The battle between Gellius' legions and Crixus' …
Years: 72BCE - 72BCE
The battle between Gellius' legions and Crixus' men was, according to Appia, the beginning of a long and complex series of military maneuvers that almost resulted in the Spartacan forces directly assaulting the city of Rome itself.
After his victory over Crixus, Gellius moved northwards, following the main group of slaves under Spartacus who were heading for Cisalpine Gaul.
The army of Lentulus was deployed to bar Spartacus' path, and the consuls hoped to trap the rebel slaves between them.
Spartacus' army met Lentulus' legion, defeated it, turned, and destroyed Gellius' army, forcing the Roman legions to retreat in disarray.
Appian claims that Spartacus executed some three hundred captured Roman soldiers to avenge the death of Crixus, forcing them to fight each other to the death as gladiators.
Following this victory, Spartacus pushed northwards with his followers (some one hundred and twenty thousand) as fast as he could travel, "having burned all his useless material, killed all his prisoners, and butchered his pack-animals in order to expedite his movement".
The defeated consular armies fell back to Rome to regroup while Spartacus' followers moved northward.
The consuls again engage Spartacus somewhere in the Picenum region, and once again are defeated.
Appian claims that at this point Spartacus changed his intention of marching on Rome—implying this was Spartacus' goal following the confrontation in Picenum—as "he did not consider himself ready as yet for that kind of a fight, as his whole force was not suitably armed, for no city had joined him, but only slaves, deserters, and riffraff", and decides to withdraw into southern Italy once again.
Locations
People
Groups
Topics
- Classical antiquity
- Roman Age Optimum
- Roman Republic, Crisis of the
- Servile War, Third (Gladiators' War or Spartacus, Revolt of)
