The Gracchi Marius and Sulla eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 234 pages of information about The Gracchi Marius and Sulla.

The Gracchi Marius and Sulla eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 234 pages of information about The Gracchi Marius and Sulla.
law, fled to the temple of Vesta, and was there slain.  The corpses of those who had been killed were thrown into the Tiber, and Marius had the ferocious satisfaction of feeling that his enemies would not be able to exult over his own imminent ruin. [Sidenote:  Sulla comes to Rome.] Sulla, leaving Ofella to blockade Praeneste, hastened to Rome, but there was no one on whom to take vengeance, for his foes had fled.  He confiscated their property, and tried to quiet apprehensions by telling the people that he would soon re-establish the State.  But he could not stay long in the city, for matters looked threatening in the north.

[Sidenote:  Metellus and Carbo in the north.] In this quarter the contest was more stubborn, because the newly enfranchised towns were stronger partisans of Marius.  Metellus had fought a battle on the Aesis, the frontier river of Picenum, against Carrinas, one of Carbo’s lieutenants, and after a hard fight had beaten him and occupied the adjacent country.  This brought Carbo against him with a superior army, and Metellus could do nothing till the news of Sacriportus frightened Carbo into retreating to Ariminum, that he might secure his communications and get supplies from the rich valley of the Po.  Metellus immediately resumed the offensive.  He defeated in person one division of Carbo, five of whose cohorts deserted in the battle.  His lieutenant, Pompeius, defeated Censorinus at Sena and sacked the town.  Pompeius is also said to have crossed the Po and taken Mediolanum (Milan), where his soldiers massacred the senate.  Metellus, meanwhile, had gone by sea along the east coast north of Ariminum, and had thus cut off Carbo’s communications with the valley of the Po.  This drove Carbo from his position, and he marched into Etruria, where he fought a battle near Clusium with Sulla, who had just arrived from Rome.  In a cavalry fight near the Clanis, 270 of Carbo’s Spanish horse went over to Sulla, and Carbo killed the rest.  There was another fight at Saturnia, on the Albegna, and there, too, Sulla was victorious. [Sidenote:  Indecisive combats.] He was less fortunate in a general engagement near Clusium, which after a whole day’s fighting ended indecisively.  Carbo was, however, now reduced to great straits.  Carrinas was defeated by Pompeius and Crassus near Spoletum, and retired into the town.  Carbo sent a detachment to his aid; but it was cut to pieces by an ambuscade laid by Sulla.  Bad news, too, reached him from the south, where Marius was beginning to starve in Praeneste. [Sidenote:  Carbo attempts to relieve Praeneste.] He sent a strong force of eight legions to raise the siege; but Pompeius waylaid and routed them, and surrounded their officer who had retreated to a hill.  But the latter, leaving his fires alight, marched off by night, and returned to Carbo with only seven cohorts; for his troops had mutinied, one legion going off to Ariminum and many men dispersing to their homes. [Sidenote:  A second attempt also fails.] A second

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The Gracchi Marius and Sulla from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.