PVarro Posted August 14, 2006 Report Share Posted August 14, 2006 Recently, I Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Primus Pilus Posted August 14, 2006 Report Share Posted August 14, 2006 Plutarch sums it up rather concisely, though he doesn't necessarily suggest that Crassus actually started any fires. Plutarch Life of Crassus From Chapter 2 For when Sulla took the city and sold the property of those whom he had put to death, considering it and calling it spoil of war, and wishing to defile with his crime as many and as influential men as he could, Crassus was never tired of accepting or of buying it. And besides this, observing how natural and familiar at Rome were such fatalities as the conflagration and collapse of buildings, owing to their being too massive and close together, he proceeded to buy slaves who were architects and builders. Then, when he had over five hundred of these, he would buy houses that were afire, and houses which adjoined those that were afire, and these their owners would let go at a trifling price owing to their fear and uncertainty. In this way the largest part of Rome came into his possession. But though he owned so many artisans, he built no house for himself other than the one in which he lived; indeed, he used to say that men who were fond of building were their own undoers, and needed no other foes. And though he owned numberless silver mines, and highly valuable tracts of land with the labourers upon them, nevertheless one might regard all this as nothing compared with the value of his slaves; so many and so capable were the slaves he possessed, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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