Marcus Licinius Crassus was born 105 BC and died 53 BC. Apparently he was quite charming, but unsurpassed were his
greed and his
ambition. He was in fact obscenely rich, even for Roman means, and this is most of what the world remembers of him :) Even his nickname was
Dives - "the rich guy". There is one biography by
Plutarch, but it is quite sketchy in parts.
His grandfather Lucius Licinius Crassus and his father Publius Licinius Crassus had also been moderately successful as consules. As a young man he had to hide from
Marius and
Cinna in Spain, then became a military commander under
Sulla.
After their victory in the
civil war, he was extremely successful as real estate dealer, specialized in the ex-property of the victims of
proscription. He also used to buy burning houses for cheap and then have the fire put out by his private firefighters. Who are rumored to have started some fires themselves - neat trick! But of course he had other businesses as well, slave trade, silver mines, money lending ...
Crassus made a name for himself by putting down the slave rebellion under
Spartacus in 71 BC. He was the one responsible for the crucification of 6000 survivors of Spartacus' army (which had numbered up to 100000 men) along the
Via Appia. He had under his command a promising young tribune called
Julius Caesar, whose time was still to come. The other strong man of the time was
Gnaeus Pompeius - he was a brilliant military commander, definitely superior to Crassus, and from the beginning the two were rivals. It infuriated Crassus no end that he only got an
ovation for putting an end to Spartacus, while Pompey got a full-fledged
triumph ceremony for his campaign in Spain.
Pompey and
Crassus and were consules together in 70 BC. Crassus got to be
censor in 65 BC, and worked on expanding his influence in
Rome, while Pompey was fighting pirates and king
Mithridates. Rumor also had him involved in the conspiracy of
Catalina, but on the other hand, he was also involved in tipping off
Cicero to foil it.
The deeply indebted
Julius Caesar and the money-man Crassus were made for one another, and the three of them formed an uneasy and unconstitutional (as far as there was a constitution) alliance that became known as the
first triumvirate in 60 BC. However, Crassus' constant envy of Pompey's military glory led to tensions while Caesar was busy with his legendary conquest of
Gaul. Still, Caesar got the two to renew their deal in 56 BC. With a lot of violence and bribery, Crassus and Pompey were elected consules again in 55 BC. Crassus then became proconsul of
Syria in 54 BC.
Already 60 and still seeking more military glory (and to plunder the fabulous riches of the Middle East), he started a war with the
Parthians, against the will of the
Senate. He did quite well initially, but an Arab chief named Ariamnes betrayed him and led his army of 7 legions into an ambush. After a bloody battle, heavy casualties and the death of his son in a sortie, he managed to retreat to a town called
Carrhae. The Parthian general Serena offered negotiations, and Crassus, despite his distrust forced to go there by his own men, was again betrayed and beheaded. All in all one of Rome's greatest
military defeats!
Crassus head and hand were then sent to
Armenia and used as props in a theater performance of
Euripides'
Bacchae for the Parthian king
Orodes.
Cassius Dio passed on the legend that the king also poured melted gold into Crassus' mouth, saying as he did so, "Now sate thyself with the metal of which thou wert so greedy when alive."
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