"A Thousand Times Mario"
When Sulla spared Caesar
Sulla Spares Young Caesar - AI-Generated Image
Anyone who has delved into the study of Sulla will have come across this famous line, the prophetic remark the dictator is said to have uttered as he reluctantly spared the life of the young Gaius Julius Caesar, then tied by family and allegiance to his Marian enemies. Suetonius records the scene in his Life of Caesar:
“Have your way and keep him, but you will soon realize that the man you are so eager to save will one day prove ruinous to the party of the Optimates, which we have defended together; in Caesar, in fact, there are many Mariuses.”
In modern translations, the word multos is sometimes rendered as “a thousand” to emphasize Caesar’s immense potential and to magnify the dramatic tone of the moment.
Why would Caesar even be considered for elimination? At the time, he was a young patrician who, at seventeen, had just been appointed flamen dialis, the lifetime priesthood dedicated to Jupiter Capitolinus and reserved for patricians. The role carried a long list of restrictions, especially on military activity, constraints that would have drastically altered Caesar’s future and the course of Roman history.
To qualify for the office, Caesar had broken off his engagement to Cossutia, a girl from an equestrian family, and instead married Cornelia, daughter of the popularist leader Lucius Cornelius Cinna, ally of Gaius Marius. Caesar was already linked to Marius by marriage: his aunt Julia was Marius’ wife, and the elder statesman had likely already shaped the young man’s political worldview.
Sulla first ordered Caesar to repudiate Cornelia. When Caesar refused, the dictator stripped him of his priesthood and began to consider having him killed, forcing the young man to flee Rome. Caesar’s mother, Aurelia Cotta, and his uncle, supported by a group of Vestal Virgins, who likely intervened because of Caesar’s sacred office, pleaded for his life. Sulla relented, delivering the now-legendary warning.
Whether the episode happened exactly as told or not, it highlights two important points. First, if we take the account at face value, it shows how even in his youth Caesar was already perceived within the political landscape of Rome. Second, Sulla’s order demonstrates that the dictator was not solely concerned with the systematic and legalized destruction of his enemies through proscriptions; he was also intent on enforcing a new moral program for Roman society. A key element of this program was exerting control over the connubium, the marriages, of leading patrician families, thereby preventing political alliances from forming beyond his reach.
Aulo Gellio, "Notti Attiche", book X published by UTET, 2013.
Svetonio, "Vite dei Cesari", book I published by Bur-Rizzoli, 1982.
F. Santangelo, "Gaio Mario", published Editoriale Jouvence, 2021.
G. Brizzi, "Silla", published by Il Mulino, 2018.
L. Canfora, "Giulio Cesare. Il dittatore democratico", published by Laterza, 2006.
01/05/2026
Salvatore Ciccarello