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Spartacus - Explained by the Billy Meier Contacts
Explained by the Billy Meier Contacts:
Mysteries, Myths, Legends, Conspiracy Theories, Historical Inaccuracies & More
compiled by David Chance
Spartacus
wikipedia/wiki/Spartacus
Important Note: For accuracy, please consult the Contact Report links for date, context,
and the German language originals. Numerous entries in this document have already
been superseded by corrected translations online.
Contact Report 230
Billy:
Well, then the following: Spartacus was a warrior for the oppressed. Despite all ancient reports,
his origin is still unknown today, as is his death. It is said that he died in the Battle of the River in
71 B.C., but his body was never found. The Romans had united all their military legions in this
battle and thereby defeated the army of Spartacus. As punishment for the slave revolt the
victors then crucified more than 6,000 defeated slaves, namely along the Via Appia from Capua
to Rome. In Capua too was the gladiator school, run by a certain Gnaeus Lentulus Batiatus,
where Spartacus also learned his gladiator craft, before it came to an uprising in the spring of 73
B.C. by a few more than 200 gladiators in Capua when they stormed the prison kitchen – armed
with all sorts of things they could just get their hands on. So the prison itself became the arena. I
know some things about Spartacus, but if you know more about it, then please let me hear.
Quetzal:
…
The term gladiator is based on the main combat tool of gladiators, the sword, which was
called Gladius in Latin language.
Gladiators were not amateurs, but fiercely trained fighters.
A gladiator training center was in Capua, and being a gladiator meant practicing a veritable
craft to perfection as any other craft was.
The gladiators were true masters of the art of f