Bulla Felix was a legendary Italian bandit leader active around 205–207 AD,[1] during the reign of the Roman emperor Septimius Severus. He gathered a band of over 600 men, among them runaway slaves and imperial freedmen, and eluded capture for more than two years despite pursuit by a force of Roman soldiers under the command of the emperor himself.[2]
The story of Bulla Felix is told by the Greek historian and Roman senator Cassius Dio. Dio's story has several similarities to later legends of "good" bandits: Bulla "combined the attributes of Zorro and the Scarlet Pimpernel (he could never be caught) with a Robin Hood-like concern for social justice."[3] Dio describes him as "never really seen when seen, never found when found, never caught when caught."[4] The Latin name Bulla Felix means roughly "Lucky Charm", and he is likely to be a composite or historical fiction.[5]