Ownership of land in Sicily had seen …

Years: 135BCE - 135BCE

Ownership of land in Sicily had seen great changes following the final expulsion of the Carthaginians during the Second Punic War, after which speculators from Italy had rushed into the island and bought up large tracts of land at a low price, or had become the occupiers of estates which had belonged to Sicilians of the Carthaginian party and had been forfeited to Rome after the execution or flight of their owners.

The Sicilians of the Roman party have also become rich out of the distress of their countrymen.

Sicily’s large agricultural estates, suppliers of most of the grain that feeds Rome, receive the greater part of the cheap slave labor captured by victorious Roman armies.

An overabundance of slaves had caused them to be ill-fed by their masters, and they soon began to provide for themselves by robbery.

The poorer Sicilians are the sufferers.

Several decades of increasing tension finally break out into war, when some seventy thousand of these captives, brutally used by their owners, rise against their owners in 135 in a revolt led by a Syrian named Eunus, claiming to be a prophet, and Cleon, a Cilician who becomes Eunus's military commander.

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