Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / SlaveGalley

Go To

1%%%
2%%
3%%
4%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Please add your example in the proper place. Thanks!
5%%
6%%
7%%%
8%% Image selected per Image Pickin' thread: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=17083631190.50856900
9%%
10%% Please don't change or remove without starting a new thread.
11%%
12[[quoteright:350:[[Film/BenHur1959 https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/slave_galley.png]]]]
13[[caption-width-right:350:Isn't it great when you work from home?]]
14%%
15%% Caption selected per above IP thread. Please do not replace or remove without further discussion in the Caption Repair thread:
16%% https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1404492079030138900
17%%
18
19->''"Pulling the weight up against the wind\
20is the plight of the galley slave\
21Chained to this cold bench, six to the oar\
22Sentenced to an early grave."''
23-->-- '''Music/{{Accept}}''', "The Galley"
24
25A staple of the SwordAndSandal and Fantasy genres, [[TropeCodifier firmly established]] by the novel ''Literature/BenHur'' and its film adaptations (the [[Film/BenHur1959 1959 one]] especially). The hero is [[MadeASlave enslaved]] and forced to work as a galley rower, while [[WorkingOnTheChainGang chained to his fellows]]. Necessary embellishments include:
26
27* A coxswain with a drum beating out a steady rhythm
28* A brutal first mate with a whip
29* Dirty rowers seated two-by-two down either side of a narrow aisle, like an even-more-sadistic school bus
30* A friendly ScaryBlackMan chained next to the hero, who will die heroically for the hero's freedom
31
32Showing a character as a galley slave is a quick-and-easy way to depict their suffering, as it combines all the bad parts of being a sailor with all the bad parts of slavery -- that is to say, all of it.
33
34This drama makes slave galleys one of the rare UsefulNotes/TypesOfNavalShips that occurs in media often enough to have its own trope, but historically, this trope is NewerThanTheyThink and belongs in the realm of BrieferThanTheyThink. The heyday of the slave galley lasted only for some 70 years - from the beginning of the 16th century to the UsefulNotes/BattleOfLepanto (1571), coinciding with the heyday of the Ottoman Empire for a few different reasons. Galley slaves were introduced only during the Renaissance (16th century) as cannons became the main weapon of galleys instead of ramming and boarding and less skill was required for rowers. Slave galleys were uncommon in the ancient world for various reasons[[note]](see [[Analysis/SlaveGalley analysis page]] for details)[[/note]], making this trope an example of ArtisticLicenseHistory. Some nations, such as Venice, never adopted galley slavery. Some, like Sweden and Russia, used [[{{conscription}} conscript soldiers]] for galley crews.
35
36When being sent to the galleys is a punishment detail rather than a military necessity, compare PrisonersWork and WorkingOnTheChainGang.
37
38Compare GladiatorGames, the alternative for a male slave in ancient times. Not to be confused with "Literature/GalleySlave", a story about a [[ServantRace robot made for proof-reading galley copies of manuscripts]].
39
40----
41!!Examples:
42
43[[foldercontrol]]
44
45[[folder:Advertising]]
46* The "spokescandies" for M&M's which take the slavemaster's line and turn it into a rendition of ''The Hues Corporation'' hit "Rock the Boat".
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Comic Books]]
50* ''ComicBook/{{Asterix}}'':
51** In ''Recap/AsterixAtTheOlympicGames'', the Gauls hire a ship to transport them to Rome only to find the ship they hired is a galley, where they're expected to do the rowing. The ship's captain explains that these are the "deck games and sport" promised. He then confirms that it's usually a slave ship: "You got the better deal, normally rowers are chained and whipped!"
52** ''Recap/AsterixTheGladiator'', when being transported to Rome as a prisoner of Odius Asparagus on board the latter's galley, Cacofonix offers to lift the galley slaves' spirits with a song. The slaves consider his singing to be even worse than getting whipped, and promise to put extra effort into the rowing if Cacofonix shuts up.
53** Similarly, the Phoenician merchant who shows up from time to time uses "business associates who didn't read the contract very well" to row his ship.
54** And in ''Recap/AsterixTheLegionary'', the troop Asterix and Obelix signed up in are the rowers (see the RealLife section below). The voyage ends up quite pleasant, driving the captain nuts by countering his orders (heading straight for the pirate ship, for instance). He also tells the drummer to beat faster... only to be told the little Gaul has already requested it.
55** And in ''Recap/AsterixAndObelixAllAtSea'', the drummer thing is subverted when the pirates end up in command of a Roman galley. They ask their (not very) ScaryBlackMan Baba to be the drummer, at which point he pulls off a high-speed drum solo before being replaced with a standard drummer.
56* In ''ComicBook/BarbeRouge'', Eric ends up as a galley slave after being framed for stealing the cargo of a ship (being the adopted son of a fearsome pirate helped). The conditions are hellish enough, but thanks to the help of his friend Baba (who [[ContrivedCoincidence happened to have been sent to the same galley]]) and a cabin boy he had helped earlier, he soon manages to not only lead a successful slave revolt, but to carry out the original mission of the galley. He and the other slaves get pardoned as a result.
57* In ''ComicBook/DeCapeEtDeCrocs'', our heroes are sent to a galley, with the requisite chains, drummers and slave uprising. Amusingly, [[AllDrummersAreAnimals the drummer wouldn't look out of place in a metal band]], and is seen still beating away on his drum ''while on the lifeboat''. Also, due to the RunningGag of referring to every ship as a galley, we get this exchange, as Don Lope and Armand have snuck onto the janissary's ship:
58-->'''Don Lope:''' Ola, amigos! We are Christians, like you! We've come to rescue you from the Barbary scum!\
59'''Armand:''' Once again, Don Lope, this is not a galley, but a zebec. A zebec is a sailboat...\
60'''Don Lope:''' So these people in the hold are not galley slaves?\
61'''Armand:''' No!\
62'''Don Lope:''' But Turkish sailors?\
63'''Sailors:''' YES!
64* The ''ComicBook/{{Thorgal}}'' volume "The Black Galley": Thorgal gets captured and becomes one of these. There's the drummer (who's a ScaryBlackMan) and the whip-man.
65* ''ComicBook/TheTriganEmpire''. Trigo is usurped by his niece who, [[EvenEvilHasStandards rather than kill her own relatives]], does this trope instead.
66* ''ComicBook/WonderWoman'' [[ComicBook/WonderWoman1942 Vol 1]]: When Diana and her sky pirate foes led by Nifta are tossed back in time by an odd {{Clock Roach|es}} to maintain the TimeLoop that has Nifta feeling like she's fought Diana before Diana ends up shackled on a slave galley, and she breaks her oar for a weapon and convinces the others slaves to revolt as well.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Comic Strips]]
70* ''ComicStrip/TheFarSide'':
71** Parodied in a cartoon. The sailors are wondering why their ship is going around in circles all the time... which the reader can see is because they put all the big, muscular slaves on one side of the boat, with the other side being crewed entirely by skinny wimps.
72** Another featured a galley slave complaining to the whipmaster about getting jabbed with a splinter.
73** Yet ''another'' had a slave complain that it was ''his'' turn for the window seat.
74** One had the drummer replaced by a bad entertainer on a piano.
75** One had a list of the day's activities: Rowing, rowing, rowing, etc. with aerobics in the middle.
76[[/folder]]
77
78[[folder:Fan Works]]
79* ''Fanfic/LovedAndLost'': After [[TheUsurper Prince Jewelius]] seizes the throne of Equestria, he legalizes slavery and sentences Applejack and Pinkie Pie to work as galley slaves. They're stuck in this situation for one week before the other discredited heroes free them.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
83* ''Film/TheAdventuresOfPhilibertCaptainVirgin'': [[BigBad Count Clotindre]]'s favorite method of disposing of someone is to send them "to the galleys", doubling as a ShoutOut to ''Film/{{Ben Hur|1959}}''. One of his Black Squadron guards, Martin and Philibert end up there.
84* ''Film/{{Ben Hur|1959}}'' (1959) was the first film [[TropeCodifier to popularize this trope]]. The title character spent a few years on a Roman slave galley.
85* ''The Crimson Permanent Assurance'', the Creator/MontyPython short at the beginning of ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'', has a scene in which the hard-working accountants switch to galley slaves, complete with BONG-BONG-BONG drummer.
86* ''Film/ErikTheViking'' also has a slave galley (chasing the heroes' boat). Here the brutal first mate is Japanese (with silly subtitles).
87* A very weird example in ''Film/FashionsOf1934''. The wild, trippy BusbyBerkeleyNumber includes a scene with a "slave galley" on a stage set, filled with half-naked chorus girls, all wearing platinum blonde wigs, smiling beatifically as they row.
88 * ''Film/TheMagicChristian'' has a brief scene in which a modern cruise ship is revealed to be powered by topless female galley slaves driven by a whip-wielding stripperific Creator/RaquelWelch. Played for laughs.
89* ''Film/LesMiserables1935'': The novel frequently refers to Valjean as a galley slave. This is due to the words "galley" and "galley slaves" continuing to be used in French for a kind of penitentiary (bagne in French) and their inmates, long after they were not actual slave galleys anymore. This film, however, takes the term literally — Marius' group, rather than aiming to overthrow the monarchy, now wants the prisoners to not be treated like slaves while in the galleys.
90* ''Film/MonsieurVincent'': Still in use in 17th century France, complete with slave drivers banging a drum and whipping the men on the oars. Vincent is so horrified by what he sees that he takes the place of a galley slave at an oar.
91* The undead crew of the Black Pearl in ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanTheCurseOfTheBlackPearl'' used galley oars for a speed advantage. Since the crew were immortal zombies, they could conceivably push to flank speed for hours at a stretch, and still be ready to fight when they caught their prey.
92* ''Film/TheSeaHawk'' Thorpe and the other surviving crew of the Albatross are sentenced to this by the Inquisition.
93* In ''Film/TheThreeStooges Meet Hercules'', the boys and the romantic lead end up as these. This eventually causes steering issues.
94* ''Film/UpPompeii'': Lurcio has a HaveWeMet moment with another slave, Gorgo. Lurcio doesn't recognize him at first, and the other guy only realizes when he sees the back of his head. He sat behind him in the galley, so that's all he saw of him for all those years, but he would recognize the back of that bonce ''anywhere'' after that.
95* The Smokers from ''Film/{{Waterworld}}'' showed off their cruelty by forcing their crew to move their flagship - a supertanker - by muscle power. This is spectacularly stupid since the supertanker weighs 30,000 tons even before loading any cargo, but ScifiWritersHaveNoSenseOfScale.
96[[/folder]]
97
98[[folder:Gamebooks]]
99* ''Literature/MasterOfChaos'' begins like this. Unusually, the [[AnAdventurerIsYou hero]] went into slavery ''voluntarily'', as a discreet way of gaining entry to the local WretchedHive.
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder:Jokes]]
103* The overseer to the galley slaves: "Men, I have some good news and some bad news. The good news is, you get as much as you want for breakfast. The bad news is, the captain wants to go water skiing."
104* British humor: A new galley slave replaces an old one who has died. As the old slave's body is flung overboard, the overseer flogs the rest of the slaves, who respond by opening their breech-clouts and urinating into the air. Confused, the new slave asks his bench-mate what is going on, and receives the reply "we always have a whip-round and a piss-up when somebody leaves." (collection of money and a drinking party)
105[[/folder]]
106
107[[folder:Literature]]
108%%* ''Literature/TheBaroqueCycle'' has whole chapters of this.
109* ''Literature/OneHundredCupboards:'' The imperial navy uses these, with slaves regularly sold or traded between galleys. Several of the protagonists are transported on one, and James spends several hours on an oar before he and Monmouth manage to incite a slave rebellion.
110* ''Franchise/ConanTheBarbarian'':
111** In ''Literature/TheHourOfTheDragon'', Conan is kidnapped and taken aboard a ship with galley slaves. He turns the tables on his captors, however, when he notices some old comrades among the galley slaves and convinces them to mutiny.
112** It happened [[AnarchicOrder again/beforehand]] in the ''City of Skulls'', where he escapes with his friend [[ScaryBlackMan Juma]] by breaking off part of an oar and beating his slavers to death with them.
113* ''Literature/TheCrimsonShadow'': This is where anyone the Huegoths capture ends up on. It's considered a {{fate worse than death}}.
114* ''Literature/TheDeathGateCycle'': Humans made prisoners by the Tribus elves of Arianus are often forced into flight harnesses to move the wings of the elves' flying ships, a very difficult and dangerous task. Later, after the human/elven war ends, the need to move galleys still remains and the elves resort to paying volunteer rowers instead -- and a lot of former galley slaves, having built up quite a bit of practice and without many other career options, sign up for this job. The narration notes that, somewhat paradoxically, many become quite proud of their career, now that they are doing it by choice as paid professionals.
115* Discussed in ''Literature/{{Eric}}''. When Rincewind and Eric are transported back to the time of the [[Literature/TheIliad Tsortean War]] and taken captive by the Tsorteans as enemy spies, the interrogator threatens to put them as rowers on a trireme. He says that if they cooperate, he can put in a good word so that they get to be on the top deck.[[note]]In RealLife, rowing at the bottom deck of a trireme was actually preferable; the oars necessarily got longer the higher the deck, meaning that more force was required.[[/note]] Later, he tells them that if they're trying to trick him, there is such a thing as quinquiremes.
116* "[[http://www.online-literature.com/kipling/3775/ The Finest Story in the World]]", a Creator/RudyardKipling short story, involves an unimaginative would-be writer [[PastLifeMemories remembering in vivid detail his past life]] as a Greek galley slave, while believing that he's inventing it.
117* ''Literature/TheGoldenCrown'': The time traveling Harry Hawkins is sold as a slave to Romans and finds himself on a ship heading who-knows-where. Lucky for him, pirates burn down the ship (after he grabs the key, and unlocks all the other rowers).
118* ''Literature/{{Gor}}'': One of the few roles a male slave could live and die in. Captain Bosk made it a practice to free slaves of captured vessels, which made them more motivated rowers, and fighters when necessary, out of gratitude and aversion to re-enslavement.
119* In ''Literature/TheLongShips'', protagonist Orm and his companions are captured in Spain while on a viking trip, and spend two years as galley slaves.
120* ''Literature/MasterOfWhitestorm'' begins with the titular character and his slaves working the same oar of a Mhurgai ship.
121* In ''Literature/LesMiserables'', the main character is referred to as a galley slave ("galérien"), as was typical at the time, even though by that point the prisoners were no longer allowed to serve as actual galley slaves. However some translations seem to be slightly confused by this and have Valjean as an actual galley slave, as do some of the films. Valjean and those like him were more like enslaved [[PrisonersWork dock workers/manual laborers.]]
122* ''Literature/{{Outcast}}'', Creator/RosemarySutcliff's second and worst-researched Roman novel, has its protagonist Beric arrested and sentenced to row a Roman army transport galley on the Rhine. His oarmate is a dreamy artist with an IncurableCoughOfDeath, leaving Beric in the role of barbarian best friend.
123* ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'':
124** Legend of Luke, Mariel of Redwall, and Mossflower incorporate oar slaves for the pirates. More often than not the heroes will end up killing the ship's crew and freeing the slaves.
125** Averted in some later books where the baddies hold slaves, but do not use them on the ships.
126* ''Literature/SaxonChronicles'': Uhtred, the AntiHero, spends some time as an oar-slave. Instead of the traditional ScaryBlackMan friend, he instead finds himself a crazy badass Irishman. They keep each other angry enough to survive.
127* In ''Literature/TheSeaHawk'', this happens to the hero [[spoiler: when he is betrayed by his younger brother.]] He later returns the favor to said betrayer.
128* ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'': In "The Grim Grotto", as well as [[Recap/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEventsS03E04TheGrimGrottoPart2 it's adaptation]], the villain's submarine is powered by the labour of the snowscouts, whom they abducted in the previous book.
129* ''Literature/{{Sevenwaters}}'': In ''Son of the Shadows'', one of the Painted Man's men had this as his backstory - captured by Vikings as a way to supplement their losses, freed by the Painted Man who asked the chained slaves to row them to Ulster, after which they could either go free with a bit of gold or stay with him.
130* ''Literature/TheShipOfIshtar'': The eponymous ship is crewed by Galley Slaves in the ''alla scaloccio'' type arrangement, with two guys on each oar. AdventurerArchaeologist John Kenton, having been magically transported onto the ship from the 1920s, is MadeASlave and put to work there. His rowing partner is a big warm-hearted Viking called Sigurd. When John takes a whipping meant for Sigurd, Sigurd swears [[SwornBrothers Blood Brothership]] with him. Far from dying for him, Sigurd helps John and two other allies plan and execute a mutiny.
131* ''Literature/{{Shogun}}'': Played with. When Blackthorne sees the galley that will transport him to the capital, he panics thinking its a slave ship and is willing to die in order not to be a galley slave. It is revealed that the rowers were all full samurai doing their duty rather than slaves.
132* ''Literature/SolomonKane'': At least one story mentions that Kane spent some time as a Turkish galley slave.
133* ''Literature/TimeMachineSeries'':
134** In ''The Mystery of Atlantis'', the hero can end up as a galley slave at one point. Being a time-traveller, he simply time travels out of there while everyone are hanging their heads down out of fatigue.
135** In ''Sword of the Samurai'', the time traveler can wind up getting conscripted into rowing for a Mongol ship heading to invade Japan. All the Japanese galley slaves start cheering when they see the original [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamikaze_(typhoon) Kamikaze]] is about to wreck the Mongol fleet. The hero quickly makes an emergency jump in time before he can be caught up in the deadly typhoon.
136* ''Literature/TheToughGuideToFantasyland'': If a male character is enslaved, chances are he'll probably wind up chained to an oar in one of these. Jones notes that, since these galleys only ever seem to contain rows of chained-up slaves and nothing in the way of merchandise or soldiers, it's a bit difficult to understand why people keep building them. In fact, it's the only way to reach any Offshore Islands. Though an unpleasant experience, before long they'll be able to break out with a Large Man who they befriend, kill their owners and escape by swimming away.
137* ''Literature/WorldOfTheFiveGods'': In ''The Curse of Chalion'', Cazaril's backstory is revealed to contain two life-changing experiences/epiphanies during his 19 months as a rower on a Slave Galley (three if you count the circumstances of him ending up on there to begin with). He also fits the ScaryBlackMan slot[[note]](more scrawny, sunburned, stinking, and shaggy than anything; but scary enough)[[/note]] noted in the description insofar as a 'boy from a good family' dumped next to him was concerned. Greeting him as one would a lad sharing a tavern bench, sharing his water ration, teaching him, and in the end earning a near-fatal flogging defending him from a rapist.
138* ''{{Literature/Wulfrik}}'': Averted: Wulfrik only takes volunteers to crew his longship, and actually has more candidates than seats so he has them fight a DuelToTheDeath and hire the winners (and when he's in a hurry, doesn't even bother with the first part). Shanghaing (or "bashing and stashing" as it's referred to) is looked down on.
139-->I'll not sail with a man too much a coward to do so willingly.
140* In ''Literature/TheYoungKing'' by Creator/OscarWilde, the titular character's second dream is that he is aboard a ship rowed by a chain gang of slaves, who are whipped by a galley master if they stop rowing. One slave is then made to dive to gather pearls for the Young King's sceptre; this slave dies soon after. Later, the Young King refuses to carry this sceptre.
141[[/folder]]
142
143[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
144* ''Series/DoctorWho'': In "The Romans", the heroes are separated while visiting Nero's Rome, and Ian ends up enslaved and working a galley.
145* ''Series/HorribleHistories'': [=S1E6=] has "Things to remember when you're a Galley slave": a two-part parody of airline passenger announcements.[[note]]This is one of the show's rare slips, as the people rowing Roman galleys were almost always regular members of the Roman navy and not slaves. However, there were a few desperate occasions when slaves were pressed into service as rowers for a naval battle, with the promise of their freedom if the battle was won. [[AccidentallyCorrectWriting One of them happened to be a battle mentioned in the sketch.]][[/note]]
146* ''Series/TheCarolBurnettShow'' had at least two sketches involving galley slaves.
147[[/folder]]
148
149[[folder:Music]]
150* The closing song of Music/{{Accept}}'s ''Stalingrad'' album is "The Galley", a lengthy song about the hopelessness of being a galley slave.
151* Music/HeatherAlexander's song "Yo Ho" is about being kidnapped and put to work as a galley. It's not a very happy song.
152* Music/BrianMcNeill's "A Far North Land" makes note of the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Knox Rev. John Knox]] having spent time as a galley slave (of the French) in the second verse.
153[[/folder]]
154
155[[folder:Radio]]
156* ''Radio/TheGoonShow'' had fun with this in "The Histories of Pliny the Elder".
157-->'''Ecclus:''' I've never done this before.\
158'''Hortator:''' Faster, you dogs!\
159'''Bluebottlus:''' He wants us dogs to go faster.\
160'''Hortator:''' Silence, you scum!\
161'''Ecclus:''' He wants us scum to go silent.\
162'''Hortator:''' Or do you want a taste of the lash?!\
163'''Bluebottlus:''' No, thanks, I've just had some cocoa.
164[[/folder]]
165
166[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
167* On Creator/GamesWorkshop 's game ''Man of War'', the Empire and High Elf crews are all volunteers, whilst Dark Elves, Chaos and Greenskins favour slaves.
168* Many of these ply the waters in ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'''s Inner Sea region, but perhaps most iconic is the ''Burnt Saffron'', an apparently cursed slave ship where unfortunate captives suffer under the lash of a sadistic gnoll first mate.
169* One of the "bad endings" of the ''TabletopGame/TunnelsAndTrolls'' solo adventure ''City of Terror'', has your character end up as galley slave. "You learn to enjoy your life as a galley slave, it's not bad.. But it is HELL, when the captain wants to water-ski."
170[[/folder]]
171
172[[folder:Theater]]
173* In ''Theatre/TheDuchessOfMalfi'', Bosola spent some years in the galleys, the last punishment for serious crimes before execution, for murder. This may explain his initial attitude.
174[[/folder]]
175
176[[folder:Video Games]]
177* ''VideoGame/BigKarnak'' have a stage set on a slave ship cruising on the Nile. The ship is filled with rowing slaves who ignores you, and can't be harmed while you fight off mooks on the decks and masts.
178* Downplayed in ''VideoGame/GoldenSun''. Monsters attack the ship Isaac and his friends are on, and by the time you fight each wave off, one of the (voluntarily employed) rowers has been put out of commission. After each round, you have to pick one of the NPC passengers to press-gang into service as a replacement for the rest of the voyage, whether they like it or not. Choosing the "right" combination of replacements will actually unbalance the rowers, sending the ship off-course and getting you early access to the BonusDungeon.
179* They aren't seen on-screen, but one NPC in ''[[VideoGame/MountAndBlade Mount & Blade: Warband]]'' will buy prisoners for this purpose. He pays a flat rate of 50 Denars each, meaning basic units like recruits and bandits will sell for more than other Ransom Brokers will pay, but you get a lot less for high-tier units.
180[[/folder]]
181
182[[folder:Webcomics]]
183* ''Webcomic/ManlyGuysDoingManlyThings'': Commander Badass, time traveling super-soldier from the future, tells Jared about a time he and his family/squad were press-ganged into service on board a Viking slave galley. He mentions this off-hand to explain how he finally got his HeroicBuild, [[NoodleIncident and provides no further context]].
184-->'''Commander:''' After that, it was easier to just keep it up rather than yo-yo back and forth every time we got captured again.
185* Spoofed in [[http://oglaf.com/stroke/ this]] strip from ''Webcomic/{{Oglaf}}''.
186[[/folder]]
187
188[[folder:Western Animation]]
189* ''WesternAnimation/Primal2019'': In the season 2 ''The Colossaeus'' three-parter, the titular Colossaeus is a [[MileLongShip gigantic warship]] whose oars are pulled by an enslaved race of giants. The Colossaeus's queen spared one, the only one who fought back when her soldiers invaded their pacifistic village, to be a {{battle thrall}} instead. When he rebels, he frees all the oarsmen, and inspired by his example they [[CurbStompBattle soon demonstrate]] the only thing keeping them in chains was their own aversion to fighting back.
190* In the ''[[WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons Simpsons]]'' episode "Kamp Krusty", in the scene where the kids at the camp are forced to sew cheap wallets for selling, Kearney keeps the beat on a drum in the background like in this type of scene.
191* We see one of theses in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheStoryKeepers'' when the characters get stuck on a Roman ship. When the ship is attacked and starts sinking the slaves have to be released from their chains before they drown.
192* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/TinyToonAdventures'' [[SelfDeprecation portrays its own animation staff this way]], with Buster Bunny as the cruel drum-beating coxswain who beats up anyone who asks for more money.
193-->'''Buster:''' Faster! Cheaper! Cheaper! Faster!
194[[/folder]]
195
196[[folder:Real Life]]
197* Usually averted in the SwordAndSandal era, where it was actually far less common (though not unknown) than is usually believed.
198** Slave galleys were a staple of Renaissance naval warfare when it became normal to put several men on an oar. In Ancient and Medieval times freemen were preferred because rowing one man to an oar required more skill.
199** The [[AncientRome Roman Army's]] [[UsefulNotes/TheGloryThatWasRome Naval Service]] only wanted free men, who were paid well, well trained, and highly motivated by the chance of citizenship at the end of their tenure. Since ramming and boarding actions were a staple of ancient sea combat, you'd need fast ships crewed by professionals willing to do their best. As a further reason, if the ship was boarded, a crew of angry and armed free men rowers was a far better second line of defense than chained, unhappy slaves.
200** Being a Galley Rower was also a prestigious [[UsefulNotes/AncientGreece Athenian Navy]] position, for similar reasons as their Roman counterparts. It is true that the rowers were ''thetes''--the lower class of Athenian citizen[[note]]Athens had four classes of citizen: ''Thetes'', the working classes; ''zeugitae'', the middle classes who had enough wealth to purchase their own armor and weapons; ''hippeis'', or "knights", meaning people rich enough to maintain a horse and served as cavalry; and "five hundred bushel men", whose income of 500 bushels of grain (or equivalent) per year made them impossibly wealthy. While the Constitution of Solon originally included some political and legal inequalities, these were mostly eliminated in the time of Pericles.[[/note]]--this was purely economic; the ''thetes'' were the most numerous citizens, as well as the only ones who couldn't afford the weapons needed to fight on land.[[note]]With few exceptions, the soldiers in the armies of Greek city-states paid for their own equipment, while the state would pay for provisions while on campaign.[[/note]] Athens recognized the importance of its navy to its defense (calling them, famously, the "wooden walls") and later their importance to the [[HegemonicEmpire Athenian Empire]], and honored the rowers accordingly. The ''thetes'' also tended to be most favorable towards going to war, because being a galley rower was a better-paying and much more prestigious job than was available to them in peacetime.
201** The Carthaginian Navy rowers[[note]]sometimes free men from the poorest classes, by the [[{{UsefulNotes/PunicWars}} Third Punic War]] they resorted to slaves[[/note]] had living and training requirements similar to a modern athlete. No wonder their Navy was so feared in the Mediterranean.
202* Played straight in the Renaissance when the chief tactic was to mount as many cannon (no more than five) as could be fitted onto the bow, gain a positional advantage, and sweep the opposing deck with [[MoreDakka shot]] before boarding. This required less delicacy than ramming and the rowing methods of the time meant that the chief desire was having more [[WeHaveReserves reserves]].
203* The galley was obsolete as a deep-water warship already in the end of 16th century, as sailing ships could carry far more cannons. The main reason why they were built after that date was primarily penal: they had important roles in interior seas like the Mediterranean and Baltic due to weaker winds and tides meaning maneuver by muscle was far more important and could occasionally get an advantage over pure sailing ships. However, their actual reason for existence was to be floating prisons and [[PrisonersWork forced labour institutions]].
204* Averted in the Baltic Sea. Galleys did see some use until the 19th century in shallow, coastal waters, such as in the Baltic archipelagoes during the wars between Sweden and Russia, but they were ''not'' manned by slaves. Both the Swedes and the Russians used [[{{Conscription}} conscripts]] as rowers. They had their weapons (usually short musket and sabre) aside their thwarts and they acted as marines once boarding action or littoral invasion was commenced. Also, both nations simply didn't practice slavery, and use of forced labor like convicts was deemed impractical for the reasons depicted above. While Russia had a serfdom at that time, which was sometimes hardly distinguishable from slavery, enlistment ''always'' immediately freed a person, and a military service was seen as a prestigious, if taxing occupation.
205** Galley rowers do not bear the stigma of slaves either in Russia, Sweden or Finland even today. They have traditionally seen as marine soldiers. The main building of Finnish Naval Warfare Academy in Helsinki, Finland, is affectionately known as ''Kivikaleeri'' (Stone Galley).
206* This played a decisive role in the UsefulNotes/BattleOfLepanto, where most rowers on both the Ottoman and Holy League fleets were either slaves (Ottomans) or convicts (League except for Venice, that still used one man per row and thus relied on skilled volunteers): when the Ottomans, in a last ditch effort to revert the course of the battle, attacked and boarded the League flagship (a Spanish ship, thus crewed by convicts) and were about to win the League admiral don Juan of Austria ordered to free the rowers on his and the surrounding ships to use as reinforcements, thus getting the upper hand, and when the Ottoman admiral Sufi Ali Pasha did the same [[DidntThinkThisThrough the Christian slaves he had as rowers promptly rebelled]].
207[[/folder]]

Top