Lucius Cornelius Sulla

People entry in the Livarva Republic Atlas.

People

Lucius Cornelius Sulla was soldier, consul, dictator, and self-proclaimed restorer of the Republic. He was the first Roman commander to march his legions against Rome itself. His victory led to proscriptions, confiscations, veteran settlements, and constitutional reforms designed to strengthen the S…

Overview

Lucius Cornelius Sulla was soldier, consul, dictator, and self-proclaimed restorer of the Republic. He was the first Roman commander to march his legions against Rome itself. His victory led to proscriptions, confiscations, veteran settlements, and constitutional reforms designed to strengthen the Senate and restrain popular power. Yet his restoration preserved forms while damaging the trust that had once animated them.

Why It Matters

Sulla matters because he turned possibility into precedent. After him, the Republic could no longer pretend that law, office, or sacred boundary stood above an army loyal to its commander.

In the Livarva Trilogy

The Dictatorship is devoted to Sulla’s life and legacy. In The First Breach, his shadow lies over Caesar’s youth. In The Final Virtue, his precedent helps define the political world Cato tries to defend.

Ancient and Modern Sources

Plutarch, Appian, Sallust, Cicero, Livy fragments, Mommsen, Syme, Christ.

This first atlas entry is drafted from the Livarva manuscripts and will be expanded with exact chapter and source references in a later version.