Image

Spartacus and the Slave War 73-71 BC: A Gladiator Rebels against Rome (Campaign)

Author(s)Nic Fields

PublisherOsprey Publishing

Year2009

LanguageEnglish

Extensionpdf

Size40 MB

IPFS CIDbafykbzacea3eya4rzs4yxanpvysmzz3i355ny5pfqruijflpsiuwn2b5y7kvu

Introduction

In the year 73 BC, the Thracian Spartacus broke out of the gladiatorial training school at Capua in Campainia. A charismatic leader, Spartacus formed an army of runaway slaves and people with little to lose, and defeated the Roman troops under the praetor C. Claudius Glaber. With this minor victory, Spartacus' army swelled to 70,000 and rampaged throughout Campania assaulting a number of cities and defeating two consular armies. Terrified lest the revolt spread across the republic, the government assigned M. Licinius Crassus the task of crushing the revolt. Crassus' first attempt to capture Spartacus failed, and the Roman senate called upon Pompey to help him. Together, they cornered Spartacus and brought him to battle near the source of the river Silarus. During the battle, Spartacus was killed and his army defeated. Crassus crucified 6,000 prisoners as an example to others who might think of revolt. Written by Nic Fields and illustrated by Steven Noon, this campaign title brings to life the story of Rome's most famous revolt and the ex-gladiator who led it.

Minter

0x81f14569622321527ac819e4f615ad893e56a9b5
形状结合备份 3

Thanks To

Copied !