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Mixed Martial Arts Celebrity Recruited for Ancient Roman Army


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Live Science is carrying this story claiming that celebrity endorsements are nothing new in the military field. I don't think that this is an early April Fools spoof but you never know.... :unsure:

 

Millennia before modern-day military recruiters talked up potential soldiers in shopping malls or put up posters, one Roman city took a rather different approach to recruiting soldiers for the emperor's army.

 

A newly translated inscription, dating back about 1,800 years, reveals that Oinoanda, a Roman city in southwest Turkey, turned to a mixed martial art champion to recruit for the Roman army and bring the new soldiers to a city named Hierapolis, located hundreds of miles to the east, in Syria.

 

His name was Lucius Septimius Flavianus Flavillianus and he was a champion at wrestling and pankration, the latter a bloody, and at times lethal, mixed martial art where contestants would try to pound each other unconscious or into submission.

 

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Anything that uses the phrase 'martial arts' in connection with Roman history is on dubious ground in my view. However, the possibility that a pankration specialist was used to recruit is an interesting possibility - I have no idea about its authenticity - because my main obection would be that pankration was a greek sport with a limited following in Roman society whose contestants tended to be regarded as athletes, or infama, and quite often slaves themselves.

 

The connection between legions and gladiators is established. There was a commonality between their equipment with a parallel development and we know that on occaision gladiators were used as bodyguards, trainers, and in rare instances military units entirely. However, since the pankration was not identifiably a legionary sport, where's the connection? My guess is that this was an ancient example of celebrity endorsement. They dragged a famous pankrationist to speak out and persuade the impressionable youths to sign up.

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I agree that at present it seems like someone puffing up an article with modern references to make a story where there really isn't one - remind you of any particular Governments at present? :D .

 

From a quick search there does appear to be at least 3 or 4 well known inscriptions relating to Lucius Septimius Flavianus Flavillianus and his victories in the pankration but I haven't so far been able to track down anything, apart from this article, providing details of this 'new inscription' or more importantly an 'actual' translation to provide the context to the story.

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