Template:Short description
Template:About Template:Good article Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox person Gaius Marius ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; Template:Circa – 13 January 86 BC) was a Roman general and statesman. Victor of the Cimbric and Jugurthine wars, he held the office of consul an unprecedented seven times. Rising from a family of smallholders in a village called Ceraetae in the district of Arpinum, Marius acquired his initial military experience serving with Scipio Aemilianus at the Siege of Numantia in 134 BC. He won election as tribune of the plebs in 119 BC and passed a law limiting aristocratic interference in elections. Barely elected praetor in 115 BC, he next became the governor of Further Spain where he campaigned against bandits. On his return from Spain he married Julia, the aunt of Julius Caesar.
Marius attained his first consulship in 107 BC and became the commander of Roman forces in Numidia, where he brought an end to the Jugurthine War. By 105 BC Rome faced an invasion by the Cimbri and Teutones, and the comitia centuriata elected Marius consul for a second time to face this new threat. Marius was consul every year from 104 to 100 BC, and he defeated the Teutones at Aquae Sextiae and the Cimbri at Vercellae. However, Marius suffered political setbacks during his sixth consulship in 100 BC and afterwards entered a period of semi-retirement from public life.
The Republic fell into crisis with the outbreak of the Social War in 91 BC, in which Marius fought with limited success. He then became embroiled in a conflict with the Roman general Sulla which resulted in his exile to Africa in 88 BC. Marius returned to Italy from Carthage during the War of Octavius, seized Rome, and began a bloody reign of terror in the city which culminated in him being elected consul a seventh time and then dying within weeks of assuming this seventh consulship, in 86 BC.
In the 19th century,Template:Sfn Marius was credited with the so-called Marian reforms, including the shift from militia levies to a professional soldiery; improvements to the pilum (a kind of javelin); and changes to the logistical structure of the Roman army. Twenty-first-century historians generally view the notion as "a construct of modern scholarship."<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
LifeEdit
Early careerEdit
Marius was born in Cereatae Template:Circa, a small village near the town of Arpinum in south-east Latium.Template:Sfn<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb.</ref> The town had been conquered by the Romans in the late 4th century BC and was initially given Roman citizenship without voting rights (civitas sine suffragio). Only in 188 BC, thirty years before his birth, did the town receive full citizenship.Template:Sfn Although Plutarch claims that Marius's father was a labourer, this is almost certainly false since Marius had connections with the nobility in Rome, he ran for local office in Arpinum, and he had marriage relations with the local nobility in Arpinum, all of which when taken together indicate that he was born into a locally important family of equestrian status.Template:Sfnm<ref>See also Template:Harvnb, citing Vell. Pat., 2.11.1 (natus equestri loco). The emendation equestri for agresti, present in some older editions, is taken also in modern editions such as Template:Cite book.</ref> While many of the problems he faced during his early career in Rome show the difficulties that faced a "new man" (novus homo) in being accepted into the stratified upper echelons of Roman society, Marius – even as a young man – was not poor or even middle-class; he was most assuredly born into inherited wealth, gained most likely from large land holdings.Template:Sfn In fact, his family's resources were definitely large enough to support not just one member of the family in Roman politics, but two: Marius's younger brother, Marcus Marius,Template:Efn also entered Roman public life.Template:Sfn
In 134 BC, Marius joined the personal legion of Scipio Aemilianus as an officer for the expedition to Numantia.Template:Sfnm It is unclear whether or not Marius was already present and serving in Numantia with the previous commander when Aemilianus arrived.Template:Sfn While serving with the army at Numantia, his military aptitude brought him to the attention of Scipio Aemilianus. According to Plutarch, during a conversation after dinner, when the conversation turned to generals and someone asked Scipio Aemilianus where the Roman people would find a worthy successor to him, the younger Scipio gently tapped on Marius's shoulder, saying "Perhaps this is the man".<ref>Template:Harvnb; Template:Harvnb</ref>
It would seem that even at this early stage of his military career, Marius had ambitions for a political career in Rome. He was elected on the basis of his accomplishments, even though he was not known by sight to the electors, as one of the twenty-four special military tribunes. After election, he likely served Quintus Caecilius Metellus Balearicus on the Balearic Islands, helping him win a triumph.Template:Sfn Next, Marius possibly ran for the quaestorship after losing an election for local office in Arpinum. He may have stood for local office as a means of gaining support back home, and lost to a local competitor. It is possible, however, that Marius never ran for the quaestorship at all, jumping directly to plebeian tribune.Template:Sfn He likely participated in the major Roman victory at the Battle of the Isère River in 121 BC, which permanently cemented Roman control over southern Gaul.Template:Sfn
In 120 BC, Marius was returned as a plebeian tribune for the following year. He won with the support of the Metelli,Template:Sfn specifically Lucius Caecilius Metellus Dalmaticus.Template:Sfn While Plutarch says the Metelli were one of his family's hereditary patrons, this may be a latter-day exaggeration.Template:Sfn It was not uncommon for prospective consuls to campaign for their candidates for the tribunate and lower the possibility of opposition tribunes exercising their vetoes.Template:Sfn
Plutarch relates that against the wishes of his patrons, he pushed through a law that restricted the interference of the wealthy in elections.Template:Sfn In the 130s, voting by ballot had been introduced in elections for choosing magistrates, passing laws and deciding legal cases, replacing the earlier system of oral voting. The wealthy continued to try to influence the voting by inspecting ballots, and Marius passed a law narrowing the passages down which voters passed to cast their votes in order to prevent outsiders from harassing the electors or seeing who was voted for.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It is not clear, however, whether Plutarch's narrative history properly reflects how controversial this proposal in fact was; Cicero, writing during the Republic, describes this {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} as quite straightforward and uncontroversial.Template:Sfn Plutarch reports that he then alienated the plebs by vetoing a bill expanding the grain dole,Template:Sfn but it is more likely that Plutarch misinterpreted Marius as vetoing attempts to interfere in the existing grain provisions.Template:Sfn
Soon thereafter, in 117 BC, Marius stood for the aedileshipTemplate:Sfn and lost.Template:Sfn It seems clear that by this time, due to the enormous financial difficulties that any prospective aedile would have to shoulder, Marius had either amassed or was availed of significant financial resources.Template:Sfn This loss was at least in part due to the enmity of the Metelli.Template:Sfn In 116 BC he barely won election as praetor for the following year, coming in last,Template:Sfn and was promptly accused of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (electoral corruption).Template:Sfn Being accused of electoral corruption was common during the middle and late Republic and details of the trial are sketchy or apocryphal. Marius, however, was able to win acquittal on this charge,Template:Sfn and spent an uneventful year as praetor in Rome,Template:Sfn likely as either {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} or as president of the corruption court.Template:Sfn In 114 BC, Marius's imperium was prorogued and he was sent to govern the highly sought-after province of Further Spain (Template:Langx) pro consule,Template:Sfn where he engaged in some sort of minor military operation to clear brigands from untapped mining areas.Template:Sfn He likely governed his province for two years before returning to Rome late in 113 BC with his personal wealth greatly enlarged.Template:Sfnm
He received no triumph on his return, but he did marry Julia, the aunt of Julius Caesar.Template:Sfn The Julii Caesares were a patrician family, but at this period seem to have found it hard to advance beyond the praetorship into the consulship. The Julii had done so only once in the 2nd century, in 157 BC. The match was advantageous to both sides: Marius gained respectability by marrying into a patrician family and the Julii received a great injection of energy and money.Template:Sfn Sources are unclear on whether Marius joined the annual race of former praetors for the consulship, but it is likely that he failed to be elected at least once.Template:Sfn
Subordinate to MetellusEdit
The Jugurthine War started in 112 BC due to "Roman exasperation with the ambitions of Jugurtha",Template:Sfn a Numidian king who had killed his half-brothers, massacred Italians in his civil war against them, and bribed many prominent Romans to support him in the Senate.Template:Sfn After the start of hostilities, the first army sent to Numidia was apparently bribed to withdraw and the second army was defeated and forced to pass under the yoke in humiliation.Template:Sfn These debacles eroded trust in the ability of the aristocracy to adequately manage foreign affairs.Template:Sfn
While Marius had seemingly broken with the Caecilii Metelli during his time as tribune and praetor, the Metelli did not seem to hold this rupture against him so much as to pass over him for selection as legate in the opening phases of the Jugurthine War.Template:Sfn In 109 BC, likely to improve his chances for the consulship,Template:Sfn Marius joined then-consul Quintus Caecilius Metellus in his campaign against Jugurtha.Template:Sfn In Sallust's long account of Metellus's campaign, no other legates are mentioned, so Marius was probably Metellus's senior subordinate and right-hand man.Template:Sfn Metellus was using Marius's strong military experience, while Marius was strengthening his position to stand for the consulship.Template:Sfn
During the Battle of the Muthul, Marius's actions probably saved the army of Metellus from annihilation. Jugurtha had cut the Romans off from the River Muthul where they wanted to refill their water reserves. The Romans had to fight Jugurtha in the desert where the Numidian light cavalry had an advantage. The Numidian cavalry scattered the Romans into small detachments and soon had control of the battlefield. Each group of Romans was fighting for survival independently. At this point Marius re-organized a few detachments and led a column of 2,000 men through the Numidians to link up with Metellus. Together they led their men against the Numidian infantry who occupied a hill. After gaining control of the hill Marius and Metellus led their men against the rear of the Numidian cavalry. The Romans gained the initiative and the Numidians had no choice but to withdraw.Template:Sfn
Standing for the consulshipEdit
By 108 BC, Marius expressed his desire to stand for consul.Template:Sfn Metellus did not give Marius his blessing to return to Rome,Template:Sfn allegedly advising Marius to wait until Metellus's son was elected (who was at the time only twenty, signifying a campaign decades in the future). Undeterred, Marius began to campaign for the consulship.Template:Sfn Sallust claims that this was catalysed, in part, by a fortune-teller in Utica who "declared that a great and marvellous career awaited him; the seer accordingly advised him, trusting in the gods, to carry out what he had in mind and put his fortune to the test as often as possible, predicting that all his undertakings would have a happy issue".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Marius soon earned the respect of the troops by his conduct towards them, eating his meals with them and proving he was not afraid to share in any of their labours.Template:Sfn He also won over the Italian traders by claiming that he could capture Jugurtha in a few days with half of Metellus's troops.Template:Sfn Both groups wrote home in praise of him, suggesting that he could end the war quickly, unlike Metellus, who was pursuing a policy of methodically subduing the countryside.Template:Sfn
During the winter of 109 and 108 BC, a detachment of Roman soldiers serving as the garrison of Vaga was ambushed and cut down almost to a man. The garrison commander, one Titus Turpilius Silanus, a client of Metellus, escaped unharmed. Marius allegedly urged Metellus to sentence Silanus to death on charges of cowardice, but then turned on Metellus, arguing that the sentence was disproportionate and overly harsh.Template:Sfn Marius also sent letters back to Rome claiming that Metellus had become enamoured with the unlimited powers associated with his imperium.Template:Sfn Metellus, wary of an increasingly disgruntled and resentful subordinate, permitted Marius to return to Rome. According to Plutarch, he returned with barely enough time to make it back for the consular elections;Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn but according to Sallust, with enough time to effectively canvass for votes.Template:Sfn
With growing political pressure towards a quick victory over Jugurtha and equestrian hostility toward the senate's conduct of the war,Template:Sfn Marius was elected consul for 107 BC,Template:Sfn campaigning against Metellus's apparent lack of swift action against Jugurtha, with Lucius Cassius Longinus as his colleague.Template:Sfn The senate prorogued Metellus's command in Numidia,Template:Sfn thereby preventing Marius from assuming command. Marius got around this by inducing an ally of his, then-tribune Titus Manlius Mancinus, to have the concilium plebis override the Senate's decision and give him the command.Template:Sfnm Metellus refused to personally hand over command to Marius and returned to Rome. Upon his return, the senate voted Metellus a triumph and the agnomen Numidicus.Template:Sfn
Command in NumidiaEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Seeking troops to bolster the forces in Numidia and win his promised quick victory, Marius found it difficult to recruit from Rome's traditional source of manpower, property-holding men.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Except in emergencies, normal practice in the middle republic was only to allow property-owning citizens to enlist in the legions; this may have been related to Tiberius Gracchus's reforms which would have, by giving more people more land, made more men eligible to serve in the legions.Template:Sfn While the senate allowed Marius to conscript men normally, he preferred instead to request volunteers, especially among discharged veterans ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), with promises of victory and plunder. He also recruited volunteers from men without property, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}.Template:Sfn With more troops mustering in southern Italy, Marius sailed for Africa, leaving his cavalry in the hands of his newly elected quaestor, Lucius Cornelius Sulla.Template:Sfn
Marius found that ending the war was more difficult than he had previously boasted.Template:Sfn Jugurtha was fighting a guerrilla war, and it appeared that no strategy would work better than Metellus's strategy of denying Jugurtha local reinforcement and support.Template:Sfn Marius arrived comparatively late in 107 BC but still fought and won a battle near Cirta (modern Constantine, Algeria).Template:Sfn At the end of 107 he surprised Jugurtha by a dangerous desert march to Capsa in the far south where, after the town surrendered, he killed all the adult men, enslaved the remaining survivors, and razed the town, distributing the loot to his soldiers.Template:Sfn Keeping up the pressure, he drove Jugurtha's forces southwards and westwards into Mauretania. Marius had been supposedly unhappy at receiving the dissolute and libertine Lucius Cornelius Sulla as his quaestor, but Sulla proved a highly competent officer and was well liked by the men.Template:Sfn
Meanwhile, Jugurtha was trying to get his father-in-law king Bocchus of Mauretania to join him in the war against the Romans. In 106, Marius marched his army far to the west, capturing a fortress near the river Molochath. Unfortunately, this advance brought him near the dominions of Bocchus, finally provoking the Mauretanian into action; in the deserts just west of Serif, Marius was taken by surprise by a combined army of Numidians and Mauretanians under the command of the two enemy kings.Template:Sfn For once, Marius was unprepared for action and in the melee all he could do was form defensive circles.Template:Sfn The attack was pressed by Mauretanian and Gaetulian horsemen and for a time Marius and his main force found themselves besieged on a hill, while Sulla and his men were on the defensive on another hill nearby.Template:Sfn The Romans managed to hold off the enemy until evening and the Africans retired. The next morning at dawn the Romans surprised the Africans' insufficiently guarded camp and completely routed the Numidian–Mauretanian army.Template:Sfn Marius then marched east to winter quarters in Cirta. The African kings harried the retreat with light cavalry, but were beaten back by Sulla, whom Marius had put in command of the cavalry.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It was by now evident that Rome would not defeat Jugurtha's guerrilla tactics through military means. Therefore, Marius resumed negotiations with Bocchus, who, though he had joined in the fighting, had not yet declared war.Template:Sfn
Ultimately, Marius reached a deal with Bocchus whereby Sulla, who was friendly with members of Bocchus's court, would enter Bocchus's camp to receive Jugurtha as a hostage. In spite of the possibility of treachery on the Mauritanian's part, Sulla agreed; Jugurtha's remaining followers were massacred, and he himself was handed over in chains to Sulla by Bocchus.Template:Sfn In the aftermath, Bocchus annexed the western part of Jugurtha's kingdom and was recognised as an ally of Rome.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Jugurtha was thrown into an underground prison (the Tullianum) in Rome, and ultimately died after gracing Marius's triumph in 104 BC.Template:Sfn
Sulla and Marius, after the triumph, disputed who received credit for capturing Jugurtha. As Sulla was acting as Marius's subordinate, under Roman tradition, the credit was Marius's; Sulla and his noble allies, however, focused on Sulla's direct responsibility to discredit Marius's victory.Template:Sfn According to Plutarch, this was "the first seed" of their "incurable hatred".<ref>Template:Harvnb, citing Template:Harvnb.</ref>
Putative reforms to the militaryEdit
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Marius has, in modern scholarship starting from the 1840s in Germany,Template:Sfn repeatedly been attributed with broad reforms to the military during his consulships between 107 and 100 BC. The standard narrative is that after a series of manpower shortages,<ref>Archaeological evidence and grain accounting indicates there was no population decline in 2nd century Italy. Template:Cite book</ref> Marius received a dispensation to recruit volunteers from the poorest census class, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, for the war against Jugurtha in 107 BC.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn There is, however, very little evidence that Italy's population fell during the second century,Template:Sfn that any major reforms to the Roman army occurred in the second century, or that Marius was responsible; specialists now increasingly dismiss these "Marian reforms" as a "construct of modern scholarship".<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
The recruitment of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in 107, documented in Sallust,Template:Sfn seems to have been a one-time affair: the volunteers were discharged on their return from the war and Marius, upon assuming command against the Cimbri, took over command of a consular army in northern Italy levied in the traditional manner.Template:Sfnm There are no indications that open recruitment of volunteers changed the social composition of the legions and later texts indicate that the Romans continued to raise most of their armies by conscription.<ref>Template:Harvnb Template:Harvnb</ref> The armies of the late Republic still were predominantly drawn from rural populations.Template:Sfn The narrative that the army's domination by poor volunteers, who in search of riches and retirement bonuses became the clients of their generals, who then used those armies to overthrow the republic, is now rejected.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
Other reforms attributed to Marius include the abolition of the citizen cavalry and light infantry, a redesign of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, a standardised eagle standard for all legions, and the substitution of the cohort for the maniple. There is little evidence for the abolition of the citizen cavalry and light infantry by the first century BC, as they are still attested in evidence.<ref>Template:Harvnb, citing, among others, Template:CIL. See generally Template:Cite journal</ref> If Marius redesigned the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, archaeological finds indicate his design was soon discarded.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Literary evidence indicates that eagle standards continued to co-exist through the late republic with other traditional animal standards including the ox and wolf.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Lastly, there is no ancient evidence that Marius introduced the cohort; Sallust's narrative gives the last attestation of the maniple in 109 BC under Metellus Numidicus' command.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
Changes to logistical arrangements and training, the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("Marius's mules") of common historiography, were regular practice among Roman generals: seeking victory, they generally sought the speed advantages of operating without large baggage trains and to ensure that their men were well-trained for combat.Template:Sfnm
Cimbri and TeutonesEdit
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In 109 BC a migrating Germanic tribe called the Cimbri appeared in Gaul and routed the Roman army there under Marcus Junius Silanus.Template:Sfn This defeat reduced Roman prestige and resulted in unrest among the Celtic tribes recently conquered by the Romans in southern Gaul.Template:Sfn In 107 the consul Lucius Cassius Longinus was completely defeated by the Tigurini, and the senior surviving officer (one Gaius Popillius, son of the consul of 132) had saved what was left only by surrendering half the baggage and suffering the humiliation of having his army "pass under the yoke".Template:Sfn The next year, 106 BC, another consul, Quintus Servilius Caepio, marched to Gaul with a new army to salvage the situation.Template:Sfn Caepio was prorogued into the next year and the new consul for 105 BC, Gnaeus Mallius Maximus,Template:Sfn was also assigned to southern Gaul with another army. Caepio's disdain for Mallius – a new man like Marius with a hunger for glory – made it impossible for them to cooperate.Template:Sfn
The Cimbri and another tribe called the Teutones appeared on the Rhône, and while Caepio was on the west bank he refused to come to the aid of Mallius on the east.Template:Sfn The Senate was unable to induce Caepio to cooperate with Mallius, which proved both generals' undoing. At the Battle of Arausio (modern Orange), the Cimbri overran Caepio's legions with massively overwhelming numbers. Caepio's routed men crashed into Mallius's troops, which led to both armies being pinned against the Rhône and annihilated by the numerically dominant Cimbrian warriors.Template:Sfn News of this defeat reached Rome just shortly after Marius completed the campaign against Jugurtha successfully.Template:Sfn
The Republic, altogether lacking generals who had recently concluded military campaigns successfully,Template:Sfn took the illegal step of electing Marius in absentia for a second consulship in three years.Template:Sfn While his election was not unprecedented, as Quintus Fabius Maximus had been elected for consecutive consulshipsTemplate:Sfn and it was not unheard of for consuls to be elected in absentia, the precedent was certainly not recent.Template:Sfn Yet, since the Assembly had the ability to overturn any law, it simply set aside the requirements and made Marius consul.Template:Sfn
As consulEdit
Marius was still in Africa when the Assembly elected him consul for 104 BC.Template:Sfn At the start of his consulship, Marius returned from Africa in spectacular triumph, bringing Jugurtha and the riches of North Africa to awe the citizenry.Template:Sfn Jugurtha, who had prophesied the purchase and destruction of Rome, met his end in a Roman prison after having been led through the streets of the city in chains.Template:Sfn Marius was assigned (it is unclear whether by the Assembly or by sortition) the province of Gaul to deal with the Cimbric threat.Template:Sfn
The Cimbri, after their decisive victory at Arausio, marched west into Hispania.Template:Sfn Marius was tasked with rebuilding, effectively from scratch, the Gallic legions.Template:Sfn Building his army around a core of trained legionaries from the last year, Marius again secured exemption from the property requirements and with his newly minted reputation for victory, raised an army of some thirty thousand Romans and forty thousand Italian allies and auxiliaries.Template:Sfn He established a base around the town of Aquae Sextiae (modern Aix-en-Provence) and trained his men.Template:Sfn
One of his legates was his old quaestor, Sulla, which shows that at this time there was no ill will between them. In 104 BC, Marius was returned as consul again for 103 BC. Though he could have continued to operate as proconsul, it is likely that the people re-elected him as consul so as to avoid another incident of disputed command à la Caepio and Mallius.Template:Sfn While Plutarch – possibly referencing the memoirs of Rutilius Rufus – jibed that Marius's consular colleagues were his servants, Evans dismisses this.Template:Sfn
In 103 BC, the Germans still did not emerge from Hispania, and Marius's colleague died, requiring Marius to return to Rome to call elections.Template:Sfn Lacking a decisive conclusion to the Cimbrian conflict over the last two years, it was not a foregone conclusion that Marius would win reelection.Template:Sfn An appeal by a young tribune, Lucius Appuleius Saturninus, in a public meeting before the vote – along with a field of candidates without great name recognition – allowed Marius to be returned as consul again in 102 BC.Template:Sfn His colleague was Quintus Lutatius Catulus.Template:Sfn Over his successive consulships, Marius was not idle. He trained his troops, built his intelligence network, and conducted diplomacy with the Gallic tribes on the provincial frontiers.Template:Sfn
Battle with the Germanic tribesEdit
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The decision to re-elect Marius as consul for 102 BC was vindicated when the Cimbri returned from Hispania and,Template:Sfn with a number of other tribes, moved on Italy. The Teutones and their allies the Ambrones were to head south and advance toward Italy from the west along the coast;Template:Sfn the Cimbri were to attempt to cross the Alps into Italy from the north by the Brenner Pass; and the Tigurini (the allied Celtic tribe who had defeated Longinus in 107) were to cross the Alps from the northeast.Template:Sfn The two consuls divided their forces, with Marius heading west into Gaul and Catulus holding the Italian Alps.Template:Sfn
In the west, Marius denied the Teutones and Ambrones battle, staying inside a fortified camp and fighting off their attempts to storm it. Failing to take his camp, the Teutones and their allies moved on. Marius shadowed them, waiting for an opportune moment to attack.Template:Sfn Near Aquae Sextiae (modern Aix-en-Provence),Template:Sfn an accidental skirmish between Roman camp servants, getting water, and bathing Ambrones turned into a spontaneous battle between Marius's army and the Ambrones in which the Romans defeated some 30,000 Ambrones.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The next day, the Teutones and the Ambrones counterattacked up a hill against the Roman position. Marcus Claudius Marcellus flanked their advance with a column of three thousand men, turning the battle into a slaughter:Template:Sfn estimates vary from 100,000 to 200,000 being slain or captured. Marius sent Manius Aquillius with a report to Rome that said 37,000 superbly trained Romans had succeeded in defeating over 100,000 Germans in two engagements.Template:Sfn
Marius's consular colleague in 102 BC, Quintus Lutatius Catulus, who Marius may have expected to "spend a fruitless year employed in garrison duty",Template:Sfn did not fare so well. He suffered some casualties in a minor engagement up in one of the mountain valleys near Tridentum.Template:Sfn Catulus then withdrew and the Cimbri entered northern Italy.Template:Sfn The Cimbri paused in northern Italy to regroup and await expected reinforcements from the other Alpine passes.Template:Sfn
Shortly after Marius had vanquished the western invaders at Aquae Sextiae, Marius received news that he had been re-elected to his fourth consecutive consulship (and fifth consulship as a whole) as consul for 101 BC.Template:Sfn His colleague would be his friend Manius Aquillius.Template:Sfn After election, he returned to Rome to announce his victory at Aquae Sextiae, deferred a triumph, and promptly marched north with his army to join Catulus,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn whose command was prorogued since Marius's consular colleague was dispatched to defeat a slave revolt in Sicily.Template:Sfn
In late July 101 BC,Template:Sfn during a meeting with the Cimbri, the invading tribesmen threatened the Romans with the advance of the Teutones and Ambrones. After informing the Cimbri of their allies' destruction, both sides prepared for battle.Template:Sfn In the ensuing battle – the Battle of Vercellae (or the Raudine Plain) – Rome decisively defeated the Cimbri. Caught off guard by Sulla's cavalry, pinned down by Catulus's infantry and flanked by Marius, the Cimbri were slaughtered and the survivors enslaved.Template:Sfn Upwards of 120,000 Cimbri perished.Template:Sfn The Tigurini gave up their efforts to enter Italy from the northeast and went home.Template:Sfn
After fifteen days of thanksgiving, Catulus and Marius celebrated a joint triumph.Template:Sfn Plutarch reports that Marius was also hailed as "the third founder of Rome",Template:Sfn but this is unlikely, as the identification of Camillus as a second founder dates to after the Sullan-era annalists and may be in fact post-Ciceronean.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In the popular imagination, it was Marius who "deserved to be the sole beneficiary of the two triumphs awarded for the decisive conclusion of the war".Template:Sfn At the same time, Marius's consular colleague, Manius Aquillius, defeated the Sicilian slave revolt in the Second Servile War.Template:Sfn Having saved the Republic from destruction and at the height of his political powers, Marius desired another consulship to secure land grants for his veteran volunteers and to ensure he received appropriate credit for his military successes.Template:Sfn Marius was duly returned as consul for 100 BC with Lucius Valerius Flaccus;Template:Sfn according to Plutarch, he also campaigned on behalf of his colleague so to prevent his rival Metellus Numidicus from securing a seat.Template:Sfn
Sixth consulshipEdit
During the year of Marius's sixth consulship (100 BC), Lucius Appuleius Saturninus was tribune of the plebs for the second time and advocated reforms like those earlier put forth by the Gracchi. Saturninus, after assassinating one of his political opponents to the tribunate,Template:Sfn pushed for bills that would drive Marius's former commanding officer Metellus Numidicus into exile,Template:Sfn lower the price of wheat distributed by the state,Template:Sfn and give colonial lands to the veterans of Marius's recent war.Template:Sfn Saturninus's bill gave lands to all veterans of the Cimbric wars, including those of Italian allies, which was resented by some of the plebs urbana.Template:Sfnm
Marius worked with Saturninus and Saturninus's ally Glaucia to pass the land bill and banish Metellus Numidicus,Template:Efn but then distanced himself from them and their more radical policies.Template:Sfn Around the start of the annual campaign season for the consulship, Marius attempted to disqualify Glaucia from standing for consul.Template:Sfn Because other candidates would lower the chances of Glaucia's victory, Saturninus and Glaucia had an opponent – Gaius Memmius – killed during the consular elections for 99 BC.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The elections then were delayed.Template:Sfn The Senate responded to Saturninus's attempt, to by violence force through Glaucia's candidacy over Marius's disqualification, by issuing a senatus consultum ultimum, and – for the first time – ordered the magistrates to take whatever actions they felt necessary to end unrest generated by other Roman magistrates.Template:Sfnm
After rejecting a plan to deploy the army near Rome under proconsul Marcus Antonius, Marius rallied volunteers from the urban plebs and his veterans.Template:Sfnm He cut the water supply to the Capitoline hill and put Saturninus under a short and decisive siege.Template:Sfn After Saturninus surrendered, Marius attempted to keep Saturninus and his followers alive by locking them safely inside the senate house, where they would await prosecution.Template:Sfnm Possibly with Marius's implied consent,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> an angry mob broke into the building and, by dislodging the roof tiles and throwing them at the prisoners below, lynched those inside.Template:Sfn Glaucia too was dragged from a house and killed.Template:Sfn
In complying with the Senate's wishes, Marius tried to show the Senate, who had always been suspicious of his motives, that he was one of them instead of the outsider that Quintus Metellus said he was in 108 BC. Marius's overall concern was always how to maintain the Senate's esteem: in the words of the scholar A.N. Sherwin-White, Marius "wanted to end his days as vir censorius, like the other great worthies among the novi homines of the second century".Template:Sfn
This episode in the city, however, won Marius little advantage. After he left office, Metellus Numidicus' relatives dogged him in mourning dress for his maltreatment of the general, pleading for his recall from exile.Template:Sfn Plutarch states that Marius had alienated both senators and the people.Template:Sfn It is, however, unlikely that Marius was abandoned by his clients and peers, as Plutarch also claims.<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> Evans tells us that Marius entered a semi-retirement as an elder statesman, a role which "precluded a more active participation in public life".Template:Sfn
90s BCEdit
After the events of 100 BC, Marius at first tried to oppose the recall of Metellus Numidicus, who had been exiled by Saturninus in 103. However, seeing that opposition was impossible, Marius decided to travel to the east to Galatia in 98 BC, ostensibly to fulfil a vow he had made to the goddess Magna Mater.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Plutarch portrays this voluntary exile as a great humiliation for the six-time consul: "considered obnoxious to the nobles and to the people alike", he was even forced to abandon his candidature for the censorship of 97.Template:Sfn Plutarch also reports that while in the East, Marius attempted to goad Mithridates VI of Pontus into declaring war on Rome – telling Mithridates to either become stronger than Rome or obey her commandsTemplate:Sfn – so that the Roman people might be forced to rely on Marius's military leadership once more.Template:Sfn This anecdote, however, is discounted by Evans, who dismisses it as "nothing more than a malicious rumour" perhaps created by Rutilius Rufus or Sulla.Template:Sfn Other scholars have argued that the mission was instead planned by the Senate with the support of the princeps senatus Marcus Aemilius Scaurus for the purpose of investigating Mithridates' campaigns in Cappadocia without arousing too much suspicion.Template:Sfn
However, scholars have pointed out that Marius's supposed "humiliation" cannot have been too long-lasting. In c. 98–97 BC, he was given the unprecedented honour of being elected in absentia to the college of priestly augurs whilst away in Asia Minor.Template:Sfn Furthermore, Marius's mere presence at the trial of Manius Aquillius in 98 BC, his friend and former colleague as consul in 101 BC, was enough to secure acquittal for the accused, even though he was apparently guilty.<ref>Cicero, De oratore 2.194–96.</ref><ref>Cicero, Pro Flacco 98.</ref> Marius also successfully acted as sole defence for T. Matrinius in 95 BC, an Italian from Spoletium who had been granted Roman citizenship by Marius and who was now being prosecuted under a new citizenship law.<ref>Cicero, Pro Balbo 48, 49, 54.</ref>
Social WarEdit
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While Marius was away in the east and after he returned, Rome had several years of relative peace. But in 95 BC, Rome passed a decree, the lex Licinia Mucia, expelling from the city all residents who were not Roman citizens. In 91 BC, Marcus Livius Drusus was elected tribune; he proposed a wide-ranging reform programme to support the plebs with land reform and grain distribution laws, grant citizenship to the Italians to compensate for land reform's infringement on Italian property rights, and enlarge the senate with equestrians.Template:Sfn Marius seemed not to have an opinion on Drusus's Italian question.Template:Sfn However, after Drusus was assassinated,Template:Sfn many of the Italian states revolted against Rome in the Social War of 91–87 BC, named after the Latin word for allies, socii.Template:Sfn
In the next campaigning year, Marius is listed as one of the senior legates of the consul Publius Rutilius Lupus,<ref>Template:Harvnb, citing App. BCiv., 1.40; Template:Harvnb.</ref> who was perhaps one of his relatives.<ref>Template:Harvnb, citing Dio, 29.98.</ref> Lupus fell to a Marsic ambush on 11 June 90 BC while crossing the river Tolenus; Marius, commanding a different wing of the army, was yet able to drive the enemy back with heavy losses.Template:Sfn The senate, after Lupus' death, appointed Marius in joint command with the praetor Quintus Servilius Caepio; Caepio, however, quickly fell to a Marsic act of perfidy, leaving Marius in sole command.Template:Sfnm After taking command over the northern front of the war, Marius moved energetically forward, defeating the Marsi with his former legate Sulla's help on hilly ground south of the Fucine Lake; Herius Asinius, a praetor of the Marrucini, was among the slain.Template:Sfn According to Plutarch, Marius then entered a state of inaction and refused to pursue – probably because he did not trust his men – which led Poppaedius Silo to challenge him: "So if you are such a great general, Marius, why not come down [from your fortifications] and fight?" To this Marius retorted, "Well, if you think you are any good a general, why don't you try to make me?"Template:Sfn
The next year saw Marius relieved by Lucius Porcius Cato, one of the consuls, and him excluded from command. We do not know why for sure he was not given another command: "his age should have been outweighed by his experience".Template:Sfn It may be possible that Marius had relinquished command on account of illness or had been relieved under a perception of insufficient aggressiveness.Template:Sfn The war was immensely hard fought but drew to an end within the next few years, as the Romans brought the lex Julia in 90 BC, granting citizenship to all the allies who were loyal or would otherwise promptly put down arms.Template:Sfn Marius's efforts in the conflict brought him few honours, though he served at a senior level and won at least a few victories. In all likelihood, this experience rekindled his desire for further commands and glory, embarking him upon a path towards seeking command in the east.Template:Sfn
Sulla and the First Civil WarEdit
During the Social War, one of Marius's clients and friends, Manius Aquillius, had apparently encouraged the kingdoms of Nicomedia and Bithynia to invade Pontus.Template:Sfn In response King Mithridates of Pontus invaded both kingdoms as well as the Roman holdings in Asia (in present-day western Turkey).Template:Sfn Defeating the meagre forces at Aquillius's disposal, Mithridates marched across the Bosphorus and Aquillius retreated to Lesbos.Template:Sfn With the Social War concluded and with the prospects of a glorious and fabulously rich conquest, there was significant competition in the consular elections for 88 BC. Eventually, Lucius Cornelius Sulla was elected consul, and received command of the army being sent to Pontus.Template:Sfn
After news of Mithridates' actions reached Rome, Marius may have considered a seventh term as consul.Template:Sfn A tribune, Publius Sulpicius Rufus, was also working on proposals to distribute the new Italian citizens into the thirty-five voting tribes. Marius was likely the one pushing for this most, while also positioning himself for a seventh consulship and – when bundled with Sulpicius's other voting reforms – a long-lasting political base.Template:Sfn Sulpicius's proposals raised a furore in the forum, leading to a riot in which the consul – Sulla – was forced to shelter in Marius's house, where a compromise was reached allowing the voting bill to pass through and for Sulla to prepare to go east.Template:Sfn
After Sulla left Rome to prepare for his army in Nola to depart for the east, Sulpicius had his measures passed into law, and tacked on a rider which unprecedentedly appointed Marius – now a private citizen lacking any office in the RepublicTemplate:Sfn – to the command in Pontus.Template:Sfn Marius then sent two of his legates to take the command from Sulla.Template:Sfn These moves were foolish: Evans notes "Marius's political ingenuity seems to have deserted him" and calls his actions rash.Template:Sfn Sulla refused to relinquish his post, even though all but one of his own subordinates opposed Sulla's course of action.Template:Sfn After killing Marius's legates, Sulla rallied his troops to his personal banner and called upon them to defend him against the insults of the Marian faction.Template:Sfn The ancient sources say that Sulla's soldiers pledged their loyalty because they were worried that they would be kept in Italy while Marius raised troops from his own veterans who would then proceed to plunder great riches.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Marius's faction sent two tribunes to Sulla's legions in eastern Italy, but the tribunes were promptly murdered by Sulla's troops.Template:Sfn
Sulla then ordered his troops to begin a slow march on Rome.Template:Sfn This was a momentous event, unforeseen by Marius, as no Roman army had ever marched upon Rome: it was forbidden by law and ancient tradition. Once it became obvious that Sulla was going to defy the law and seize Rome by force, Marius attempted to organize a defence of the city with gladiators. Unsurprisingly, Marius's ad hoc force was no match for Sulla's legions.Template:Sfn Marius was defeated and fled the city. He narrowly escaped capture and death on several occasions and eventually found safety with his veterans in Africa.Template:Sfn Sulla and his supporters in the Senate proscribed twelve men, and passed a death sentence on Marius, Marius's son, Sulpicius and a few other allies.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Sulpicius was executed but, according to Plutarch, many Romans disapproved of Sulla's actions.Template:Sfn
Some who opposed Sulla were elected to office in 87 BC – Gnaeus Octavius, a supporter of Sulla, and Lucius Cornelius Cinna, a supporter of Marius and member of Sulla's extended family,Template:Sfn were elected consuls – as Sulla wanted to demonstrate his republican bona fides.Template:Sfn Regardless, Sulla was again confirmed as the commander of the campaign against Mithridates, so he took his legions out of Rome and marched east to war.Template:Sfn
Seventh consulship and deathEdit
While Sulla was on campaign in Greece, fighting broke out between the conservative supporters of Sulla, led by Octavius, and the popular supporters of Cinna over voting rights for the Italians.Template:Sfn When Cinna was forced to flee the city by Octavius's gangs, he was able to rally significant Italian support: some 10 legions including the Samnites.Template:Sfn Marius along with his son then returned from exile in Africa to Etruria with an army he had raised there, and they placed themselves under Cinna's command to oust Octavius.Template:Sfn Marius demanded the tribunes lift his banishment by passage of law.Template:Sfn Cinna's vastly superior army coerced the Senate into opening the gates of the city.Template:Sfn
They entered Rome and started to purge a number of their opponents, including Octavius.Template:Sfn Their heads were exhibited in the Forum. Fourteen of the victims, including six former consuls, were noteworthy individuals:Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Lucius Licinius Crassus (older brother of the triumvir), Gaius Atilius Serranus, Marcus Antonius Orator, Lucius Julius Caesar, his brother Caesar Strabo, Quintus Mucius Scaevola the Augur, Publius Cornelius Lentulus, Gaius Nemotorius, Gaius Baebius and Octavius Ruso.Template:Sfn A number of those targeted by the purge were not immediately killed: show trials were set up before the victims committed suicide.Template:Sfn Marius and Cinna also declared Sulla an enemy of the state and stripped him of his proconsular command in the east.Template:Sfn
While Marius and Cinna were both responsible for the deaths and the headed pikes in the forum, it is unlikely that Marius and his men killed everyone in their paths, as reported in Cassius Dio and Plutarch.Template:Sfn The killings, more likely, served to terrorise the political opposition.Template:Sfn With competitors suitably frightened, show elections were held for 86 BC,Template:Efn with Marius and Cinna being elected by the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} irregularly.Template:Sfn Within a fortnight of assuming the consulship for the seventh time, Marius was dead.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Plutarch relates several opinions on the end of Marius: one, from Posidonius, holds that Marius contracted pleurisy; Gaius Piso has it that Marius walked with his friends and discussed all of his accomplishments with them, adding that no intelligent man ought leave himself to fortune.Template:Sfn Plutarch then anonymously relates that Marius, having gone into a fit of passion in which he announced in a delusionary manner that he was in command of the Mithridatic War, began to act as he would have on the field of battle; finally, Plutarch relates that, ever an ambitious man, Marius lamented on his deathbed that he had not achieved all of which he was capable, despite his having acquired great wealth and having been chosen consul more times than any man before him.Template:Sfn
After his death, Lucius Valerius Flaccus, another patrician like Cinna, was elected as the sole candidate to succeed Marius as consul;Template:Sfn Flaccus was dispatched immediately with two legions to fight Mithridates alongside (but not with) Sulla.Template:Sfn While Marius is at times blamed for the purges, his sudden death more than likely was used to deflect blame, avoiding an actual change in policy.Template:Sfn Cinna and one of his later consular colleagues, Carbo, would lead their faction into the civil war, which continued until their defeat (and that of Marius's son) by Sulla's army, eventually allowing Sulla to make himself dictator.Template:Sfn
LegacyEdit
Marius was an extremely successful Roman general and politician.Template:Sfn In ancient sources, he has been repeatedly characterised as having unending ambition and opportunism.Template:Efn Plutarch says of him:
if Marius could have been persuaded to sacrifice to the Greek Muses and Graces, he would not have put the ugliest possible crown upon a most illustrious career in field and forum, nor have been driven by the blasts of passion, ill-timed ambition, and insatiable greed upon the shore of a most cruel and savage old age.Template:Sfn
According to Evans this characterisation is not entirely fair,Template:Sfn because Marius's attempts to win the consulship and for self-aggrandisement were not out of the norm for politicians of the middle to late Republic.Template:Sfn Marius's legacy is heavily defined by his example: his five successive consulships, while seen at the time as necessary for the survival of Roman civilisation, gave unprecedented power into the hands of a single man over a never-before-seen length of time.Template:Sfn
However, that Marius died "so hated by contemporaries is really rather unremarkable, because to his unrealistic, even senile, dreams of further triumphs may be laid the prime cause for the disastrous civil war of 87 [BC]... His unquenchable ambitio overcame an unusually astute sense of judgement; the result, the beginning of the Roman revolution".Template:Sfn Broadly, "traditional republican culture had been based on the principles of equality between colleagues in office and short terms of office holding... the inherited republic could not survive Marius and his ambitions".Template:Sfn
Supposed reforms to the legionsEdit
In the narratives of Plutarch and Sallust, Marius's reforms to the recruitment process for the Roman legions are roundly criticised for creating a soldiery wholly loyal to their generals and beholden to their beneficence or ability to secure payment from the state.Template:Sfn However, Evans argues this development did not emerge from Marius, and it was likely initially envisioned as nothing more than a temporary measure to meet the extraordinary threats of Numidia and the Cimbrian tribes.Template:Sfn Moreover, the armies in the late republic were broadly similar to those of the middle republic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The willingness of the soldiers to kill fellow Romans changed after the Social War: "if Sulla's army had been unwilling to march on Rome... then the outcome would obviously have been completely different, no matter how power-hungry Marius or Sulla were".Template:Sfn The Social War had the related effect of breaking down the Roman government's legitimacy.Template:Sfn Lintott, in the Cambridge Ancient History, similarly writes that "Roman armies were only to be used for civil war after their scruples had been drowned in a blood-bath of fighting with their own Italian allies... it may as well be argued that civil war created the self-seeking unprincipled soldier".Template:Sfn
There were political effects, however, to the promise of land after service: the decision to call up the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} would not be fully felt until the time to draw down the troops. As the spoils of war became increasingly inadequate as compensation for the soldiers – the spoils of war do not guarantee a long term stream of income – it became common practice to allocate land (generally abroad) for the foundation of veterans' colonies.Template:Sfn Political unrest over veterans' land bonuses in the first century BC, however, is exaggerated:Template:By whom soldiers both in the Marian and post-Marian periods largely went home peacefully when land demands were not immediately met. Moreover, through the post-Marian period, land distributions were sporadic and volunteers were taken on with no promises or reasonable expectations of land at discharge.Template:Sfnm It was only by the second half of the last century BC that veteran demands for land had become an expectation, later fulfilled by the Second Triumvirate.Template:Sfn
Assemblies and foreign affairsEdit
Marius's repeated use of the Assemblies to overturn Senatorial commands had significant negative effects on the stability of the state.Template:Sfn The senate generally used sortition to choose generals for command posts, removing the conflict of interest between consuls.Template:Sfn Marius's use of the Assemblies to remove Metellus from command in Numidia spelled an end to collective governance in foreign affairs.Template:Sfn In later years, use of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} became the main means by which commands were granted to other generals, adding to personal rivalries and diminishing the ability to govern the state.Template:Sfn The size of the rewards gained from manipulating the Assemblies was irresistible to future generations of ambitious politicians.Template:Sfn
The similar use of the Assemblies in an attempt to replace Sulla with Marius for the Mithridatic War was unprecedented, as never before had laws been passed to confer commands on someone lacking any official title in the state.Template:Sfn Marius's legal strategy misfired disastrously because he failed to predict Sulla's reaction of marching on the city to protect his command:Template:Sfn
It was plainly expected that Sulpicius's bill and the sanctity of the law, even if much abused, would be obeyed without question... Sulla's unforeseen rejection of the 'popular' will, which he must surely have believed to have been of equivocal legality, was made from a position of great strength since he had the means and the opportunity to impose his will on the situation.Template:Sfn
Political violenceEdit
While political violence had been increasingly normalised throughout the middle and late Republic, starting with the murder of the Gracchi brothers, the passage of the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} against Saturninus and Glaucia in Marius's sixth consulship normalised the use of force not only against private citizens, but also "against properly elected magistrates in order to preserve [the Senate's] own position".Template:Sfn
Moreover, Marius's attempts to undermine Sulla's command at the start of the First Mithridatic War massively expanded the scope of that violence. No longer would only mobs clash in the streets of Rome. No longer would personal grudges be pursued by mere political prosecutions in the courts:Template:Efn political enemies would be killed.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn The use of the Assemblies eroded senatorial control which, along with Sulla's decision to march on Rome, created significant and prolonged instability, only resolved by the destruction of the Republican form of government and the transition to Empire.Template:Sfn
TimelineEdit
Years are from Template:Harvnb.
<timeline> ImageSize = width:800 height:1000 PlotArea = left:40 right:0 top:10 bottom:10 DateFormat = yyyy TimeAxis = orientation:vertical format:yyyy order:reverse Period = from:-160 till:-85 AlignBars = early ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:5 start:-160 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:1 start:-160
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id:gray value:gray(0.7) id:lightsteelblue value:rgb(0.418, 0.609, 0.800)
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bar:event width:20 color:gray shift:($dx,-4)
from:start till:end color:lightsteelblue
mark:(line, white) at:-157 fontsize:M text:BC 157 – Born in Arpinum from:-134 till:-133 fontsize:M text:Service at Numantia under Scipio Aemilianus at:-119 fontsize:M text:BC 119 – Plebeian tribune at:-115 fontsize:M text:BC 115 – Praetor at:-114 fontsize:M text:BC 114 – Propraetor in Hispania Ulterior at:-110 fontsize:M text:BC 110 – Marriage to Julia from:-109 till:-108 fontsize:M text:Legate under Caecilius Metellus at:-107 fontsize:M text:BC 107 – Consul (assigned by law to Numidia); abolished land ownership qualification for military service from:-106 till:-105 fontsize:M text:Proconsul in Numidia at:-101 fontsize:M text:BC 101 – Led successful Roman defence during Germanic invasions from:-104 till:-100 fontsize:M text:Elected as consul for five consecutive years. from:-90 till:-88 fontsize:M text:Led Roman armies during the Social War at:-88 fontsize:M text:BC 88 - Displaces Sulla in Mithridatic command; Sulla marches on Rome and reclaims command; Marius exiled at:-87 fontsize:M text:BC 87 – Marius returns to Italy; joins Cinna in successful war on the Senate at:-86 fontsize:M text:BC 86 – Seventh consulship (with Cinna); died early January
</timeline>
OfficesEdit
TableEdit
The following table is sourced from Template:Harvnb.
Year (BC) | Office | Colleague | Comment |
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121? | Quaestor | ||
119 | Tribune of the plebs | ||
115 | Praetor | ||
114 | Promagistrate (pro praetore?) | Farther Spain | |
109–08 | Legate (lieutenant) | Under Metellus in Numidia | |
107 | Consul | Lucius Cassius LonginusTemplate:Sfn | Numidia |
106–05 | Proconsul | Numidia | |
104–01 | Consul | Template:Plainlist | Cimbri and Teutones |
100 | Consul | Lucius Valerius FlaccusTemplate:Sfn | Saturninus and Glaucia |
97 | Legate (ambassador) | ||
90? | Legate (lieutenant) | Social War | |
88–87 | Proconsul | Social War | |
86 | Consul | Lucius Cornelius CinnaTemplate:Sfn | Died shortly after taking office |
ConsulshipsEdit
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