Book 24. (1 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
26
190
Out of the slave Wars grew much of the merchant law pertaining to slaves.
Out of the Slave Wars grew much of the merchant law pertaining to slaves.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 26, Sentence #190)
Book 24. (7 results) Vagabonds of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
26
187
She was referring to a series of wars, loosely referred to as the slave Wars, which occurred amongst various cities in the middle latitudes of Gor, off and on, over a period of approximately a generation.
26
188
They had occurred long before my coming to Gor.
26
189
Although large-scale slaving was involved in these wars, and was doubtless a sufficient condition for them, hence the name, other considerations, as would be expected, were often involved, as well, such as the levying of tribute and the control of trade routes.
26
190
Out of the slave Wars grew much of the merchant law pertaining to slaves.
26
191
Too, out of them grew some of the criteria for the standardization of the female slave as a commodity, for example, how, in virtue of her scarcity, her training, and such, she is to be figured as an item of tribute, for example, in terms of other domestic animals, given their current market values in the area, and so on, such as verr and tarsks.
26
192
For example, she might, at a given time, be worth five verr or three tarsks, but she might be worth only a fifth of a sleen or a tenth of a tarn.
26
193
Obtaining women is one of the major reasons Goreans fight.
She was referring to a series of wars, loosely referred to as the slave Wars, which occurred amongst various cities in the middle latitudes of Gor, off and on, over a period of approximately a generation.
They had occurred long before my coming to Gor.
Although large-scale slaving was involved in these wars, and was doubtless a sufficient condition for them, hence the name, other considerations, as would be expected, were often involved, as well, such as the levying of tribute and the control of trade routes.
Out of the slave Wars grew much of the merchant law pertaining to slaves.
Too, out of them grew some of the criteria for the standardization of the female slave as a commodity, for example, how, in virtue of her scarcity, her training, and such, she is to be figured as an item of tribute, for example, in terms of other domestic animals, given their current market values in the area, and so on, such as verr and tarsks.
For example, she might, at a given time, be worth five verr or three tarsks, but she might be worth only a fifth of a sleen or a tenth of a tarn.
Obtaining women is one of the major reasons Goreans fight.
- (Vagabonds of Gor, Chapter 26)