had ordered them to be publicly exposed; and among
men of the second and third rank in particular death
reaped a fearful harvest. In addition to those
who were placed on the list for their services in
or on behalf of the revolutionary army with little
discrimination, sometimes on account of money advanced
to one of its officers or on account of relations of
hospitality formed with such an one, the retaliation
fell specially on those capitalists who had sat in
judgment on the senators and had speculated in Marian
confiscations—the “hoarders”;
about 1600 of the equites, as they were called,(6)
were inscribed on the proscription-list. In
like manner the professional accusers, the worst scourge
of the nobility, who made it their trade to bring
men of the senatorial order before the equestrian
courts, had now to suffer for it—“how
comes it to pass,” an advocate soon after asked,
“that they have left to us the courts, when
they were putting to death the accusers and judges?”
The most savage and disgraceful passions raged without
restraint for many months throughout Italy. In
the capital a Celtic band was primarily charged with
the executions, and Sullan soldiers and subaltern
officers traversed for the same purpose the different
districts of Italy; but every volunteer was also welcome,
and the rabble high and low pressed forward not only
to earn the rewards of murder, but also to gratify
their own vindictive or covetous dispositions under
the mantle of political prosecution. It sometimes
happened that the assassination did not follow, but
preceded, the placing of the name on the list of the
proscribed. One example shows the way in which
these executions took place. At Larinum, a town
of new burgesses and favourable to Marian views, one
Statius Albius Oppianicus, who had fled to Sulla’s
headquarters to avoid a charge of murder, made his
appearance after the victory as commissioner of the
regent, deposed the magistrates of the town, installed
himself and his friends in their room, and caused
the person who had threatened to accuse him, along
with his nearest relatives and friends, to be outlawed
and killed. Countless persons—including
not a few decided adherents of the oligarchy—thus
fell as the victims of private hostility or of their
own riches: the fearful confusion, and the culpable
indulgence which Sulla displayed in this as in every
instance towards those more closely connected with
him, prevented any punishment even of the ordinary
crimes that were perpetrated amidst the disorder.
Confiscations
The confiscated property was dealt with in a similar way. Sulla from political considerations sought to induce the respectable burgesses to take part in its purchase; a great portion of them, moreover, voluntarily pressed forward, and none more zealously than the young Marcus Crassus. Under the existing circumstances the utmost depreciation was inevitable; indeed, to some extent it was the necessary result of the Roman