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    Gaius Marius Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Gaius Marius? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Gaius Marius from Historical Figures 1st Millenium Bce and what is the personality traits.

    Gaius Marius
    ENTJ

    ENTJ (8w7)

    Gaius Marius personality type is ENTJ, and we’re going to tell you why.

    Like all of us, Marius was a product of his environment and upbringing.

    His father, like most Roman fathers, was very demanding and authoritarian.

    As a young boy, Marius was raised to be obedient, hardworking, and to take orders from his father with no questions asked.

    This impacted his later life in many, many ways.

    Marius believed that he had to be in control, and this is why he was so aggressive and aggressive in his need to control.

    He was so aggressive because he felt he had to be in control. Any time he felt he wasn’t in control, he would get overly aggressive and violent.

    We know this with certainty because we have the writing of his son and biographer, Sallust, who says that Marius was very aggressive and violent as a child.

    We also know that at the Battle of Aquae Sextiae (where he killed many of his own men), he was very aggressive and violent.

    Gaius Marius (157 BC – January 13, 86 BC) was a Roman general and statesman. Victor of the Cimbric and Jugurthine wars, he held the office of consul an unprecedented seven times during his career. He was also noted for his important reforms of Roman armies. He was at the centre of a paradigmatic shift from the militia levies of the middle Republic to the professional soldiery of the late Republic; he also developed the pilum, a javelin designed to break on impact, and large-scale changes to the logistical structure of the Roman army. For his victory over invading Germanic tribes in the Cimbrian War, he was dubbed "the third founder of Rome". His life and career, by breaking with many of the precedents that bound the ambitious upper class of the Roman Republic together and instituting a soldiery loyal not to the Republic but to their commanders, was highly significant in Rome's transformation from Republic to Empire.

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