Gaius Claudius Glaber


Gaius Claudius Glaber was a military commander of the late Roman Republic, holding the offices of legate and military praetor in 73 BC. He was defeated in the battle of Mount Vesuvius against the forces of Spartacus during the Third Servile War.

History

Glaber was a member of a Roman plebeian family. He might have a distant connection with the famous patrician Claudii.
Glaber, who was one of eight elected praetors in 73 BC, is only mentioned by classical historians in connection with his disastrous military leadership against Spartacus. They note his force of Roman militia was destroyed because he was unable to adapt to the gladiators' unorthodox tactics.
After Glaber besieged the slaves on slopes of Mount Vesuvius, he failed to anticipate what they would do next. Spartacus' forces used rappelling lines made from local vegetation to scale down the cliffs on the other side of the mountain. They then outflanked Glaber's militia, annihilating his forces.
Roman records make no further mention of Glaber after this defeat. It is not known whether he was killed during the battle, or was simply considered too obscure for further mention by classical historians. Classics scholar Barry S. Strauss noted that his obscurity might also have been another sign of how little attention the Roman Senate gave Spartacus in 73 BC.

Portrayals in fiction

Glaber appears in Robert Harris's novel Imperium, which chronicles the career of Marcus Tullius Cicero. Harris has Glaber retire from public life "in humiliation" following his failure to defeat Spartacus, but as an old man he returns to politics in the role of foreign praetor.
In screen adaptations of the life of Spartacus, Glaber has been portrayed: