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@Pyewhackett02 That was "the way" back then, because tribunes and non patricius people were having to much influence in the laws being created. Weird times indeed.
@robbystarbuck@elonmusk I agree with them hating each other by the end.
Sulla certainly resented Marius underrating him whenever he showed military and political progress.
That's an excellent explanation, I want to go ahead and point out some things:
Marius and Sulla were very close; they wrote letters to each other, their first wives were sisters, and they drank wine together all the time at each other's houses.
There were more adversaries than enemies, but that would probably be mainly because of their origin. Marius was a "New man," and Sulla was a "Patricius," but that didn't stop them from sharing wine and mutual friendship and respect.
Sulla was not a general turned politician, more like the other way around; he was actually an "Augur," someone who could read the gods' messages in events. His position in the Senate was given and open because of the family he came from, even though he was undoubtedly one of the most famous strategists.
In fact, Sulla was involved in some of Marius's most renowned victories; he was, in some cases, the reason some of them actually happened. Sulla noted and never forgave that Marius took credit for his most significant accomplishments during that time, but that was just how the Roman Military worked.
Furthermore, to your point regarding the money flowing because of the proscriptions, Rome was broke at that time; they just had a tremendous war with the tribes in the peninsula, which wanted Roman citizenship, by the way, and almost brought Rome to its doom.
The state and any resources confiscated and sold were barely at 20% of their value because there was no money. Bribing to find proscribed was then abolished by Sulla, who believed "it wasn't the Roman way." This wasn't the financing Rome used for its future wars, not at all. It was so bad that they started accounting for 1 copper coin per 10 silver to make the economy rise again and fixed the wheat price to prevent insubordination.
Regarding Marius' son, he died at the hands of the city he self-hid during Sulla's rule. Sulla then killed the city mayors because only Romans were allowed to kill other Romans.
To more concerning elements in your history, Sulla didn't escape death once Marius was elected consul for the seventh time; he was, in fact, consul at that very moment, and Marius was angry because the Senate had elected Sulla to defend Rome from an Asian threat, not him. Sulla marched with his army into Rome (something Marius didn't think he could), but this wasn't "by force."
Sulla's army accompanied him because, in reality, he was the elected and current consul of Rome. To solve this issue, he proclaimed himself ruler, a Dictator, to be precise, not a king, a Dictator, to bring Rome to its roots and glory, something like a "Make Rome Great Again" kind of thing. He took away the people's voting and reserved that power for the senate only.
Sulla proscribed anyone related to Marius and Cinna, and their families lost their state or citizenship and even the right to have their descendency be Romans.
It is funny and scary how similar our times are to people who lived and died 2000+ years ago.
Thank you for bringing this memory line back to me, I always love a good story.
Cheers.