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13[[quoteright:300:[[ComicBook/SupermansPalJimmyOlsen https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/spartacus03.jpg]]]]
14 [[caption-width-right:300:[[Film/{{Spartacus}} "I am Jimmy Olsen!" "No, I am Jimmy Olsen!"]]]]
15
16->''"I'm Spartacus!"''
17-->-- '''[[IAmSpartacus Everyone]]''', ''Film/{{Spartacus}}''
18
19A staple of SwordAndSandal and LostWorld stories, the hero is captured and forced into the gladiatorial pits [[MadeASlave as a slave]]. He will be trained as gladiator (giving him a justification for becoming a badass warrior if he was not one already). He will win numerous bouts, becoming a favourite of the fans and winning the respect of his fellow gladiators. He will then incite his fellow gladiators to rise up and break out of the slave pits, leaving the hero at the head of a ready-made army of highly trained warriors with which to overthrow the EvilOverlord who condemned him to the pits.
20
21Subtrope of GladiatorGames as well as SlaveLiberation. The main alternative for captive heroes is in a SlaveGalley.
22
23----
24!!Examples:
25
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:Comic Books]]
29* The real-life revolt of Spartacus and his fellow gladiators is told in a flashback in ''ComicBook/{{Alix}}: [[Recap/AlixLeFilsDeSpartacus Le Fils de Spartacus]]''.
30* In ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' #91-93, the robot gladiator Torgo leads a gladiator revolt on the Skrull controlled planet of Kral, after the Fantastic Four arrives to rescue the captive Thing from the gladiator pits.
31* The ''ComicBook/PlanetHulk'' storyline.
32* BarbarianHero ''ComicBook/{{Slaine}}'' from ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' orchestrated a revolt amongst the Cythron's human gladiators.
33* Mongul once captured ComicBook/{{Superman}} and forced him into GladiatorGames. Superman became champion and eventually defeated Mongul.
34* In ''ComicBook/SupermansPalJimmyOlsen'' #159, the magical gem the Star of Cathay causes Jimmy to travel back in time and relive one of his past lives; that of Spartacus. Naturally, he leads a gladiator revolt which is crushed by a young Julius Caesar (and historical accuracy be damned).
35* Grand finale of the ComicBook/SuskeEnWiske album ''Het Geheim van de Gladiatoren''.
36* In the IDW ''[[ComicBook/TheTransformersIDW Transformers Generation 1]]'' continuity, Megatron began as a successful gladiator who recruited the greatest gladiators on Cybertron to revolt against their oppressors.
37** It's a recurring theme in Generation 1; he also led such a revolt in [[ComicBook/TransformersGenerationOne the Dreamwave comics]], and [[WesternAnimation/TheTransformers the original cartoon]] has an unsuccessful gladiator revolt against the Quintessons in the Transformers' early history.
38* ''ComicBook/TheWarlordDC'': Early in his career, Morgan is captured and spends time as an enslaved gladiator. He earns his title leading his fellow gladiators to freedom.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Comic Strips]]
42* ComicStrip/ModestyBlaise does it in the "Those About to Die..." arc, where an insane millionaire kidnaps Modesty, Willie and other elite athletes and warriors and is forcing them to compete in a DeadlyGame.
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Fan Works]]
46* In ''Fanfic/TheDornianHeresy'', Angron's backstory as the leader of one of these is almost how it is in the canon ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' universe. However, Horus Lupercal was able to convince the Emperor that teleporting Angron to his flagship and leaving his comrades to be slaughtered would only make Angron resent his father. Instead, the Emperor and the Luna Wolves supported Angron's revolt, making the slavers flee instead of fighting.
47* ''Franchise/StarWars'' fic ''[[https://www.fanfiction.net/s/11040419/1/Gladiatorial-Jedi Gladiatorial Jedi]]''. Luke is captured and forced to fight, and a woman who befriends him helps him and the rest of the prisoners fight back.
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
51* ''Film/{{Gladiator}}'': After sold into slavery in the arena, Maximus attempts to lead his fellow gladiators and those in the army still loyal to him in rebellion against the emperor.
52* ''Film/{{Spartacus}}'' which is, of course, based on the real life version of the Spartacus revolt. (DownerEnding included, if you consider Spartacus et al to be the good guys.)
53** More of a BittersweetEnding, considering that [[spoiler: his wife and [[SomeoneToRememberHimBy child]] were freed.]]
54* The Sakaar portion of ''Film/ThorRagnarok'' adapts some of ''Planet Hulk'''s storyline. Hulk is initially content to keep working off his rage as the grand champion, but Thor manages to convince him to join a revolt that's been brewing for a while but lacked the muscle the heroes provide.
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Gamebooks]]
58* ''Literature/FightingFantasy'':
59** If you chose the path to becoming a fighting slave in ''Literature/TheCrimsonTide'', you can attempt to invoke one.
60[[/folder]]
61
62[[folder:Literature]]
63* Subverted in the ''Literature/AlienChronicles'' novels. Ampris uses her fame, traveling and combat experience as a gladiator to lay the foundations for the Abiru Freedom Network, but her fellow gladiators never find out about her activities or go on to play any role in the rebellion. By the time the Freedom Network is in a position to make a difference in the third book, Ampris is no longer a gladiator and her old team doesn't make any appearance in the story.
64* ''Literature/BazilBroketail'': At the end of the first book, the characters are being held as prisoners in Tummuz Orgmeen where they're made to fight enemy soldiers. When their side wins (not without losses) against all odds, the city authorities give them the chance to join their side. After they refuse, they're ordered killed and attacked, but manage to fight out of the arena, sparking a slave revolt and eventually winning.
65* The Spartacus incident also happens in ''The Death of Kings'', the second of Creator/ConnIggulden's ''Literature/{{Emperor}}'' series. In this case, since Julius Caesar is the protagonist, it's a more upbeat ending than that of ''Film/{{Spartacus}}''.
66* In Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs's ''[[Literature/JohnCarterOfMars The Gods of Mars]]'', John Carter [[TheDulcineaEffect charges into the arena]] when [[DamselInDistress women]] are threatened with great apes, and another prisoner leaps to join him, shouting they should all come, and they do.
67** In ''Chessman Of Mars'': the hero infiltrates the game of the title, where the pieces are living swordsmen, and fights; he wins and leads a revolt.
68* ''Literature/{{Gor}}'' has this a few times.
69* ''Literature/TheHungerGames'', especially the third book, could be seen as a post-apocalyptic version of this, with [[spoiler: Katniss and other Hunger Games winners becoming major figures in the rebellion.]]
70* The ''Literature/{{Kregen}}'' Planetary Romance novels by Alan Burt Akers do this a few times. It's a staple of the genre.
71* Thrall's backstory in ''Literature/LordOfTheClans'', explaining his martial skills.
72* Happens in ''Literature/TheNevernightChronicle'' after Leona tries to sell most of her Gladiators to stay afloat.
73* In ''Literature/RakuinNoMonshou'', Orba discovers a revolt being planned for a major festival where the gladiators intend to kill the Emperor and the nobility. Unknown to the gladiators, their backer is a noble who plans to seize power during the chaos before killing the rebels. Orba blackmails the gladiators into obeying him and uses the failed revolt to expose the noble.
74* Literature/{{Tarzan}} stages one in the novel ''Tarzan and the Lost Empire''.
75* ''Literature/TheTelnarianHistories'' by Creator/JohnNorman. The setting of the novels is a galactic realm closely parallel to the later history of the Roman Empire and its wars with Germanic barbarians. The ruling family of the empire is human, but extraterrestrials exist, while individuals pursue destinies of freedom and slavery. As such, gladiator revolts play a significant role.
76* ''Literature/TennisShoesAdventureSeries'': Harry starts one in ''The Sacred Quest'', when he rescues Marcos and Gidgiddonihah.
77* In Creator/EEDocSmith's ''[[Literature/{{Lensman}} Triplanetary]]'', the last significant attempt to save Roman civilization was a Gladiator Revolt -- and failed utterly.
78* In Creator/BenCounter's ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' ''Literature/GreyKnights'' novel ''Hammer of Daemons'', Alaric and a fellow captive Grey Knight are forced in fight in GladiatorGames to celebrate the putting down of a Gladiator Revolt. The other Grey Knight dies. To [[{{Revenge}} avenge]] [[FireForgedFriends his friend]], Alaric [[spoiler:instigates another gladiator revolt as ''part'' of instigating a full blown EnemyCivilWar, thereby destroying an entire Khorne Daemon World and sabotaging a Black Crusade.]] Do not annoy Alaric!
79[[/folder]]
80
81[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
82* Happened in an episode of ''Series/{{Angel}}'' where the titular hero was captured and put into demon gladiator fights. Angel eventually breaks out and leads a gladiator revolt. Unfortunately, after the successful revolt, when the demons are freed and walking into the Los Angeles night, one of his human teammates [[NiceJobBreakingItHero questions if they just loosed a dozen bloodthirsty and deadly demons onto the streets of LA]].
83* Much the same plot occurred on ''Series/HerculesTheLegendaryJourneys'', except Herc deliberately got himself captured in the hope of rescuing one of the gladiators.
84* ''Series/{{Rome}}''. When Titus Pullo is sentenced to death in the arena, Pullo instead goes on a rampage and kills several of the gladiators. His [[HeterosexualLifePartners friend]] Lucius Vorenus, stuck in a dilemma ToBeLawfulOrGood for his friend, [[TrueCompanions eventually]] [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight decides]] to stand with him.
85-->[[BattleCry Thirteen!!!]]
86* ''Series/SpartacusBloodAndSand'' follow the life of Spartacus, the gladiator who lead a rebellion against the Romans. From his time as an ally of the Romans, to his betrayal and becoming a gladiator, to the rebellion he leads and its ultimate outcome.
87* "The Gamesters of Triskelion" from the original ''Series/{{Star Trek|The Original Series}}''. In the episode, Captain Kirk and his companions are abducted into slavery and trained to fight as gladiators for the gambling entertainment of three disembodied beings. Kirk winds up fighting for the freedom of all the enslaved thralls.
88[[/folder]]
89
90[[folder:Music]]
91* "Trial of Champions" by Music/ThreeInchesOfBlood was inspired by the ''Literature/FightingFantasy'' game book of the same name, and features a similar plot in which an enslaved gladiator fights his way to victory, and ultimately kills the emperor.
92* The plot to "Warrior" is this but with MaskedLuchador wrestlers and Music/{{Kimbra}} being held captive as the singer for a mariachi band.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
96* The first module for ''TabletopGame/DarkSun'' featured this. North of the Tablelands lie a string of cities made up of ex-slaves.
97* Forms part of the history for the city of Cartago in the ''Lands of Mystery'' supplement for the ''[[TabletopGame/{{Champions}} Justice, Inc.]]'' roleplaying game.
98* The backstory of Angron, primarch of the World Eaters, in ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}''. He grew up in the gladiator arenas of a barbaric planet and eventually led his fellow slaves to escape to the mountains. When the Emperor arrived to give Angron command of his Space Marine legion, the primarch refused, choosing to die with his brothers-in-arms, who were facing annihilation at the hands of a massive coalition. The Emperor ignored this and teleported Angron away in time to watch his comrades get slaughtered, and though the primarch would agree to lead the World Eaters, [[Literature/HorusHeresy there were repercussions later]].
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:Video Games]]
102* In ''VideoGame/AgeOfEmpiresI'', there's a mission where you have to defend an Italian region from Spartacus revolts. The Slave Army is on Post-Iron Age, while you're in Bronze Age.
103* Happens twice in ''VideoGame/BaldursGateII''. The first time, you can help the gladiators. The second time, you're one of them.
104* The ''VideoGame/{{Thera}}'' mod for ''VideoGame/MedievalIITotalWar'' has this as part of the background for the [[TheHorde Uruk Dominion]]. The Uruks and other bestial creatures were used as gladiators and laborers for the [[AncientRome Romuli]] [[FantasyCounterpartCulture Empire]] until an Uruk named Slavos won his freedom in the gladiator pits. Then [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt the Great Torment]] hit the world, afflicting the planet with storms, frosts, and disease, and the Romuli Emperor sent the Legions to purge the city Slavos lived in as a plague was starting to spread. Slavos unified the gladiators and citizenry and destroyed the Legions, then contained the plague, and created a new nation.
105* ''[[VideoGame/RatchetAndClank Ratchet:]] [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Gladiator]]'' - a Gladiator Revolt... '''[-[[RecycledInSpace IN SPACE!]]-]'''
106* In ''VideoGame/RomeTotalWar'', cities with a Gladiatorial Arena who go into revolt may have "The Gladiator Uprising" as their rebellion. In practice, it's the same as a standard revolt with access to some [[EliteMooks better units]].
107* In ''VideoGame/TransformersWarForCybertron'', Megatron got his start (and name) in the equivalent of [[GladiatorGames Cybertronian Fight Club]]. His desire to see a free Cybertron without a caste system where everyone is free to determine their own path sparks his rise to power as more and more Cybertronians (including the future Optimus Prime) come to his cause, leading eventually to a full-scale revolt.
108* ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}''
109** Kargath Bladefist the eventual Chieftain of the Shattered Hand Clan started out as a slave of the Ogres and told to kill 100 Orcs in order to earn his freedom. After killing his 100th Orc, [[ILied he was imprisoned beneath the Arena]] alongside every other Orc Gladiator. [[AnArmAndALeg Kargath took a rock and smashed it against the shackle binding his left hand before tearing it off at the wrist,]] before tossing the same rock a distance away from the other gladiators to have them do the same [[SecretTestOfCharacter to prove their desire for freedom and vengeance against the Ogres.]]
110-->'''This was the birth of The Shattered Hand.'''
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder:Webcomics]]
114* ''WebComic/GurralTheSmasher'': The main character, Gurral, was genetically engineered by the alien Arena Lords to be the ultimate gladiator monster and blackmailed into fighting to sate his addiction to the mineral Impervium, but grows tired of fighting for them and eventually rebels, escaping to Earth.
115[[/folder]]
116
117[[folder:Western Animation]]
118* ''WesternAnimation/DragonsRidersOfBerk'': With a little help from Hiccup and the others, the captured dragons are freed and proceed to attack their jailers and their audience in "Stryke Out".
119* ''WesternAnimation/JusticeLeague'''s "War World" put Superman on Mongul's titular War World. He rose to become champion, beat Mongul on interdimensional TV and overthrew his rule.
120* ''WesternAnimation/SamuraiJack'': In "Episode XVI: Jack and the Smackback", Jack is captured and thrown into a battle area, where he must fight numerous champions in order to survive the Dome of Doom.
121* ''WesternAnimation/SpartakusAndTheSunBeneathTheSea''. Spartakus (as might be guessed from his name) is an ex-gladiator who escaped slavery following a revolt.
122[[/folder]]
123
124[[folder:Real Life]]
125* The Spartacus rebellion is the TropeMaker.
126** And, amazingly for a modern reader, the only known example of a gladiator revolt that lasted longer than one day. That's right, folks: armed, desperate, relatively freely moving professional fighters did nothing worse than occasionally grumble over bad food.
127*** And Spartacus celebrated several of his victories by holding gladiator games... which makes him a very strange freedom fighter.
128*** It's worth noting that while gladiators are taught how to fight, they are not taught how to be part of an army. Gladiator rebellions would look more like a rampaging horde than real rampaging hordes. Individually, they were likely very good fighters, but they only rarely knew how to set up a good formation or enforce discipline in the ranks, let alone apply tactics on the scale of a battle or even have an actual chain of command. "Successful" gladiator rebellions were generally done with the intent of getting better conditions, and largely consisted of holding a rich man hostage until he agreed to grease the wheels to get them what they wanted.
129*** Whether or not Spartacus could qualify as a freedom fighter is a matter of considerable debate among historians, given that his motivations are entirely unknown and we're left with nothing but the speculation of Roman historians who were projecting their own societal fears and cultural biases onto the rebellion, and modern historians trying to gleam intent from Spartacus' rather baffling troop movements (which aren't consistent between the various roman historians). While popular culture and folk lore remembers Spartacus as a freedom fighter, if one with a taste for PayEvilUntoEvil, there's as much or more evidence that he was simply trying to [[ScrewThisImOutOfHere get the hell out of Italy]], or worse, that he was simply a warlord who escaped slavery to RapePillageAndBurn. Whatever the case, considerable ValuesDissonance applies.
130[[/folder]]

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