Crassus had been rising steadily up the …

Years: 71BCE - 71BCE

Crassus had been rising steadily up the cursus honorum, the sequence of offices held by Roman citizens seeking political power, when ordinary Roman politics were interrupted by two events—the Third Mithridatic War and the Third Servile War.

In response to the first threat, Rome's best general, Lucius Licinius Lucullus (consul in 74 BCE), had been sent to defeat Mithridates, followed shortly by his brother Varro Lucullus (consul in 73 BCE).

Meanwhile, Pompey is fighting in Hispania against Quintus Sertorius, the last effective Marian general, without notable advantage, succeeding only when Sertorius was assassinated by one of his own commanders.

The Senate had not initially taken the slave rebellion seriously, until it became clear that Rome itself was under threat.

After several legions have been defeated and their commanders killed in battle or taken prisoner, Crassus offers to equip, train, and lead new troops, at his own expense.

The Senate, now alarmed at the apparently unstoppable rebellion occurring within Italy, gives the task of putting down the rebellion to Crassus.

Crassus is given a praetorship, and assigned six new legions in addition to the two formerly consular legions of Gellius and Lentulus, giving him an army of some forty thousand to fifty thousand trained Roman soldiers.Crassus treats his legions with harsh, even brutal, discipline, reviving the punishment of unit decimation within his army.

Appian is uncertain whether he decimated the two consular legions for cowardice when he was appointed their commander, or whether he had his entire army decimated for a later defeat (an event in which up to four thouand legionaries would have been executed).

Plutarch only mentions the decimation of fifty legionaries of one cohort as punishment after Mummius' defeat in the first confrontation between Crassus and Spartacus.

Regardless of what actually occurred, Crassus' treatment of his legions proved that "he was more dangerous to them than the enemy", and spurs them on to victory rather than running the risk of displeasing their commander.

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