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The Diet and Control of Enslaved People in Ancient Rome

By

Matthew McIntosh

16h ago· 96 min readenInsight

Summary

This article examines the diet and food practices of enslaved people in ancient Rome, exploring how what slaves ate—primarily grain, beans, oil, olives, weak wine, and scraps—was shaped by labor demands, social hierarchy, and the institution of ownership. It argues that food was not merely sustenance but a tool of discipline, control, and power dynamics within Roman slavery.

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
To ask how slaves ate in ancient Rome is to ask more than a question about ingredients.
It is to enter one of the most ordinary and revealing spaces of Roman slavery: the daily management of the enslaved body.
Roman slaves ate grain, beans, oil, olives, weak wine, and scraps, but every meal was shaped by labor, hierarchy, and ownership.
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Roman slaves ate grain, beans, oil, olives, weak wine, and scraps, but food was also a tool of labor, discipline, and control.

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