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Gaius Marius (consul 82 BC)

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Roman general and politician
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This article is about the Gaius Marius who was consul in 82 BC. For his father, the Roman statesman who was seven times consul, seeGaius Marius.
Gaius Marius
Consul of theRoman Republic
In office
82 BC
Served withGnaeus Papirius Carbo
Preceded byLucius Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus andGaius Norbanus
Succeeded byMarcus Tullius Decula andGnaeus Cornelius Dolabella
Personal details
Bornc. 110 BC[1]
Died82 BC
Praeneste
Spouses
Parents
Military service
Battles/wars

Gaius Marius "the Younger" (c. 110 BC – 82 BC)[1] was aRoman republican general and politician who becameconsul in 82 BC withGnaeus Papirius Carbo.[2] He was the son of theGaius Marius who was the victor of theJugurthine andCimbric wars. He fought inSulla's civil war. He committed suicide that same year atPraeneste, after his defeat bySulla and during the city's capture byQuintus Lucretius Afella.[3]

Biography

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Marius the Younger was the son[a] of theGaius Marius who was seven times consul and a famous military commander.[6] His mother,Julia, was an aunt ofJulius Caesar.[7] In his youth, Marius was educated withTitus Pomponius Atticus andMarcus Tullius Cicero by Greek tutors. During theSocial War, he served underLucius Porcius Cato, which one source claims Marius killed at theBattle of Fucine Lake over Cato's claims that Cato's achievements were on par with the elder Marius's victory over theCimbri.[8] Seeking to strengthen his political alliances, the elder Marius married his son to Licinia, a daughter ofLucius Licinius Crassus.[9]

Due to the political turmoil launched by his father in 88 BC to strip his rivalLucius Cornelius Sulla of command of the Roman forces in theFirst Mithridatic War, the younger Marius accompanied his father into exile when Sulla unexpectedly marched on Rome, forcing them both to flee.[10] AtOstia, young Marius went on ahead of his father and sailed to Africa.[11] There he went to the court ofHiempsal II ofNumidia to seek his help against Sulla, but the king decided to hold him captive instead.[12] He managed to escape with the help of one of Hiempsal's concubines whom the young Marius had seduced.[13] He then joined up with his father who had also come to Africa, and they escaped to theKerkennah Islands.[citation needed]

Learning ofCinna's fight to retain his consulship in 87 BC, father and son returned to Rome, where Marius the elder took control of the situation, gathering an army of slaves and gladiators, and murdering his enemies, both real and imagined.[14] According toCassius Dio, the younger Marius inaugurated his father's seventh consulship by murdering oneplebeian tribune and sending his head to the newly installed consuls, while having another tribune thrown from the heights of theCapitoline Hill. He also banished twopraetors, ordering that neither should receive fire or water from any Roman citizen.[15] When his father died of natural causes shortly after taking office, the young Marius assumed leadership of his father's adherents and clients, although overall control of the Marian faction was held by Cinna,[16] who was elected consul for consecutive years until his death in 84 BC.The young Marius is said[by whom?] to have lacked his father's charisma and sought to achieve popularity on the family name.[citation needed]

Marius minor was elected consul for 82 BC and deployed on the frontiers of Latium to oppose Sulla, who had conquered the southern part of Italy after landing inBrundisium the prior year.[7][b] This was a political move byGnaeus Papirius Carbo, his consular colleague and the new leader of the Marians after Cinna died, to drum up popular support and enthusiasm for thewar against Sulla; Marius was much too young and had not held the prerequisite magistracies to be a legally elected consul.[17] Two talented and better-qualified men among the Marian faction, his cousinMarius Gratidianus andQuintus Sertorius, were passed over in favor of the younger Marius "in the interest of unity".[18] Many of the old veterans from the elder Marius's former armies came out of retirement and flocked to the younger Marius's side, and, by the battle of Sacriportus, his army numbered eighty-fivecohorts.[19]

At theBattle of Sacriportus, in 82 BC,Sulla and his army defeated the army of Marius.[1] Marius with around 7,000 surviving troops retreated to the fortress city ofPraeneste, along with the treasury of the Capitoline temple.[4] Sulla's lieutenantQuintus Lucretius Afella, conducted the siege,[20]throttling the town with a ring of rapidly constructed earth andtuff barricades.[citation needed]

After his defeat, Marius gave orders to allies in Rome to kill a number of Sullan supporters before Rome was captured by Sulla,[17] including his father-in-law,Quintus Mucius Scaevola Pontifex,[21] the ex-consulLucius Domitius,Publius Antistius andGaius Carbo.[22] Although bothGnaeus Papirius Carbo andLucius Junius Brutus Damasippus attempted to break the siege, they were unsuccessful, with relief forces being intercepted and destroyed en route.[23] After receiving news of Sulla's victory at theBattle of the Colline Gate, Marius made one final attempt to escape, this time by digging a tunnel under the walls, but the attempt was uncovered. Marius committed suicide so as not to fall into enemy hands.[24]

In 45 BC, a man referred to asPseudo-Marius appeared in Rome, claiming to be the son of the younger Marius.[25]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^He is sometimes said to be adopted,[4] on the basis ofAppian, who first describes him as the son of the great Marius, but in a subsequent passage, says the consul of 82 was the general's nephew.[5] No other ancient sources suggest that the younger Marius was adopted.
  2. ^In theChronography of 354, the consul for this year is recorded as Marius’s cousin,Marcus Marius Gratidianus.[citation needed][undue weight?discuss]

References

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  1. ^abcBadian 2012.
  2. ^Duncan 2017, p. 235.
  3. ^Duncan 2017, p. 242.
  4. ^abSmith 1867, p. 959.
  5. ^Appian,Bella Civilia, 62, 87.
  6. ^Titus Livius,Ab Urbe ConditaEpitome, 86;Marcus Velleius Paterculus,Compendium of Roman History, ii. 26.
  7. ^abSmith 1867, p. 953.
  8. ^Orosius, Paulus (2010).The Seven Books of History Against the Pagans. CUA Press. p. 210.ISBN 978-0-8132-1150-3.
  9. ^Meijer, F. J. (1986). "Marius' Grandson".Mnemosyne.39 (1–2): 115.doi:10.1163/156852586X00077.JSTOR 4431470.
  10. ^Duncan 2017, p. 199.
  11. ^Smith 1867, pp. 956–7.
  12. ^Smith 1867, p. 957.
  13. ^Smith 1867, p. 958.
  14. ^Smith 1867, pp. 957–8.
  15. ^Dio, 30–35, fr. 102, 12
  16. ^Duncan 2017, p. 216.
  17. ^abDuncan 2017, p. 237.
  18. ^Konrad, C F (1996). Lindersky, Jerzy Shannon (ed.).Imperium Sine Fine: T. Robert S. Broughton and the Roman Republic. Franz Steiner Verlag. pp. 104–5.ISBN 978-3-515-06948-9.
  19. ^Hildinger 2002, p. 206.
  20. ^Broughton 1952, p. 68.
  21. ^Plutarch,Life of Marius, 35.6-7
  22. ^Broughton 1952, p. 67, under the entry forLucius Junius Brutus Damasippus.
  23. ^Duncan 2017, p. 240.
  24. ^Smith 1867, p. 959;Duncan 2017, p. 242.
  25. ^Cicero,Letters to Atticus xii. 49, xiv. 6–8; Cicero,Philippicae i. 2; Valerius Maximus, ix. 15. § 2; Appian,Civil Wars iii. 2, 3; Livy,Epit. 116; Nicolaus of Damascus,Life of Augustus c. 14. p. 258, ed. Coraes.

Sources

[edit]
Preceded byRoman consul
82 BC
With:Gnaeus Papirius Carbo
Succeeded by
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