Page 8 - Cause & Effect: Ancient Rome
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“Sulla now devoted         to Rome in 83 BCE. For a second time,
             himself entirely to        he led his soldiers against the capital and
             the work of butchery.      provoked outrage among the citizenry.
             The city was fi lled       First, he announced that he had made
             with murder.” 23           himself Rome’s dictator, which he claimed

             — First-century-CE Greek   gave him the authority to do whatever he
               biographer Plutarch      deemed necessary to restore order.  Th  en
                                        he sent hundreds of his soldiers out to
              kill Marius’s supporters, along with their families. In Plutarch’s words,
              “Sulla now devoted himself entirely to the work of butchery. Th  e city
              was fi lled with murder and there was no counting the executions or
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              setting a limit to them.”

              Pompey Versus Crassus

              Luckily for the Roman people, Sulla’s brutal reign of terror was rela-
              tively brief, as he died in 78 BCE. For a while, political and social af-
              fairs in the capital seemed to return to normal. Th  is was largely an illu-
              sion, however, because the damage the violent confrontation between
              Marius and Sulla had done to Roman politics and military culture
              was permanent. Other conceited, ruthless men possessing wealth and
              military backing now knew it was possible to manipulate the govern-
              ment to their own ends.
                 Th  e next military strongman who ended up following this omi-
              nous path was one of the Republic’s greatest national heroes—Gnaeus
              Pompeius Magnus, widely known as Pompey. Born in 106 BCE, he
              gained fame in his twenties and thirties as a bold and brilliant military
              leader, and by the mid-70s BCE Romans everywhere admired him.
                 Th  ere was at least one exception to that claim, however. Another
              Roman notable, a rich businessman named Marcus Crassus, fancied
              himself becoming a renowned military leader like Pompey. Extremely
              vain, Crassus became increasingly jealous of Pompey’s growing repu-
              tation.
                 Fortunately for Crassus, an unexpected opportunity arose that
              gave him the chance to prove himself as a soldier. In 73 BCE sev-
              eral slaves from a training school for gladiators escaped. Led by one
              of their number—a talented fi ghter and leader named Spartacus—


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