21 April 753 A.D. Rome Founded
21 April 753 A.D. Rome Founded
Editors. “Rome founded.” History.com. 2009. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/rome-founded. Accessed 20 Apr 2015.
According to tradition, on April 21, 753
B.C., Romulus and his twin brother, Remus, found Rome on the site where they
were suckled by a she-wolf as orphaned infants. Actually, the Romulus and Remus
myth originated sometime in the fourth century B.C., and the exact date of
Rome’s founding was set by the Roman scholar Marcus Terentius Varro in the
first century B.C.
According to the legend, Romulus and
Remus were the sons of Rhea Silvia, the daughter of King Numitor of Alba Longa.
Alba Longa was a mythical city located in the Alban Hills southeast of what
would become Rome. Before the birth of the twins, Numitor was deposed by his
younger brother Amulius, who forced Rhea to become a vestal virgin so that she
would not give birth to rival claimants to his title. However, Rhea was
impregnated by the war god Mars and gave birth to Romulus and Remus. Amulius
ordered the infants drowned in the Tiber, but they survived and washed ashore
at the foot of the Palatine hill, where they were suckled by a she-wolf until
they were found by the shepherd Faustulus.
Reared by Faustulus and his wife, the
twins later became leaders of a band of young shepherd warriors. After learning
their true identity, they attacked Alba Longa, killed the wicked Amulius, and
restored their grandfather to the throne. The twins then decided to found a
town on the site where they had been saved as infants. They soon became
involved in a petty quarrel, however, and Remus was slain by his brother.
Romulus then became ruler of the settlement, which was named “Rome” after him.
To populate his town, Romulus offered
asylum to fugitives and exiles. Rome lacked women, however, so Romulus invited
the neighboring Sabines to a festival and abducted their women. A war then
ensued, but the Sabine women intervened to prevent the Sabine men from seizing
Rome. A peace treaty was drawn up, and the communities merged under the joint
rule of Romulus and the Sabine king, Titus Tatius. Tatius’ early death, perhaps
perpetrated by Romulus, left the Roman as the sole king again. After a long and
successful rule, Romulus died under obscure circumstances. Many Romans believed
he was changed into a god and worshipped him as the deity Quirinus. After
Romulus, there were six more kings of Rome, the last three believed to be
Etruscans. Around 509 B.C., the Roman republic was established.
Another Roman foundation legend, which
has its origins in ancient Greece, tells of how the mythical Trojan Aeneas
founded Lavinium and started a dynasty that would lead to the birth of Romulus
and Remus several centuries later. In the Iliad, an epic Greek poem
probably composed by Homer in the eighth century B.C., Aeneas was the only
major Trojan hero to survive the Greek destruction of Troy. A passage told of
how he and his descendants would rule the Trojans, but since there was no
record of any such dynasty in Troy, Greek scholars proposed that Aeneas and his
followers relocated.
In the fifth century B.C., a few Greek
historians speculated that Aeneas settled at Rome, which was then still a small
city-state. In the fourth century B.C., Rome began to expand within the Italian
peninsula, and Romans, coming into greater contact with the Greeks, embraced
the suggestion that Aeneas had a role in the foundation of their great city. In
the first century B.C., the Roman poet Virgil developed the Aeneas myth in his
epic poem the Aeneid, which told of Aeneas’ journey to Rome. Augustus,
the first Roman emperor and emperor during Virgil’s time, and Julius Caesar,
his great-uncle and predecessor as Roman ruler, were said to be descended from
Aeneas.

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