Apega of Nabis

The Apega of Nabis, also known as the Iron Apega, was described by Polybius[1] as an ancient torture device similar to the iron maiden. It was invented by Nabis, a king who ruled Sparta as a tyrant from 207 to 192 BC.

An ancient Greek coin with a portrait of Nabis, king of Sparta and inventor of the Iron Apega.

Device description

The mechanical Apega, according to Polybius, was a machine, a well-executed replica or duplicate of the real wife of Nabis, and was used by Nabis to collect money from unwilling Spartan citizens. Those who did not give money were sent to deal with his wife. This was the replica, dressed in expensive clothing, with arms outstretched. When the drunken visitors hugged her, this triggered the arms to close. The device's arms, hands, and breasts were covered with iron nails, and the arms were capable of crushing the body of its victim. Nabis would control the machine through hidden devices until the victim agreed to pay a tribute or to the point of death.

The automaton, Apega, was one of the advancements in technology of the ancient Greco-Roman world used as implements of torture, along with other torture devices such as the cross, the wheel, and the brazen bull of Phalaris.[2]

Origins

Nabis, tyrant of Sparta, reportedly created the device in the image of his own wife, Apega (Ancient Greek: Ἀπήγα; also known as Ἀγαπήνα or Ἀπία), a tyrant herself who helped in furthering her husband's ambitions. The Greek historian, Polybius (203–120 BC, author of The Histories), further described the real Queen Apega as a female ruler who ruled Sparta like a Hellenistic queen, similar to Cleopatra and Arsinoe, because she "received men at court alongside her husband." Polybius also mentioned that she was a woman who knew how to dishonor men by humiliating women belonging to the families of male citizens. Both Nabis and Apega brought suffering and violence to their subjects by stealing their wealth and valuables.[3]

The historical Apega was described as a Spartan woman who had exceeded her husband's viciousness and wielded power to satisfy her own greed.[3] The Iron Apega was further described as the personification of the evilness and deceitfulness of the real Apega, and was said to be equal to Pandora, the first woman in Greek mythology.[3]

Literary references

In Arthur Machen's episodic horror novella The Three Impostors (1895), one story centers on an execution device named the "Iron Maid" which in its outstretched arms bears a great resemblance to the Iron Apega.[4] Nabis and Apega are mentioned in Adrienne Mayor’s “Gods and Robots” [5]

gollark: The Minecraft one.
gollark: It would be cool if the server had some mod or other to bridge its chat to a Discord channel here.
gollark: It should work if you don't go around building loads of stuff.
gollark: Though your CPU is worse than that, I guess.
gollark: I ran a server with maybe 50 mods off a Xeon E3-1240 and 4GB of RAM a while ago, and that mostly worked.

References

  1. Polybius, 13.7. The thrust of Polybius' anecdote is the extent to which the tyrannical cruelty of Nabis would drive him. Neither F. W. Walbank (A Historical Commentary on Polybius, vol. II, 1967:420f) nor P.A. Cartledge and A.J.S. Spawforth, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta: A Tale of Two Cities London 1989:72) believe this story. Sarah B. Pomeroy, Spartan Women 2002:90, credits it because of other documented Hellenistic automata; Evan T. Sage, "An ancient robotette", Classical Journal, 30.5 (February 1935: 299–300) withholds judgement
  2. Clements, Barbara (University Communications staff writer), “Apega of Nabis.” one of the “Machines of Malice” on a Discovery Channel program aired on September 23, 2008 Archived July 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Professor (Eric Nelson) Appears On Discovery Channel This Week, Campus Voice, Pacific Lutheran University, New.PLU.edu, Sept 19, 2008
  3. Sarah B. Pomeroy (2002). "The Last Reformers: Apega and Nabis and Chaeron". Spartan Women. Oxford University Press US. pp. 89–90. ISBN 9780195130676.
  4. Arthur Machen (1895). The Three Impostors. London: John Lane. Retrieved 2018-07-15.
  5. Mayor, Adrienne (2018). Gods and Robots: Myths, Machines, and Ancient Dreams of Technology. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691192685.
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