the people of Rome and end the corruption that has crippled it" (in the words of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius to the film's good guy, Maximus) • Rome has nothing to do with Italian civilization, it seems, and it simply serves as the pretext for a story about the fight of a good man to insure democracy, equality, justice for all, and also to protect his family • “Is Rome worth one good man's life?" says Lucilla at the end of the movie, right before Juba, the Numidian gladiator and friend of Maximus leaves Rome to go home HUI216 90 5.14 Hollywood's Rome: Gladiator and Italy • Maximus has left his family in Spain, almost three years before the story begins, and the only noticeable reference to Italy in this movie comes out when we see his wife and his child hoping to see him among the Roman soldiers that come to kill him and his mother (the evil praetorians, properly sporting all-black uniforms) • In the scene, the kid says: "Mamma, i soldati!" (=mammy, the soldiers), and then calls out "Papà!" (=daddy) • At another point in the movie, a street hawker in Rome shouts "Vino! Vino!" (= Wine! Wine!) • In the end even this historic fiction ends up being mostly a moral tale about those staples of the American way of life that are individualism and selfdevelopment, how one individual can make a difference in his/her life and in the lives of many others… HUI216 91 5.14 Hollywood's Rome: Gladiator and ambition, progress • …as it becomes clear when we consider lines such as the following: • "the general who became a slave, the slave who became a gladiator, the gladiator who defied an Emperor..." • "today I saw a slave become more powerful than the Emperor of Rome" (these words are pronounced by Lucilla, Commodus' sister, after Maximus fights in the Colosseum for the first time) • Maximus replies back to her that the only power he has is "the power to amuse a mob," but Lucilla insists that "Rome is the mob" (which looks like an auto-ironic allusion to the power of the entertainment industry: to be able to entertain the masses is in itself power) HUI216 92