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See also: Roman general, of plebeian descent, the son of a small See also: farmer of Cereatae (mod
.
Casamare, " home of See also: Marius ") near Arpinum
.
He served first in See also: Spain under the See also: great Scipio See also: Africanus, and See also: rose from the ranks to be an officer
.
In 119 as tribune he proposed a See also: law intended to limit the influence of the nobles at elections
.
This brought him into conflict with the aristocratic party, who prevented him from obtaining the aedileship
.
When about See also: forty years of age he married a lady of patrician See also: rank, Julia, the aunt of
See also: Julius Caesar
.
This gave him a new social status, and being at the same See also: time a popular favourite and a brave, energetic soldier, he was in 115 elected praetor, in which capacity he effected the subjugation of the troublesome province of Further Spain
.
In the war with Jugurtha, (ro9–ro6) he came to the front as See also: lieutenant of the See also: consul See also: Quintus See also: Caecilius See also: Metellus Numidicus
.
When he had already achieved some important successes over Jugurtha (q.v.), in 107 he was elected consul for the first time (an almost unheard-of honour for a " new See also: man "), his popularity with the army and See also: people being sufficient to bear down all opposition
.
In the following See also: year, in conjunction with Sulla, he brought the war to a triumphant issue, and passed two years in his province of See also: Numidia, which he thoroughly subdued and annexed
.
The surrender of the See also: person of Jugurtha to Sulla gave rise to the view that he, not Marius, had really. ended the war, and so laid the foundation of the subsequent enmity between the two leaders
.
By this time Marius was generally recognized as the ablest general of the See also: day, and was appointed to the chief command against the See also: Cimbri and Teutones
.
Two Roman armies had been destroyed near the Lake ofSee also: Geneva, and it seemed as if a repetition of the disaster of the Allia and the capture of See also: Rome itself might not be impossible
.
Marius, out of unpromising materials and a demoralized soldiery, organized a well-disciplined army, with which he inflicted on the invaders two decisive defeats, the first in 102 at See also: Aquae Sextiae (See also: Aix), 18 m. See also: north of See also: Marseilles, and the second in the following year on the Raudian plain near Vercellae (See also: Vercelli), about midway between See also: Turin and Milan
.
For some centuries afterwards Rome remained unmolested by See also: northern barbarians
.
In for Marius was elected consul a fifth time (previously in 107, 104, 103, 102), hailed as the " saviour of his country," and honoured with a See also: triumph of unprecedented splendour
.
The glorious See also: part of his career was now over
.
Though a very able soldier, he was without the intellectual culture which the Gracchi, his See also: political ancestors, possessed
.
As a politician he on the whole failed, though he retained the confidence of the popular party almost to the last
.
But he unfortunately associated himself with the demagogues See also: Saturninus (q.v.) and Glaucia, in See also: order to secure the consulship for the See also: sixth time (Too)
.
The manner in which he turned against his former associates (although he probably had no choice in the See also: matter) alienated the sympathies of the plebs; and Marius, feeling that his only chance of rehabilitation See also: lay in war, See also: left Rome for See also: Asia, where he endeavoured to provoke See also: Mithradates to hostilities
.
On his return he served as See also: legate in the Social War (90), and defeated the See also: Marsi on two occasions
.
In 88 war broke out with Mithradates, and Sulla was appointed by the senate to the chief command, which was eagerly desired by Marius
.
This led to a rupture
.
With the assistance of the tribune Sulpicius Rufus, Marius succeeded in getting the command transferred to himself . Sulla marched upon Rome and defeated Marius, who fled to the marshes ofSee also: Minturnae in See also: Latium
.
He was discovered and taken prisoner; and the See also: local magistrates, in accordance with Sulla's proclamation, resolved to put him to See also: death
.
The Gallic trooper sent to strike off the old man's See also: head quailed, it is said, before the fire of his eyes, and fled exclaiming, " I cannot kill See also: Gaius Marius." The inhabitants out of compassion then allowed Marius to depart, and put him on See also: board a See also: ship which conveyed him to See also: Carthage
.
When forbidden to See also: land, he told the messenger to inform the governor that he had seen Marius sitting as a fugitive among the ruins of Carthage
.
Having been joined by his son, he took See also: refuge in the See also: island of Cercina
.
Meantime, Sulla having left See also: Italy for the Mithradatic war, See also: Cinna's sudden and violent revolution put the senate at the mercy of the popular leaders, and Marius greedily caught at the opportunity of a bloody vengeance, which became in fact a reign of terror in which senators and nobles were slaughtered wholesale
.
He had himself elected consul for the seventh time, in fulfilment of a prophecy given to him in early manhood
.
Less than three See also: weeks afterwards he died of fever, on the 13th of January_ 86
.
Marius was not only a great general, but also a great military reformer
.
From his time a citizen militia was replaced by a professional soldiery, which had hitherto been little liked by the Roman people
.
He further made the See also: cohort the military unit instead of the maniple, and his cavalry and See also: light-armed troops were See also: drawn from See also: foreign countries, so that it may be said that Marius was the originator of the mercenary army
.
The Roman soldier was henceforth a man who had no See also: trade but war
.
A great general could hardly fail to become the foremost man in the See also: state
.
Marius, however, unlike Caesar, did not attempt to overturn the oligarchy by means of the army; he used rather such expedients as the constitution seemed to allow, though they had to be backed up by riot and violence
.
He failed as a political reformer because the merchants and the moneyed classes, whom the Gracchi had tried to conciliate, feared that they would themselves be swept away by a revolution of which the See also: mob and its leaders would be the ultimate controllers
.
Marius had a decided tinge of fanaticism and superstition
.
In canvassing for the consulship he was guided by the counsels of an See also: Etruscan soothsayer, and was accompanied in his See also: campaigns by a Syrian prophetess
.
The fashionable accomplishments of the day, and the new See also: Greek culture, were wholly See also: alien to his taste
.
For the See also: life of Marius the See also: original See also: sources are numerous passages in See also: Cicero's See also: works, Sallust's Jugurtha, the epitomes of the lost books of See also: Livy, Plutarch's Lives of Sulla and Marius, Velleius Paterculus, Florus and See also: Appian's Bellum civile
.
See F
.
D
.
Gerlach, Marius and Sulla (See also: Basel, 1856) ; I
.
Gilles, See also: Cam pagne de Marius clans la Gaule (1870); W
.
Votsch, Marius als Ref ormator See also: des rOmischen Heerwesens (with notes and references to See also: ancient authorities, 1886) ; A
.
H
.
J
.
Greenidge, See also: History of Rome, vol. i
.
(19o4); also ROME: History, I I
.
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