Marius replaces the Roman militia with a …

Years: 103BCE - 103BCE

Marius replaces the Roman militia with a professional standing force composed mostly of able-bodied but landless volunteers.

He improves and standardized training, weapons, armor, equipment, and command structure, and makes the cohort the main tactical and administrative unit of the legion.

Along with these new arrangements come new standards and symbols, such as the aquila, which the troops come to revere and which is never allowed to fall into enemy hands.

Caepio, upon his return to Rome, is tried by a tribune of the plebs, Gaius Norbanus, for having brought about the defeat of his army by the Cimbri through rashness, and also of having plundered the temple of Tolosa.

Caepio is convicted, and is given the harshest sentence allowable: he is stripped of his citizenship, forbidden fire and water (a formulaic expression of banishment) within eight hundred miles of Rome, nominally fined fifteen thousand talents (about eight hundred and twenty-five thousand pounds) of gold, and forbidden to see or speak to his friends or family until he has left for exile.

(The huge fine—which greatly exceeds the Treasury of Rome—will never be collected.)

Caepio will spend the rest of his life in exile in Smyrna in Asia Minor.

Mallius, who had lost his sons in the battle, is also impeached for the loss of his army.

Although it is unclear whether Mallius was convicted at trial and subsequently went into exile, he is also placed under an aquae et ignis interdictio by a rogatio of Saturninus.

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