the soldiers, vehemently as they had demanded battle
a little before, fought ill; Varinius was completely
vanquished; his horse and the insignia of his official
dignity fell with the Roman camp itself into the enemy’s
hand. The south-Italian slaves, especially the
brave half-savage herdsmen, flocked in crowds to the
banner of the deliverers who had so unexpectedly appeared;
according to the most moderate estimates the number
of armed insurgents rose to 40,000 men. Campania,
just evacuated, was speedily reoccupied, and the Roman
corps which was left behind there under Gaius Thoranius,
the quaestor of Varinius, was broken and destroyed.
In the whole south and south-west of Italy the open
country was in the hands of the victorious bandit-chiefs;
even considerable towns, such as Consentia in the Bruttian
country, Thurii and Metapontum in Lucania, Nola and
Nuceria in Campania, were stormed by them, and suffered
all the atrocities which victorious barbarians could
inflict on defenceless civilized men, and unshackled
slaves on their former masters. That a conflict
like this should be altogether abnormal and more a
massacre than a war, was unhappily a matter of course:
the masters duly crucified every captured slave; the
slaves naturally killed their prisoners also, or with
still more sarcastic retaliation even compelled their
Roman captives to slaughter each other in gladiatorial
sport; as was subsequently done with three hundred
of them at the obsequies of a robber-captain who had
fallen in combat.
Great Victories of Spartacus
In Rome people were with reason apprehensive as to
the destructive conflagration which was daily spreading.
It was resolved next year (682) to send both consuls
against the formidable leaders of the gang.
The praetor Quintus Arrius, a lieutenant of the consul
Lucius Gellius, actually succeeded in seizing and destroying
at Mount Garganus in Apulia the Celtic band, which
under Crixus had separated from the mass of the robber-army
and was levying contributions at its own hand.
But Spartacus achieved all the more brilliant victories
in the Apennines and in northern Italy, where first
the consul Gnaeus Lentulus who had thought to surround
and capture the robbers, then his colleague Gellius
and the so recently victorious praetor Arrius, and
lastly at Mutina the governor of Cisalpine Gaul Gaius
Cassius (consul 681) and the praetor Gnaeus Manlius,
one after another succumbed to his blows. The
scarcely-armed gangs of slaves were the terror of
the legions; the series of defeats recalled the first
years of the Hannibalic war.
Internal Dissension among the Insurgents