In 103 BC the Senate sent the praetor
Lucius Licinius Lucullus, who had just put down a revolt in Campania (
Vettian Revolt), to quell the rebellion. Lucullus, at the head of a 17,000 strong Roman and allied army, landed in western Sicily and marched on the rebel stronghold of
Triocala.
Battle of Scirthaea When Salvius Tryphon, the Slave King, heard of Lucullus‘ arrival he wanted to hold out against the Romans inside Triocala. His general Athenion, however, persuaded him not to hide but instead face the Romans in open battle. Marching to meet Lucullus, the rebels encamped at Scirthaea, twelve miles distant from the Roman camp and, the next day, the two sides lined up for battle. According to
Diodorus, Tryphon's host numbered around 40,000. Lucullus did this to render the task harder for his successor, Gaius Servilius the Augur; Lucullus intended, by ensuring the failure of his successor, to prove his own innocence from any alleged incompetence.
Other According to
Deipnosophistae (early 3rd-century AD), referring to
Posidonius, making mention of large slave revolt happened in
Mines of Laurion around the times of the second servile war in Sicily. ==Athenion==