No, the roman response to slavery violence would not be similar to that of slave owners in the American south before the civil war.
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What is slavery?</h3>
Both the state and the situation of being a slave, who is prohibited from leaving their employer and is viewed as the enslaver's property, are referred to as slavery and enslavement, respectively. In most cases of slavery, the enslaved individual is forced to do some kind of work and has their location or place of residence determined by the enslaver. Other types of slavery were established along demographic lines such as race. Many historical occurrences of enslavement occurred when the slaves disobeyed the law, were indebted, or suffered a military defeat. A person may be held in servitude for all of time, or for a specific amount of time, after which they would be freed.
Romans would not have responded the same way because they often considered their slaves to be "white" and human beings throughout the Roman Empire. The majority of slaves in the North American Colonies were black or Indian, and no white people were held as property. Slaves were also often not thought of as having the same rights as free people or being completely human.
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