troops against the gangs of runaway herdsmen and rural
slaves. The plantation-system, spreading more
and more among the Italian speculators had infinitely
increased the dangerous evil: in the time of
the Gracchan and Marian crises and in close connection
with them servile revolts had taken place at numerous
points of the Roman empire, and in Sicily had even
grown into two bloody wars (619-622 and 652-654;(24)).
But the ten years of the rule of the restoration
after Sulla’s death formed the golden age both
for the buccaneers at sea and for bands of a similar
character on land, above all in the Italian peninsula,
which had hitherto been comparatively well regulated.
The land could hardly be said any longer to enjoy
peace. In the capital and the less populous districts
of Italy robberies were of everyday occurrence, murders
were frequent. A special decree of the people
was issued—perhaps at this epoch—
against kidnapping of foreign slaves and of free men;
a special summary action was about this time introduced
against violent deprivation of landed property.
These crimes could not but appear specially dangerous,
because, while they were usually perpetrated by the
proletariate, the upper class were to a great extent
also concerned in them as moral originators and partakers
in the gain. The abduction of men and of estates
was very frequently suggested by the overseers of
the large estates and carried out by the gangs of
slaves, frequently armed, that were collected there:
and many a man even of high respectability did not
disdain what one of his officious slave-overseers
thus acquired for him as Mephistopheles acquired for
Faust the lime trees of Philemon. The state of
things is shown by the aggravated punishment for outrages
on property committed by armed bands, which was introduced
by one of the better Optimates, Marcus Lucullus, as
presiding over the administration of justice in the
capital about the year 676,(25) with the express object
of inducing the proprietors of large bands of slaves
to exercise a more strict superintendence over them
and thereby avoid the penalty of seeing them judicially
condemned. Where pillage and murder were thus
carried on by order of the world of quality, it was
natural for these masses of slaves and proletarians
to prosecute the same business on their own account;
a spark was sufficient to set fire to so inflammable
materials, and to convert the proletariate into an
insurrectionary army. An occasion was soon found.
Outbreak of the Gladiatorial War in Italy
Spartacus
The gladiatorial games, which now held the first rank among the popular amusements in Italy, had led to the institution of numerous establishments, more especially in and around Capua, designed partly for the custody, partly for the training of those slaves who were destined to kill or be killed for the amusement of the sovereign multitude. These were naturally in great part brave men captured in war, who had not forgotten that