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Rome in 100 BC was a fast-growing power. Originally, Rome was only a small settlement on the Tiber. However, by force of arms, it was able to expand its power across much of Italy. The defeat of the Carthaginian Empire meant that Rome no longer had any serious enemy in the Mediterranean. The city-state’s armies were the most formidable in the region and they created a huge Empire. The Roman army was made up of citizens and they supplied their own arms and armor. Wealth and slaves flowed into Rome. However, the victory over the Carthaginians and the growing wealth of Rome created problems and eventually led to a crisis in the Roman Republic. The government of Rome was designed to govern a city-state and not an Empire. Increasingly, the Roman senate was unable to control the governors in the provinces who acted like independent sovereigns<ref> Hildinger, Erik. Swords Against the Senate: The Rise of the Roman Army and the Fall of the Republic (NY, Da Capo Press 2002), p 14</ref>. The political system of Rome was unable to effectively govern an Empire. Rome’s wealth led to increased social divisions and the city was divided between the elite, the Optimates, and the popular party, Populares. The common people of Rome, including many citizens, were experiencing economic decline as slave labor in the cities and on landed estates resulted in many small farmers and traders going bankrupt. There was also tension between Rome and its Italian subjects who wanted a greater say in the Empire and citizenship. Rome had become the predominant power in the Mediterranean but it was a very unstable society with a political system on the verge of collapse<ref>Holland, Tom. Rubicon (London, Faber, 2004), p. 34</ref>.
[[File: 673px-Roman Legionaries-MGR Lyon-IMG 1050.jpg |thumbnail|200px|Roman legionaries 1st century BCE]]
===The career of Marius==Gaius Marius was born about .157 BCE in Arpinium in central Italy. His family was of Equestrian status and they were very influential in the local district. They had important political connections in Rome, especially with the powerful Scipio family. Marius joined the Roman army at an early age and he was essentially a military man. He served under Scipio in Numantia and became a military tribune and later a quaestor. It appears that the Scipio family acted as the patrons of the young Marius and this greatly helped his career<ref>Holland, p. 113</ref>. Marius later married Julia the aunt of Julius Caesar. He later served as an officer in Rome’s war with the North African king Jurgutha. This war was to make the reputation of Marius as a soldier and a general. Marius was eventually given command of the army in the war against Jurgutha and he proved to be a charismatic leader with real military talent<ref>Plutarch. The fall of the Roman Republic (London, Penguin Books, 1987), p. 145</ref>. He developed a new strategy to deal with the king and soon captured him. During his time in North Africa, he began the first of his reforms of the military which were technically illegal. Marius was very concerned with the reluctance of citizens to enroll in the army and the declining number of recruits available to Rome <ref>Plutarch, p. 145</ref>. Marius was later elected one of Rome’s two consuls and he was elected to that office an unprecedented seven times. He was associated with the Populares and his policies were often informed by the need to help the urban and the rural poor. In 105 BCE, while he was consul he was sent to deal with a military threat from the far north. The Cimbri and Teuton tribes from modern Scandinavia were migrating towards the Mediterranean. They defeated a Roman army that was sent to repel them and they seemed to be on the verge of overrunning Italy and Rome. Marius was faced with a crisis there were simply not enough citizens to fill the ranks of the army<ref>Plutarch, p 145</ref>. It was at this time that he enacted radical reforms in the army and they became known as the Marian reforms. In 102 BC, the Germanic tribes, who had invaded Gaul, decided to launch a full-scale attack on Italy. Marius had thoroughly reformed the army, by this time. Fortunately, for Marius, the invaders split into two groups and this allowed the Roman general to annihilate them in separate battles. Marius had saved Rome and was the leading figure in Rome for some time. A Marius tried to introduce land reforms that would have benefitted the poor, but they were blocked by the Senate. He did not prove to be a capable politician, but he remained popular with the poor. Later he became involved in a series of civil wars with the Roman politician and soldier Sulla, leader of the aristocratic faction. Marius during the wars was able to seize Rome but was later expelled by Sulla. He later returned to Rome, while Sulla was in the east and took control of the city once again but died soon afterward in 86 BCE <ref>Plutarch, p 151</ref>.
[[File: 662px-Marius Chiaramonti Inv1488.jpg|thumbnail|200px|A bust of Marius from the 1st century AD]]
Marius reorganized the Roman army and he reformed the legions. The total number of men per legion was six thousand and of these 4800 would be legionnaires and the rest support staff, mainly servants. Marius wanted every legion to be a self-contained fighting force. The legion was divided into centuries that were commanded by a centurion<ref>Goldsworthy, p. 117</ref>. Each century was comprised of 80 soldiers and twenty support staff. The century was divided into the sub-units that contained 8 legionaries and 2 non-combatant support staff. The Roman legionnaires would eat, fight and live together and this created a great spirit de corps. Marius insisted on regular training and drills and this meant that the Romans were always physically fit. He also ordered that every man carrying his own gear and equipment and the soldiers, as a result, referred to themselves as ‘Marius’ Mules’ <ref>Plutarch, p 146</ref>’. This meant that the army did not have lengthy supply lines and massive baggage trains but was rather very mobile and flexible. Marius believed that morale was very important in the army and he offered the common soldiers and men retirement benefits. These were usually in the form of land for the common soldier and money for officers. Upon retirement, a soldier could expect a parcel of land., usually in some newly conquered territory. One of the most important reforms of Marius was that he granted citizenship status to many Italians. Any Italian who fought in the Roman legion was automatically granted the citizenship of Rome. The reforms of Marius were widely adopted and they shaped the Roman army right down to the 3rd century AD<ref> Goldsworthy, p 119</ref>.
[[File: 662px-Marius Chiaramonti Inv1488.jpg|thumbnail|200px|A bust of Marius from the 1st century AD]]
 
== The social and political impact of the Marian Reforms==
The reforms of Marius did not only change the army they also change Roman society, over the longer term. Marius was a member of the popular party and he was always keen to advance the interests of the common people. Because of his reforms, the poor could join the army for the first time and this provided them with opportunities that allowed them to rise in society. Marius by allowing many Italians to become citizens changed the nature of Rome and it became less of a city-state and rather the capital of Italy. The ability of many Italians to become citizens did much to strengthen Rome over time<ref>Holland, p. 189</ref>. Then Marius by providing retiring soldiers with land from conquered territories did much to strengthen Rome’s control of the provinces. Retired soldiers often formed colonies in newly conquered territories and they strengthened Rome’s hold on newly conquered lands. These colonies also played an important part in the ‘Romanization process’, whereby provincials adopted Roman practices and cultural norms<ref>Goldsworthy, p 213</ref>.

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