Vanquished Army Passing Under the Yoke details |
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| Image title: | Vanquished Army Passing Under the Yoke | |
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| Source: | D. Rose, Edited by H. W. Dulcken: “A Popular History of Rome” (1886) | |
| Place shown: | none | |
| Keywords: | battles, ancient rome, bare feet, greyscale | |
| Status: | public domain in the USA, out of copyright in Canada, hence royalty-free stock image for all purposes and no usage credit required | |
Notes: |
Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase and Fable says, in the entry for Yoke, “To pass under the yoke. To suffer the disgrace of a vanquished army. The Romans made a yoke of three spears—two upright and one resting on them. When an army was vanquished [i.e. beaten], the soldiers had to lay down their arms [i.e. weapons] and pass under this archway of spears.” The illustration shows three vertical spears and one horizontal. The conquored soldiers appear to be encouraged to pass under the horizontal spear by a man brandishing a long dagger or possibly a whip. The losers have a cloth wrapped round their waist, but are bare-backed, bare-legged and either barefoot or wearing light shoes or sandals. It might be that they were subsequently taken away and enslaved or killed, or if they were mercenaries I imagine that they might even have been re-hired by the winning army. I didn’t find any description of this image in the book, though. |
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| Dimensions: | 84 x 94mm (3.3 x 3.7 inches) | |
| Filename: | 067-Vanquished-Army-Passing-Under-the-Yoke-q50-746x840.jpg | |
| Blog link: | http://www.fromoldbooks.org/DulckenHistoryOfRome/pages/067-Vanquished-Army-Passing-Under-the-Yoke//067-Vanquished-Army-Passing-Under-the-Yoke-q50-444x500.jpg | |
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