This small landaulet, which was well-suited to city traffic, was manufactured in 1885 by the renowned Vienna carriage-maker Marius. |
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Before I knew it, Marius and I crossed the line between roommates, and, well, bedmates and we had a serious relationship. |
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Marius found two different places in the wall that certainly appear to be mouse holes. |
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The so reduced remains of the Gallic empire were inherited by the unlikely figure of Marius. |
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Logan turned to hide a laugh before recomposing himself and turning back to Marius. |
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After ascending the helix of stairs, I sat down at my computer and pulled up the logs that Marius had sent me. |
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The situation was saved by Gaius Marius, a man born into a family recently admitted to equestrian status but who was politically well-connected. |
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Marius grunted which Erika interpreted as his way of showing his agreement but in actuality it was his way of showing his furiousness. |
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Chosen by C. Marius as his quaestor he distinguished himself in the Numidian War. |
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Rheiner and I exchanged pleasantries and both looked at Marius for further instruction. |
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In contrast to the Gracchus brothers, Marius was a self-made man with no aristocratic background. |
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Marius is a home-bred Romanian forestry worker, not a foreign-trained biologist, and his attitude is complexly grounded in local realities. |
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The handling, collaring, and release were done by a Romanian wildlife technician named Marius Scurtu, a sturdy young man with an unassuming grin and a missing front tooth. |
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He posted two tweets about Marius, raging against the zoo's breeding practices and paying tribute to the young giraffe. |
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They much admired Marius Victorinus, whose last years had been devoted to the deployment of Neoplatonic logic in defence of orthodox Trinitarian belief. |
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Marius now intrigued against Metellus among his equestrian and Italian friends in Africa and Rome and won election for 107 by playing on suspicions of the aristocracy. |
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In 1609 and 1610, Italian mathematician and astronomer Galileo Galilei and German astronomer Simon Marius began telescopic studies of Jupiter and its system. |
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Marius is a Roman soldier whose father is killed and he goes to avenge the death. |
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Last Sunday Marius, a 2-year-old giraffe, was slaughtered at the Copenhagen Zoo. |
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Over the span of his tragically short life, we doubt young Marius ever imagined a sobbing Kirstie Alley tweeting on his behalf. |
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Seeing the girl's sweet, youthful smile made Marius beam as well. |
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During their attack they were ambushed from the rear by a select force of five cohorts which Marius had hidden in a nearby wood. |
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With Sulla gone, the populares under Marius and Lucius Cornelius Cinna soon took control of the city. |
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Hence, Metellus had to have asked the Senate to appoint Marius as legate to allow him to serve as Metellus' subordinate. |
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Thus Metellus was using Marius' military experience, while Marius was strengthening his position to run for the consulship. |
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The loyalty of such legions is what allowed Marius himself, Sulla, and about 40 years later Marius' nephew Julius Caesar to march on Rome itself. |
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Newcastle prop Marius Hurter will leave the Falcons later this month to finish his career in South Africa. |
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The Falcons are also without prop Marius Hurter and may struggle against a powerful Bath front row. |
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In 101 BC, during an attempted invasion of Italy, the Cimbri were decisively defeated by Gaius Marius, and their king, Boiorix, was killed. |
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A similar law was passed in 108 BC and Marius was voted the command by the People in this special election. |
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The most dramatic and influential changes Marius made to the Roman army were named the Marian Reforms. |
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In 107 BC, shortly after being elected as Consul, Marius, fearing barbarian invasion, saw the dire need for an increase in troop numbers. |
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Marius relaxed the recruitment policies by removing the necessity to own land, and allowed all Roman citizens entry, regardless of social class. |
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Even though the army increased in size considerably, Marius also sought to improve organization among his troops. |
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In 107 BC Marius decided to ignore the census qualification altogether and recruited with no inquiry into the property of the potential soldier. |
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Marius was supposedly unhappy at receiving the dissolute youth as his subordinate, but Sulla proved a competent military leader. |
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Meanwhile, Marius was the hero of the hour, and his services would be needed in another emergency. |
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Nonetheless by this time news of a new advancing tribe known as the Cimbri had reached Rome and in the emergency Marius was again chosen consul. |
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The Cimbri conveniently marched into Hispania and the Teutoni milled around in northern Gaul, leaving Marius to prepare his army. |
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First, Marius had to deal with the Teutones, who were in the province of Narbonensis marching toward the Alps. |
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While Marius was away and after he returned, Rome had several years of relative peace. |
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The choice before the Senate was to put either Marius or Sulla in command of an army which would aid Rome's Greek allies and defeat Mithridates. |
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The Senate chose Sulla, but Marius induced tribune Publius Sulpicius Rufus to call an assembly that subsequently appointed Marius. |
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Marius narrowly escaped capture and death on several occasions and eventually found safety in Africa. |
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Sulla and his supporters in the Senate passed a death sentence on Marius, Sulpicius and a few other allies of Marius. |
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Marius along with his son then returned from exile in Africa with an army he had raised there and combined with Cinna to oust Octavius. |
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The Senate passed a law exiling Sulla, and Marius was appointed the new commander in the eastern war. |
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Cinna was chosen for his second consulship and Marius to his seventh consulship. |
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Marius died on January 13, 86 BC, just seventeen days into his seventh consulship. |
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Marius set the precedent of recruiting among the poor and then granting these veterans land upon the conclusion of the campaign. |
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While the Teutones and Ambrones were slaughtered in 102 BC by Gaius Marius, the Cimbri and the Tigurini wintered in the Padan plain. |
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The following year, Marius virtually destroyed the Cimbri in the battle of Vercellae. |
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From 260 to 271 Cologne was the capital of the Gallic Empire under Postumus, Marius, and Victorinus. |
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This was the first time that hostile forces had entered Italy since 101 BC, when Gaius Marius defeated the Cimbri and Teutones. |
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Julius Caesar, member of the Populares, nephew of Gaius Marius, politician, writer, general, and Dictator, introduced the Julian Calendar. |
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A natural appetizer, originally produced in 1915 by herborist of Nyon, Marius Briol. |
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Marius invaded Numidia and brought the war to a quick end, capturing Jugurtha in the process. |
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The apparent incompetence of the Senate, and the brilliance of Marius, had been put on full display. |
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The populares party took full advantage of this opportunity by allying itself with Marius. |
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In a process known as the Marian reforms, Roman consul Gaius Marius carried out a programme of reform of the Roman military. |
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This was very provocative to Marius, since many of his enemies were encouraging Sulla to oppose Marius. |
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In an attempt to raise Sulla's anger, Marius and Cinna revenged their partisans by conducting a massacre. |
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Following the Battle of Vercellae in 101 BC, Marius granted all Italian soldiers Roman citizenship. |
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His coming of age coincided with a civil war between his uncle Gaius Marius and his rival Lucius Cornelius Sulla. |
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Sulla gave in reluctantly, and is said to have declared that he saw many a Marius in Caesar. |
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Thus, it was that a Gaulish army of 250,000 could advance on Rome during the period of Marius at a steady pace of what the average member could cover on foot in a given day. |
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The historical novels The First Man in Rome and The Grass Crown, by Colleen McCullough, largely focus on the rise and fall of Gaius Marius and his lengthy career. |
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The struggle between Marius and Sulla led to the deaths of numerous distinguished Roman senators, equestrians and unknown thousands of Roman soldiers and citizens. |
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In the Battle of the Colline Gate at the very door of the city of Rome, a Roman army under Sulla bested an army of the Marius supporters and entered the city. |
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In 120 BC, Marius was returned as plebeian tribune for the following year. |
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Marius found that ending the war was more difficult than he had claimed. |
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Once it became obvious that Sulla was going to defy the law and seize Rome by force, Marius attempted to organize a defense of the city using gladiators. |
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Because of the destruction of the Roman force at Arausio and the pressure of the impending crisis, Marius was now given the latitude to construct a new army on his own terms. |
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As Marius failed, Sulla, a general of Marius at that time, in a dangerous enterprise, went himself to Bocchus and convinced Bocchus to hand Jugurtha over to him. |
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Sometime during this war Marius participated in the Trial of Trebonius. |
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By the end of the Social War, Marius and Sulla were the premier military men in Rome and their partisans were in conflict, both sides jostling for power. |
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In late 105 BC Marius was elected consul again while still in Africa. |
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Severus attempted to revive totalitarianism and in an address to people and the Senate, he praised the severity and cruelty of Marius and Sulla, which worried the senators. |
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The critics singled out, among the other players, Jack Hawkins as Caliban, Marius Goring as Ariel, Jessica Tandy as Miranda and Alec Guinness as Ferdinand. |
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Ethnographer and folklorist Marius Barbeau estimated that well over ten thousand French folk songs and their variants had been collected in Canada. |
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In the passage of this law, Marius alienated the Metelli, who opposed it. |
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Instead, they pursued their route, and Marius followed them. |
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The end of the Cimbrian war marked the beginning of the rivalry between Marius and Sulla, which eventually led to the first of Rome's great civil wars. |
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Before the reforms of Marius they were ineligible for military service and are often described as being just above freed slaves in wealth and prestige. |
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By 108 BC, Marius conceived the desire to run for the consulship. |
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Marius then hid 3,000 troops in ambush, so when the main Germanic contingent finally attacked, the hidden Roman troops could fall on them from behind. |
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Marius was born in 157 BC in the town of Arpinum in southern Latium. |
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Marius attempted to keep Saturninus and his followers alive by locking them safely inside the Senate House, where they would await prosecution according to the law. |
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However, seeing that opposition was impossible, Marius decided to travel to the east in 98 BC, ostensibly to fulfil a vow he had made to the goddess Bona Dea. |
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Matrinius, an Italian from Spoletium who had been granted Roman citizenship by Marius and who was now accused under the terms of the Lex Licinia Mucia. |
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This was especially evident in the 70s BC when the social wars were going on between the populists led by Marius, and the senatorials led by Sulla. |
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They were partisans of the Sullan faction who carried on the Marius and Sulla conflict through their histories, often rewriting them to fit their own agenda. |
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Marius needed more troops, and to this effect he made a change in procedure used for recruiting troops, probably unaware of the momentous implications of this change. |
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