Name: Gnaeus Fabius Quinti f. Quinti n. Pictor Age: Triginta (30) Ethnicity: Romanus Class: Nobilis (Optimates) Occupation: Qaestor Classicus Appearance: Average height (for a Roman in this time period), dark hair, Personality: Gnaeus Fabius Pictor could be described as an almost perfect image of Romanitas. However, does his personality belong to a time long past? Backstory: Gnaeus Fabius Pictor was born to Quintus Fabius f. Quinti n. Quinti. Pictor and Cornelia f. Gnaei n. Marci in 635 A.U.C. (118 B.C.E.). Once he had come of age in 653 (100 B.C.E.), Pictor started his military service so that he might begin his political career in the cursus honorum. Gn. Fabius Pictor served in the military for 12 years, until 665 A.U.C. (88 B.C.E.). During this career, the main highlight of his career was the Social War (91-88), where he served under Lucius Cornelius Sulla. After the Romans had pacified their Italian allies, Gnaeus Fabius Pictor was elected to the position of Qaestor Classicus, doubtfully with the aid of Sulla, the recently elected Consul. As Quaestor Classicus, Pictor was supposed to accompany Sulla’s Consular army that was heading to oppose Mithridates; however, Gaius Marius was reappointed as the head of the army against Mithridates with the aid of a Tribune of the People. Will Pictor accompany Sulla back to Rome to uphold Sulla’s right to lead the army as Consul, or will he protest the impious action of marching a Roman army against Rome herself. Gnaeus Fabius Pictor was extremely well educated, being fluent in Greek, having studied in Athens prior to his military career. He also enjoys penning Greek poetry. In 663 A.U.C. (90 B.C.E.), Pictor married the young daughter of Lucius Cornelius Scipio Barbatus, Cornelia. While Pictor is a supportive husband, he has had a long and well-developed relationship with one of his slaves, Cynthia, whom he had inherited from his father. During his youth, he and his father, Quintus Fabius Pictor, bought a slavewoman and her daughter, who was just a year younger than Gnaeus Fabius Pictor. The slave dealer they were Amazons, but the elder Fabius doubted it. Nevertheless, Quintus Fabius Pictor purchased the two slaves.