The military reforms known as the Marian Reforms took place at 107 BCE
According to most historians, Marius died of natural causes in 86 BCE. Arguments to the counter however involve precedence. Like Gaius Marius, both Gaius Gracchus and his brother Tiberius Gracchus supported land reforms that sought to redistribute land holdings (at that time, the only commodity that held any sustained economic value and thus wealth) among the landless and poor, especially to the common legionaries that fought during the Punic Wars and the later wars against the Germanic tribes. Tiberius was murdered by the chief priest of the Roman Senate (133 BCE) and his brother was killed in 121 BCE by order of the Senate. Gaius Marius' death occurred in 86 BCE, right in the middle of civil war. Some argue he may have been poisoned while he occupied the city of Rome to make it look like a natural death. But lack of evidence states that no, Marius was not murdered.
Gaius Julius Caesar implemented several long-lasting reforms during his time as head of the Roman government, most notably the Julian calendar, which reformed the Roman calendar and established the basis for the modern calendar used today. He also enacted land reforms to redistribute public land to veterans and the poor, improving social equity. Additionally, Caesar centralized the bureaucracy and expanded the Senate, integrating more provincial leaders, which helped to stabilize and broaden the governance of the expanding Roman Empire. These reforms had enduring impacts on Roman society and governance.
they tried to make life easier
the reforms of education
To recruit Gaius in the game "Fire Emblem: Awakening," you must first progress through the main story until you reach Chapter 11. During this chapter, ensure that Chrom and Gaius are in proximity to each other during battle, as Gaius will approach Chrom and offer to join your cause. After successfully defeating the enemy forces, Gaius will become available as a playable character. Make sure to engage him in conversation during the battle to solidify his recruitment.
Social reform: he made it so that the emperors were respected and awed again Military reforms: He got rid of the field armies Administrative reforms: he separated the civil leaders from the military leaders Tax reforms: he created a standardized tax system where taxes were established on the basis of how many workers were in an area and how productive the land was political reforms: established a tetrarchy because the empire was too big for one person to run religious reforms: persecuted christians in the Great Persecution Price reforms: issued a price edict declaring the maximum price that a product could be sold for
You need to specify which reforms you are referring to if you want to make it possible to answer you question.
Egypt.
the athenian ruler Draco made several reforms,including what
you make 3 5th cell creators example[jeremiath,mattcox and marius].
reduce its national debt
Reform is the change of something to make for the better