The battle lasted hours. Spartacus cut a path directly toward Crassus. He killed two centurions and a cornicen (horn blower). Historical records say he wounded Crassus’s thigh with a thrown spear. But it wasn't enough.
While Spartacus provided the fire and the inspiration, Sura provided the discipline. He was the one who organized the baggage trains, managed the captured Roman equipment, and likely drafted the original plan to escape over the Alps back to Thrace and Gaul. The exact details of Sura’s death are lost to time, but the consensus is that he fell during a brutal skirmish in Lucania (modern-day Basilicata) in late 72 BCE or early 71 BCE, just before Crassus trapped the rebels. spartacus sura death
According to later Roman embellishments (and a few Greek accounts), Spartacus paused the entire army’s movement to perform a gladiatorial funeral. He draped Sura’s body in a captured Roman general’s paludamentum (cloak) and burned it on a pyre made of broken legionary shields. This is where the narrative changes. The battle lasted hours