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| Romulus (Twin) Quirinus, 1st King of Rome | |
| Also Known As: Twin |
| Reference: 3327 |
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Individual:
ROMULUS AND THE KINGS OF ROME
The name of the city, Roma in Latin, comes from Romulus, its legendary founder. He and his twin brother Remus were offspring of Rhea Silvia, a woman of the royal line of Alba Longa, and the god Mars, who had seduced her in a sacred grove, where she was searching for water. When her uncle Amulius, the King, noticed her mysterious pregnancy, he imprisoned her; and as soon as the children were born, he had them abandoned on the banks of the Tiber to die.
The twins were found by a she-wolf, who suckled them until they were discovered by a shepherd (Faustulus) who brought them up as his own. When they were, Romulus and Remus took to robbery, and on one occasion attacked some of Amulius' shepherds, who were guarding sheep on the Aventine Hill (part of the future site of Rome). Remus was captured and brought before Amulius; and Faustulus chose this moment to explain to Romulus the facts of his birth (in one version he had observed the abandon-
ment). After hearing the story, Romulus went straightaway to rescue Remus, murdered Amulius, and awarded the now vacant throne of Alba Longa to his grandfather, Numitor.
Romulus and Remus resolved to found their own city where the wolf had rescued them. However, a dis-
pute arose between the twins about the exact location. Romulus, having received a sign from the gods,
started to mark out a boundary around his chosen site on the Palatine hill; but Remus jumped over the
boundary ditch (the original pomerium), as if to show how feeble a line of defence it was. Romulus saw this as sacrilege, killed Remus, and became sole King of the new city.
Romulus' immediate problem was manpower; he needed to populate Rome. So he established there a place of refuge where criminals and runaways from all over Italy could take up residence in safety as the first citizens. In order to find sufficient women, he resorted to a trick. He invited people from the sur-
rounding areas -- the Sabine Tribes -- to celebrate a joint religious festival, and in the midst of it gave a
signal to his men to abduct the marriageable women.
In retaliation, the Sabine King, Titus Tatius, gathered his army and invaded Roman territory. After some fighting between the two (2) sides, in which the Sabines penetrated Roman defences on the Capitoline hill, the Sabine women, now Roman wives, intervened, begging their fathers and husbands to cease hostilities. Peace was made, and the two (2) peoples united. Until his death shortly after the war, Titus Tatius ruled jointly with Romulus. Then Romulus took charge of the whole community, ruling for a further thirty-three (33) years -- the first King of Rome.
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