Overview
Gaius Marius, the novus homo from Arpinum, saved Rome from the Cimbri and Teutones and reshaped the Roman army. By opening military service to the landless poor, he solved an immediate recruitment crisis but weakened the older bond between property, citizenship, and service. Soldiers increasingly looked to their generals for pay, land, and reward.
Why It Matters
Marius stands at the turning point between the citizen militia and the personal army. Without this change, the later careers of Sulla, Pompey, and Caesar are almost impossible to understand.
In the Livarva Trilogy
In The First Breach, Marius forms part of Caesar’s family and political inheritance. In The Dictatorship, he is Sulla’s rival and the older figure whose military system Sulla learns to master.
Ancient and Modern Sources
Plutarch, Sallust, Appian, Cicero, modern scholarship on military reform.
This first atlas entry is drafted from the Livarva manuscripts and will be expanded with exact chapter and source references in a later version.