carried out with the same artful audacity as formerly
his expedition to Bocchus, relieved the hard-pressed
Aesernians for a moment; nevertheless they were after
an obstinate resistance compelled by the extremity
of famine to capitulate towards the end of the year.
In Lucania too Publius Crassus was defeated by Marcus
Lamponius, and compelled to shut himself up in Grumentum,
which fell after a long and obstinate siege.
With these exceptions, they had been obliged to leave
Apulia and the southern districts totally to themselves.
The insurrection spread; when Mutilus advanced into
Campania at the head of the Samnite army, the citizens
of Nola surrendered to him their city and delivered
up the Roman garrison, whose commander was executed
by the orders of Mutilus, while the men were distributed
through the victorious army. With the single
exception of Nuceria, which adhered firmly to Rome,
all Campania as far as Vesuvius was lost to the Romans;
Salernum, Stabiae, Pompeii, Herculaneum declared for
the insurgents; Mutilus was able to advance into the
region to the north of Vesuvius, and to besiege Acerrae
with his Samnito-Lucanian army. The Numidians,
who were in great numbers in Caesar’s army,
began to pass over in troops to Mutilus or rather to
Oxyntas, the son of Jugurtha, who on the surrender
of Venusia had fallen into the hands of the Samnites
and now appeared among their ranks in regal purple;
so that Caesar found himself compelled to send home
the whole African corps. Mutilus ventured even
to attack the Roman camp; but he was repulsed, and
the Samnites, who while retreating were assailed in
the rear by the Roman cavalry, left nearly 6000 dead
on the field of battle. It was the first notable
success which the Romans gained in this war; the army
proclaimed the general -imperator-, and the sunken
courage of the capital began to revive. It is
true that not long afterwards the victorious army
was attacked in crossing a river by Marius Egnatius,
and so emphatically defeated that it had to retreat
as far as Teanum and to be reorganized there; but the
exertions of the active consul succeeded in restoring
his army to a serviceable condition even before the
arrival of winter, and he reoccupied his old position
under the walls of Acerrae, which the Samnite main
army under Mutilus continued to besiege.
Combats with the Marsians
Defeat and Death of Lupus
At the same time operations had also begun in Central Italy, where the revolt of the Abruzzi and the region of the Fucine lake threatened the capital in dangerous proximity. An independent corps under Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo was sent into Picenum in order that, resting for support on Firmum and Falerio, it might threaten Asculum; but the main body of the Roman northern army took its position under the consul Lupus on the borders of the Latin and Marsian territories, where the Valerian and Salarian highways brought the enemy nearest to the capital; the rivulet Tolenus (Turano),