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 WILHELM IHNE’S HISTORY OF ROMEFIRST BOOK.THE REGAL PERIOD.FIRST
                BOOK.
                 THE
                REGAL PERIOD.
                 CHAPTER I.
                 The Legend of Aeneas.
                  
                 When, according to the counsel of the gods, Troy was
                conquered by the Greeks, the noble Aeneas, with a number of Trojans, fled from
                the burning city. He carried his father Anchises on his shoulders, and led his
                son Ascanius by the hand. Nor did he forget the sacred image of Pallas which
                had fallen from heaven, but he saved it from the hands of the conquering enemy.
                Therefore the gods loved him, and Mercury built him a ship, which he entered
                with his family and followers, that he might find a new home far from Troy. But
                his mother Venus showed him the direction in which he should steer, for she let
                her star shine before him till he reached a distant coast in Italy, not far
                from that part where the river Tiber flows into the sea. There the star
                suddenly disappeared. Aeneas landed with his people, and called the place Troy,
                in memory of his beloved home.
                   The king of the country was called Latinus. He
                received the strangers kindly, made a league with Aeneas against his enemies,
                and gave him his daughter Lavinia in marriage. Aeneas then built a town, and
                called it Lavinium; and he fought against the
                enemies of the country, and killed Turnus, the king of the Rutuli; and when
                Latinus had fallen in battle, Aeneas reigned in his stead over the united
                people of the natives and the Trojans, and he called them Latins after the name
                of Latinus.
                   When he had ruled for three years, he waged a war
                against Mezentius, the king of the Etruscans
                in Caere. Then it came to pass that in a battle
                on the river Numicius a storm and sudden
                darkness separated the combatants. When it became light again and they looked
                for the Aeneas, he was nowhere to be found. Then his people saw that the gods
                had taken him to themselves, and they built him an altar, and worshipped him
                from that time as the “native Jupiter”.
                   Ascanius the son of Aeneas, who was also called Iulus, left the town of Lavinium after
                thirty years, and built a new city, high on the hill near a deep lake; and he
                called the town Alba Longa, and there he and his descendants reigned three
                hundred years over the whole country of the Latins from the mountains to the
                sea, and all the Latin towns were subject to Alba. There were thirty of them,
                and they formed a league amongst themselves, and Alba was the chief town of the
                league, and upon the summit of the Alban hill they built a temple to Jupiter
                Latinus, for thus King Latinus was called after his death when he had become a
                god. In this temple the thirty Latin towns offered up an annual sacrifice and
                celebrated games in honor of the god. But
                the sacred relics of Troy, which Aeneas had rescued, remained still in Lavinium, the first place in Latium where they were
                worshipped; and whenever they were carried away from it to Alba Longa, they
                returned of their own accord to Lavinium in
                the night. So Lavinium remained a sacred
                town among the Latins, and the priests offered up yearly sacrifices for the
                whole of Latium in the sanctuaries of the Penates and the Lares, the tutelary gods of the Latin race.
                    
                 Critical
                Examination of the Legend of Aeneas.
                    
                 In
                the period of contemporary history the immigration of Aeneas and the Trojan
                colony was considered in Rome an undoubted fact. It was publicly recognised by
                the state as early as the first Punic War. At that time the Senate interceded
                with the Aetolians in favour of the Acarnaniaus,
                because among all the Greeks the Acarnanians had been the only people who had
                not taken part in the war against Troy. On several occasions the Romans
                conferred favours on the people of Ilium on the ground of their being of a
                kindred race. Many of the Roman families were proud to trace their descent from
                the Trojan colonists, and when the Julian house rose to the highest position in
                the state, the legend of Aeneas acquired more and more splendour and
                importance. At last it was celebrated by Virgil, and so interwoven with the
                existence and greatness of Rome that through the whole of antiquity and the
                middle ages, and in fact up to the time of the rise of historical criticism, it
                was universally recognised as an authentic tradition. Nevertheless, it can be
                satisfactorily proved that the legend, even in those parts which do not contain
                anything supernatural, is devoid of all historical foundation, and owes its
                origin wholly and entirely to the imagination.
                   The
                Roman legend of Aeneas is one of a numerous class of myths, which are found in
                different places, especially on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, and which
                trace the foundation of towns back to the heroic age of Greece. The splendour
                of the epic poetry of Greece, especially that of Homer, was reflected on the
                islands and sea-coasts of the far West, where in the course of centuries Greek
                sailors had ventured or Greek emigrants had settled. Everywhere the settlers
                took their gods and their heroes with them, and even the surrounding barbarians
                were glad to exchange the shadowy forms of their own mythology and past history
                for the brilliant heroes of Greece or Troy.
                   Among
                the innumerable city-legends connected with the Greek and Trojan heroes of the
                epic age, that of the building of Rome has nothing especially to recommend it,
                on the score of inherent probability or external proof. Nothing but the
                greatness of Rome rescued it from the obscurity in which the other legends were
                buried by the lapse of time. If, instead of Rome, Tusculum had become the
                mistress of the world, Aeneas and his Trojans would have been forgotten,
                and Telegonus, the son of Ulysses, would most
                probably have occupied the place of founder of the Empire. In that case,
                instead of the Aeneid, we should have had songs celebrating Telegonus, and the noble families of Tusculum would have
                derived their descent from the companions of the far-travelled Ulysses.
                   If
                we ask for the actual evidence of the Trojan immigration, we find that the
                older Greek authors, from Homer downwards, know nothing of it, and indirectly
                contradict the Roman legend by making Aeneas rule as king, and die either in
                his own country or in other places.
                   The
                pretended settlements of Aeneas are as numerous as the towns which by their
                names seem to refer either to him or to his father Anchises, or to one of his
                companions. Thus it was said that he founded the town of Aenos in Thrace, the town of Aenea in
                Chalcidice; and that in the neighbourhood of Cumae he landed on the
                island Aenaria. In many places his tomb was
                shown, but more especially the numerous temples of his divine mother, Venus,
                found along the coast of the Mediterranean, were ascribed to him as their
                founder. While the older Greek authors know nothing of Aeneas as settling in
                Latium, we do not meet with any noteworthy writer who mentions this event
                before the third century B.C. The Greek historian Timaeus is the first who
                distinctly refers to the settlement of Aeneas in Italy, and the poet Naevius, a little later, is the first Roman authority.
                There is therefore no reasonable ground for supposing that for the space of
                eight or nine hundred years the legend of Aeneas had any existence at all. It
                would be useless to dwell longer on a narrative which in itself is so utterly
                void of historical foundation and internal probability, and which in fact is
                only interesting because in later times it was part of the national belief, and
                exercised an influence on the literature and politics of Rome.
                   The
                legend of a Trojan settlement in Latium in the form given above was the most
                generally received, but by no means the only version of the legend of Aeneas.
                No less than eighteen different forms of the legend of the foundation of Rome
                connect it directly with the wanderings of Aeneas or Ulysses, and place it
                therefore in the Trojan age. This conception was undoubtedly the oldest. But
                when the Romans discovered from the chronological tables of Greece that many
                centuries intervened between the destruction of Troy and the commencement of
                the period of the Roman kings, they found it necessary to fill up the gap by an
                imaginary line of Alban kings, and to place the Trojan immigration at a period
                anterior to the foundation of Rome. It appears that in Rome the descent of the
                founder from Alba was a received national tradition, before anybody thought of
                tracing it to Aeneas. The connection with Alba could not therefore be set aside,
                else it would have been easy to make Aeneas sail into the Tiber and found Rome,
                and in that case a line of Roman instead of Alban kings might have been
                invented to connect Aeneas with Romulus. It is therefore quite clear that the
                legend of Aeneas is of a comparatively recent date, later at least than the
                story of Romulus and Remus as the sons of the Alban Vestal virgin. It did not
                arise, in all probability, before the Romans became acquainted with the Italian
                Greeks; and after it had passed through the most varied and capricious forms,
                it at last assumed that shape in which, its principal features being preserved,
                it became the national belief of the Romans.   
                    
                 CHAPTER II.
                 The Legend of Romulus.
                  
                 Now when the time was fulfilled in which, according to
                the decree of the gods, Rome should be built, it came to pass that after the
                death of Procas, the king of Alba, a quarrel
                arose between his two sons concerning the throne. Amulius,
                the younger, took the government from his elder brother Numitor, killed his son
                and made his daughter Rhea Silvia a priestess of Vesta, to the end that she
                should remain a virgin all her life, engaged in the service of the goddess who
                presides over the city-hearth and loves purity and chastity in those who serve
                her. But the wicked king was not able to oppose the will of the gods. For Mars,
                the god of war, loved the virgin, and she bore twins. When Amulius heard this, he ordered the mother to be killed
                and the twins to be thrown into the river Tiber. But the water had risen and
                had formed shallow pools along the banks where it flowed but slowly. Here the
                servants of the king placed the basket with the children in the water, thinking
                that it would float down with the stream and then sink. But the gods watched
                over the children, and the basket floated to the foot of the Palatine hill,
                near the cave of the god Lupercus, and was
                caught by the branches of a fig-tree. This was the Ruminal fig-tree, which
                continued to grow for centuries, and bore witness to the miracle. The waters of
                the river now fell rapidly, and the two boys remained on dry land.
                   Attracted by their cry, there came a she-wolf out of
                the Lupercos and suckled the children with
                her own milk, and licked them with her tongue. And when Faustulus, a shepherd who tended his flocks hard by, saw
                it, he scared away the animal and brought the children to his wife Acca
                Laurentia, and called them Romulus and Remus, and brought them up as his own
                children. When the boys were grown up, they distinguished themselves among the
                shepherds of that country by their strength and courage; and they protected the
                weak against the strong who went out to pillage and plunder. Then it came to
                pass that their enemies lay in wait for them while they were celebrating the
                festival of the god Pan. And Remus was taken prisoner, and brought before his
                grandfather Numitor, and accused of having injured his cattle. But Romulus
                escaped. Then Faustulus delayed no longer,
                but told Romulus of his mother and how he was destined to death by Amulius and miraculously saved. And Romulus and his
                followers forced their way into the town of Alba, and set his brother free, and
                the two brothers slew the unjust and cruel Amulius,
                and placed their grandfather Numitor again upon the throne.
                   But the brothers would not remain in Alba, and
                determined to build a new city on one of the seven hills by the Tiber, near the
                spot where they had grown up among the brothers-shepherds, and they were joined
                by many from Alba and from the whole country of the Latins.
                   Now, as Romulus and Remus were twins, and as neither
                would yield to the other in honour and power, there arose a quarrel between
                them and their followers which of them should give his name to the new town and
                govern it. And they determined to let the gods decide by a sign from the sacred
                birds. Then Romulus with his followers observed the heavens from the Palatine
                hill, and Remus took his station on the Aventine, and thus they both waited for
                a sign from heaven, from midnight until morning. Then there appeared to Remus
                six vultures; and he rejoiced and sent messengers to his brother announcing
                that the gods had decided in his favour. But at the same moment Romulus saw
                twelve vultures, and therefore it was plain that the gods gave the preference
                to Romulus.
                   Therefore he built the town on the Palatine hill, and
                called it Rome after his own name, and drew a furrow round it with the sacred
                plough, and along by the furrow he built a wall and dug a trench. But when
                Remus saw the doings of his brother, he mocked him, and leaped over the wall
                and the trench to show him how easily the town might be taken. Then Romulus
                was wroth and slew his brother and said,
                “Thus may it be with anyone who dares to cross these walls”. And this remained
                a warning word for all future times, that no enemy should venture to attack
                Rome unpunished.
                   After this Romulus opened a place of refuge on the
                Capitoline hill. And there came a great many robbers and fugitives of all kinds
                from all the surrounding nations, and Romulus received them all and protected
                them and made them citizens of his town.
                   But there was a lack of women in the new community.
                Therefore Romulus sent messengers to the towns round his people asking the
                neighbours to give their daughters in marriage to the Romans. But the
                messengers were sent back contemptuously, and they were told that there could
                be no union and no friendship with a band of robbers and outcasts. When Romulus
                heard this answer he hid his anger, and invited the dwellers round about to
                come to Rome with their wives and children to see the games which the Romans wished
                to celebrate in honor of the god Consus; and a great number of Sabines and others came; and
                when all eyes were fixed on the games Romulus gave his people a sign which had
                been agreed upon. And suddenly there rushed out a number of armed men, who
                surrounded the place and carried away the young women of the Sabines. But the
                parents of the women hurried away from Rome with curses against the faithless
                town, and swore to take vengeance on Romulus and on his people.
                   First the men of Caenina rose,
                and would not wait until others were ready for war, but sent out an army to lay
                waste the Roman land. But Romulus went out against them and drove them back,
                and slew their king with his own hand. Then he returned triumphantly to the
                city, bearing the armour of the slain king on a pole, and brought it as an
                offering to Jupiter. Thus Romulus celebrated his first triumph over his enemies
                in the first war which he waged as a sign that Rome would subdue all her foes.
                   Now when the men of Crustumerium and Antemnae also went forth to take their revenge on the
                Romans for the and rape of the women, Romulus marched against them and subdued
                them in easy combat. But the Sabines, who lived further up the mountains in the
                direction of Cures, did not go forth till they had gathered a powerful army.
                And their king, Titus Tatius, pressed forward and encamped on the Quirinal
                hill, which lies opposite the Capitol. Now, one day, when Tarpeia, the daughter of the Roman captain on the Capitol,
                had gone out to draw water, the Sabines begged of her to open a gate and to let
                them into the citadel. This Tarpeia promised,
                having made them swear that they should give her what they wore on their left
                arms, meaning thereby their gold armlets and rings. Whereupon, when the Sabines
                had penetrated into the citadel, they threw their heavy shields which they wore
                on their left arms on Tarpeia and killed
                her with their weight. So the traitress met with her reward.
                   Now when the Sabines had won the Capitol, they fought
                with the Romans who lived on the Palatine, and the s fighting was up and down
                in the valley which separates the two mountains. The champion of the Sabines
                was Mettus Curtius,
                and that of the Romans Hostus Hostilius. When Hostus fell, the Romans were
                seized with a panic, and they fled back to the Palatine, carrying Romulus with
                them in their flight. But at the gate of the town Romulus stopped, raised his
                hands to heaven, and vowed that he would build a temple on this spot dedicated
                to Jupiter Stator, that is, the Stayer of Flight, if he would be helpful to the
                Romans. And behold, as if a voice from heaven had commanded them, the Romans
                stayed their flight, turned round against the advancing Sabines, and drove them
                back against the Capitoline hill. Then it came to pass, that Mettus Curtius sank
                with his horse into the marsh, which then covered the lower part of the valley,
                and he almost perished in the marsh. And the place where this happened was
                called for ever after the Lake of Curtius.
                   When the battle had come to a standstill, and Romans
                and Sabines were facing each other and ready to begin the battle afresh,
                behold, the Sabine women rushed between the combatants, praying their fathers
                and brothers on the one side, and their husbands on the other, to end the
                bloody strife or to turn their arms against them, the cause of the slaughter.
                Then the men were all quiet, for they thought the advice of the women
                reasonable; and the chiefs on each side came forward and consulted together,
                and made peace; and to put an end to all disputes for ever, they decided to
                make one people of the Romans and Sabines, and to live peaceably together as
                citizens of one town. Thus the Sabines remained in Rome, and the city was
                doubled in size and in the number of its inhabitants, and Titus Tatius, the
                Sabine king, reigned jointly with Romulus. But as Tatius and his people came
                from Cures, the city of the Sabines, high up among the mountains, the united
                people was called the Roman people of the Quirites, and the name remained in
                use for all times.
                   After this Tatius had a quarrel with the men of Laurentum, and when he brought offerings to the sanctuary
                0f the Penates at Lavinium, he was slain by
                the Laurentines. From that time Romulus governed
                alone over the two peoples, and he made laws to govern them in peace and war.
                First of all he divided them into nobles and commons; the nobles he called
                Patricians, and the commons Plebeians. Then he divided the Patricians into
                three tribes, the Ramnians, the Titians, and
                the Lucerans, and in each of these tribes he
                made ten divisions, which he called Curies. And when the Patricians assembled
                together to administer justice and to make laws, they came each in his curia
                and gave their votes, and the votes of each curia were counted, and what the
                greater number had decided, that was taken to be the wish of each curia. All
                the Patricians were equal among themselves, and every father of a family
                governed those of his own house, his wife, his children, and his slaves; having
                power over life and death. And several families united together and formed Houses,
                and the houses had their own sanctuaries, customs, and laws. But the Plebeians
                Romulus portioned out as tenants and dependants among the Patricians, and
                called them Clients, and commanded them to serve their masters faithfully, and
                to help them in peace and in war; and the Patricians he recommended to protect
                their Clients against all injustice, and on that account he called them
                Patrons, that is, Protectors. And from among the Patricians he chose a hundred
                of the oldest and wisest men to be his Council of Senators, that is, Elders,
                and to advise him on all great matters of state, and to help him to govern the
                city in time of peace. But out of the young men he chose a legion or army of
                3,000 foot soldiers and 300 horsemen, according to the number of the three
                tribes and the thirty curies, out of every curia 100 foot soldiers and ten
                horsemen, and for the captain of the horsemen he chose a Tribune of the Celeres, for Celeres was
                the name of the horsemen.
                   After the city had been so ordered and made strong to
                defend her freedom, Romulus governed wisely and justly for many years, and was
                beloved by his people as a father. He conquered his enemies in many wars, and
                won Fidenae, an Etruscan town on the left bank of the Tiber, not far from
                Rome.
                   Now when all that Romulus had to carry out was
                fulfilled according to the will of the gods, it came to pass that he assembled
                the people to a festival of atonement at the Goat-pool, on the field of Mars,
                which extends from the town towards the north, even to the Tiber. Then there
                arose suddenly a fearful storm, and the sun was darkened, and out of the clouds
                came lightning, and the earth quaked with the thunder. And the people were
                frightened, and waited anxiously till the storm should clear away. But when
                daylight returned Romulus had disappeared and was nowhere to be found. And his
                people mourned for him. Then Proculus Julius,
                an honourable man, came to them and said that Romulus had appeared to him as a
                god, bidding him tell his people not to mourn for him, but to worship him as
                Quirinus, to practise valour and all warlike virtues, that they might please
                him and might gain for themselves the power over all other nations. Then the
                Romans rejoiced, and erected on the Quirinal hill an altar to the god Quirinus,
                and worshipped him as their national hero and their protector for ever
                afterwards.
                    
                 Critical Examination of the Legend of Romulus
                  
                 In the preceding pages we have given the legend of the
                foundation of the town in its principal features, as it was probably first
                related by the oldest Roman historians, Q. Fabius Pictor and L. Cincius Alimentus, in the
                time of the second Punic war. We shall now proceed to show that it can make no
                claims to historical authenticity.
                   The Romans of the later republic already had given up
                as untenable all that was miraculous in the legend of Romulus, but they fancied
                that by a rationalistic interpretation of the supernatural they could gain a
                plausible account of at least possible or probable events. The God of War was
                explained away. It was not Mars who loved the Vestal virgin and became the
                father of the twin-founders of Rome, but some stranger disguised as Mars
                frightened and deceived Rhea Silvia. The miraculous nurse of the children was
                not a she-wolf but a woman of ill repute, for lupa was
                the name for both. Romulus was not taken away from the earth by the gods, but
                the patricians being dissatisfied with him, killed him, cut him in pieces, and
                carried these pieces away under their clothes. In those parts of the legend
                which contained nothing supernatural these critics saw no difficulty, and so
                they flattered themselves that they had worked out a genuine history of
                Romulus.
                   Such a proceeding cannot satisfy us. The first
                question of which historical criticism suggests is an inquiry into the evidence
                for an asserted fact, and the second is that of its internal probability. All
                evidence must in the end be traceable to contemporaries and eye-witnesses, and
                it must be such, that the judgment and truthfulness of the witnesses cannot be
                called in question. It is clear that no evidence whatever can prove that which
                to our comprehension appears impossible. Writers, therefore, who relate
                historical miracles, though they may claim to have been eye-witnesses, must be
                supposed to have been deceived or to wish to deceive. Where trustworthy
                evidence of contemporaries is wanting, and where the second or third hand
                evidence is full of contradictions, improbabilities, chronological and other
                errors, it were vain to believe that the story has any historical foundation.
                   No written chronicles dating as far back as the regal
                period ever existed in Rome. The date of the first historical documents of the
                time of the republic is extremely doubtful. So much, however, is certain, that
                they referred to contemporary events, and not to times long past. The writing
                of History, properly so called, was begun in Rome at a comparatively late period.
                The Romans, with all their attachment to old forms, customs, and laws, were
                deficient in the real historical spirit, and especially in critical
                investigation. The oldest annalistic accounts of past events, i.e. accounts
                in the form of annual reports, did not go further back than the beginning of
                the republic. Into the origin of the state nobody thought it worthwhile to
                inquire before Rome had risen in power and dignity above the other towns of
                Latium. When this was first attempted, not only the events but the laws and
                institutions of the regal period, the old religion with its customs, its gods,
                and even its language, had been forgotten or had become for the most part
                unintelligible. The first connected history of the foundation of Rome of which
                we have any knowledge, that of Fabius Pictor, dates from the time of the second
                Punic war, and is therefore 500 years later than the alleged date for the
                founding of Rome. It is probable, however, that when Fabius wrote, the story of
                Romulus was commonly received; for in the year 458 after the foundation of
                Rome, i.e. 296 B.C., a bronze cast representing the suckling
                she-wolf and the twins was set up at the foot of the Palatine hill. For a
                period therefore of at least four centuries we can discover no trace of the legend
                of Romulus in any monuments or authentic records. There is, for the whole of
                this long period, nothing but oral tradition by which the memory of historical
                events of the time of Romulus could have been preserved and handed down, and to
                oral tradition alone we are therefore compelled to trust if we would make out a
                ‘history’ of the foundation of Rome.
                   We shall not rashly venture on such an undertaking, if
                we bear in mind how fast, and how easily, even in times of great literary
                activity, historical events fall into oblivion, or are strangely distorted by
                the uneducated, whose memory is not guided and corrected by written documents.
                   Now, it cannot be denied that poetry, in the absence
                of writing, is calculated to keep up tradition in a comparatively pure and
                genuine form. Popular songs in praise of traditions, heroes of the past may
                live for centuries in the mouth of the people, and may save many an event from
                oblivion. It has been conjectured, therefore, that there existed in Rome at a
                very early period a great national epic poem, and that the oldest annalists
                drew some of their facts from poems of this sort, which recorded the exploits
                of Romulus and other great men, mixed up with fiction, but by no means entirely
                fictitious. This hypothesis was set up by Niebuhr, and it met with much
                approval. But at present it is almost universally abandoned, and for very good
                reasons. There is in favour of it neither sufficient external evidence nor
                internal probability. The character of the narrative itself speaks against it,
                for, with few exceptions, it is destitute of all poetical elements; it is dry,
                bald, jejune, unimaginative—in one word, unpoetical. It is really nothing more
                than a string of tales, in which an attempt is made to explain old names,
                religious ceremonies and monuments, political institutions and antiquities, and
                to account for their origin.
                   Thus even the name of the founder of Rome is evidently
                derived from the name of the town, not contrariwise, as the legend has it. In a
                similar manner, all the nations of antiquity invented a legendary ancestor for
                themselves; the Dorians claimed descent from Dorus, the Ionians from Ion, the
                Latins from Latinus, and the Sabines from Sabus.
                Of course the Romans had their own progenitor, who appropriately was
                called Romus or Romulus.
                   The miraculous portion of the legend of Romulus, of
                course, does not deserve serious consideration. It is connected with local
                sanctuaries and with the religious conceptions of the shepherds on the Tiber,
                and is not more historical than are the myths of Heracles, Theseus, Janus,
                Saturnus, and Latinus.
                   The story of the asylum is of a different kind. There
                is nothing supernatural in it, and though it was not flattering to the Roman
                pride, it was never doubted by the Romans. Nevertheless, it is not difficult to
                perceive that it deserves no more credit than the legend of the suckling
                she-wolf. It is strange at the very outset that the legend of the asylum is at
                variance with the alleged descent of the Romans from Alba. How can one imagine
                that a colony founded by the heirs of the Alban kings could be so forsaken and
                estranged from the parent town, and so hostile to it, as the legend of the
                asylum would imply? Either the Alban origin is a mere fiction, or the
                population of Rome could not to any large extent be made up of exiles from the
                neighbouring States. But independently of this consideration, the process of
                increasing the population of a town by means of such an asylum for the
                reception of fugitives and outcasts is in the highest degree improbable, and as
                it is not reported to have occurred in any second instance, it must have been
                uncongenial to the national sentiments and the practices of ancient Italy. The
                old Italian communities were by no means open to strangers. They were made up
                of tribes, houses and families firmly bound together, and admitting none but
                hereditary members to participation in the religious rites peculiar to each. It
                is not likely that crowds of vagrants infested the country, nor that an
                organization like that of the Roman patricians, with their tribes, curies,
                and gentes, could have grown out of such
                materials.
                   A still more forcible objection to the authenticity of
                the story of the asylum is the circumstance that the Romans, down to the time
                of the emperors, were practically unacquainted with the Greek custom of taking
                sanctuary, as the word ‘asylum’ shows, which they had to borrow from the
                Greeks. It can therefore hardly be doubted that the story of the asylum first
                arose when Greeks were busy in importing into the history of Rome their notions
                and their fables, their gods and their myths.
                   As according to the legend a part of the male
                population came to Rome through the asylum, so the women were carried off by
                force four months after the foundation of Rome. The story of the rape of the
                Sabines is therefore in a certain degree a parallel to that of the asylum. It
                is without all doubt a pure invention of later times, without the least
                foundation in fact. The date for the rape of the Sabines in the fourth month of
                Rome might seem to point to something like a tradition; but it is in fact only
                the result of the calculation that the festival of the Palilia,
                which was considered the day of the foundation of Rome, fell on the 21st of
                April, whilst that of the Consualia, on which
                the games were celebrated and the women ravished, took place four months later,
                in the month of Sextilis. Cneius Gellius was the
                only annalist who gave the fourth year instead of the fourth month as the date
                of this rape. He wisely thought it somewhat improbable that, after a reign of
                four months, Romulus would have already ventured upon such an act of violence,
                and accordingly he corrected the date given by his predecessors. With so much
                freedom was the pretended history of that time handled. But, unfortunately, it
                is not always so easy to discover the reason for assertions which were so long
                looked upon as simple statements of well-recorded facts.
                   The same freedom appears to be used in dealing with
                the statements as to the number of the ravished Sabines. The old legend
                mentioned only thirty, and traced the names of the thirty Curies to the names
                of these thirty Sabine women. The number thirty, which occurs so often in the
                stories of ancient Rome, betrays their legendary origin. Accordingly it was
                rejected by those who tried as much as possible to turn the legends into
                history. Livy considers thirty too small a number; he thinks there must have
                been many more, and he cannot discover on what grounds the selection was made
                of those whose names were to be given to the thirty Curies. The annalist, Valerius of Antium, who
                is pre-eminent among the Roman historians for circumstantial descriptions of
                unascertainable facts, and who is never at a loss for accurate numbers, informs
                us that the number of the Sabine women was five hundred and twenty-seven. This
                accuracy seems to settle the question. But Valerius found
                a rival in the historian Juba, the son of the Numidian king, who seems to have
                made equally erudite researches in Roman antiquities, and to have discovered
                that 688 was the right number. This uncertainty with regard to dates and
                numbers stamps the story of the rape of the Sabines as void of all historical
                truth. We cannot, therefore, agree with Niebuhr, who thinks he can discover
                some historical facts through this legendary mist. As he supposes, the
                inhabitants of the Palatine had not the right of intermarriage with their
                Sabine neighbours on the Capitoline and the Quirinal. This inferiority of the
                Palatine Romans to the Sabines of the Capitoline and Quirinal hills caused
                discontent and war. The right of intermarriage was obtained by force of arms, and
                this historical fact lies at the bottom of the tale of the rape of the Sabines.
                   Such a method of changing legends into history is of
                very doubtful utility. It seems more natural to explain the legend from the
                customs at the Roman marriage ceremonies. The Roman maiden was carried away
                from her parents by her bridegroom with pretended force; she was led by three
                youths to her new home and lifted over the threshold, her hair having been
                previously parted by the point of a spear. Under compulsion and with sorrow the
                Roman bride entered her husband’s dwelling. A woman could not be married on a
                day sacred to the celestial gods, because violence, lamentation, and mourning
                were as hateful to them as they were acceptable to the deities of the nether
                world. All these references to force and violence are so striking, that the
                ancient writers explained them by referring to the rape of the Sabines. We
                reverse the argument, and trace the story of the rape, which is evidently a
                fable, to the ceremonies which were assuredly customary, and did not arise from
                a single historical event, but from an ancient popular feeling interwoven with
                religious conceptions.
                   The only feature in the story of Romulus which is in a
                certain degree historical is the narrative of the advance of the Sabines under
                Tatius, and of their capture of the Capitol. It cannot be doubted that the
                Sabines, the inhabitants of the central mountains of Italy, penetrated in the
                earliest period into the plains, as they did repeatedly in historical times,
                and it is equally certain that a large portion of the Roman people were of
                Sabine origin. The Latins also, the inhabitants of the plain, were related to
                the Sabines, and had in early times immigrated from their native land. It
                appears that at the time which is assumed as that of the foundation of Rome, a
                body of these bold mountaineers settled on the Quirinal and Capitoline hills.
                The Quirinal indicates by its name, and by many Sabine sanctuaries on it, that
                it was inhabited by Sabines. Sabine altars were likewise consecrated on the
                Capitol. The distinguishing name of these Sabines was Quirites, a word either
                derived from the Sabine word quiris, a
                lance, or from the town of Cures, from which these conquerors are said to have
                come. The Quirites, who settled on the Quirinal and Capitoline hills, were a
                conquering race. Their god Quirinus became identified with Romulus, the
                patronymic hero of the Roman people; and their name of Quirites was joined with
                the name of Romans, to form the official designation of the united people, “the
                Romans and Quirites”. Much in the customs of the Romans may be traced back to
                the Sabines with tolerable certainty. The strict organisation of the Roman
                family, and of the gens, the enlarged family or house, was Sabine; as were also
                the laws of paternal authority and of property—the real groundwork of the Roman
                political discipline. The Roman religion is constantly declared by the Romans
                themselves to be Sabine in its most important elements, and its introduction is
                attributed to the Sabine king Numa. It may therefore be assumed that, at one
                time, when on one or another of the seven hills there were independent Latin
                communities, Sabine conquerors also settled in the same locality. But the Roman
                pride would not allow that Rome had ever been conquered by strangers.
                Accordingly the legend partially obliterates the Sabine invasion and conquest,
                and represents the two nations as joined together by a league between Romulus
                and Tatius; but through the mist of the early traditions, thus much seems
                manifest, that the conviction of a Sabine conquest of Rome was general at a
                very remote period.
                   What is reported of the legislation of Romulus rests
                on the plausible supposition that he, as founder of the state, must also have
                formed the constitution of the state and the groundwork of civil order.
                Accordingly Romulus is said to have divided the people into three tribes,
                the Ramnes, Tities,
                and Luceres; that he formed three centuries of
                knights, of a hundred horsemen each, and a senate of a hundred members, which
                he doubled after the union with the Sabines. In these statements genuine
                traditions are altogether out of the question, inasmuch as irreconcilable
                contradictions prevail most capriciously among the different reports as to the
                original form and meaning of the several institutions. This is particularly
                evident in the reports about the institution of the senate and the origin of
                the three tribes.
                   In the organism of the state the most important member
                after the king was the senate. On this subject, therefore, one would expect
                certain information, however vague the traditions might be in other respects.
                Yet what our authorities say about the formation of the senate and the original
                number of its members shows that they report their speculations as if they were
                facts. Livy relates that Romulus selected a hundred senators, and he knows of
                no further extension in the reign of Romulus. Dionysius says that a hundred
                Sabine senators were added to the senate after the peace with Tatius. Others
                say that the new members only numbered fifty. Plutarch, in one place, makes the
                number of the senators to have been 150, in another 200. It is impossible to
                reconcile such contradictory statements, or to separate what is true in them
                from what is false. Every writer related capriciously, and almost at random,
                what appeared to him most probable, without having the least foundation for his
                assertions, and without even pretending to have trustworthy information.
                   With regard to the mode of appointing the senators,
                the same difference of opinion and the same caprice prevail. While Cicero,
                Livy, and most other authors leave to the king the free choice of the senators,
                the ingenuity of Dionysius has invented a most intricate mode of election. He
                says that each of the three tribes and each of the thirty curies chose three
                senators, and to these ninety-nine Romulus added the hundredth. Dionysius tried
                in this way to solve a difficulty which he felt, and to bring into arithmetical
                harmony the number of the hundred senators with that of the three tribes. In
                later times the senate consisted of three hundred members, and this number
                answers to the number of the three tribes and thirty curies, so that a
                proportion is manifested in the respective numbers which in a certain measure
                makes the senate represent the tribes. The number of a hundred senators,
                therefore, in the time of Romulus, is very surprising. The attempt which
                Dionysius made to solve this difficulty is of course a failure. There can be no
                doubt, that the oldest narrative which ascribed to Romulus the formation of the
                constitution, attributed to him also the nomination of a senate of three
                hundred members, just as it ascribed to him the division of the people into
                three tribes. But the origin of these three tribes (the Ramnes, Tities, and Luceres) is as obscure as everything else. Concerning two
                of them there is indeed tolerable harmony of opinion among all writers, as from
                an apparently self-evident etymology the Romans were universally supposed to be
                the Ramnes of Romulus, and the Tities the Sabines of Tatius. But there is no clue to
                explain the tribe of the Luceres; and hence we
                have an abundance of conjecture. Some thought of the Etruscan Lucumo, whom
                Romulus is said to have brought to his help, and they made out to their own
                satisfaction that the Luceres were the
                Etruscan companions of this Lucumo, or Lucius. Others bethought themselves of
                the grove (lucus) of the asylum of Romulus,
                and made out the Luceres to be those
                strangers, fugitives, and robbers who were attracted to Rome by the protection
                of sanctuary. It would be useless to try to find out the truth. All trustworthy
                materials are wanting, and we should therefore gain nothing if to the old
                conjectures we should add a new one which would only add to our perplexity
                without adding to our knowledge.
                   The long reign of Romulus was by no means
                satisfactorily filled up by the martial deeds and political actions ascribed to
                him. It might be expected that the warlike son of Mars, who, in the midst of
                hostile nations, had trained a band of adventurers into an army and a community
                of warriors, could only have held his ground by constant wars, and must
                therefore have fought many battles and gained many victories. Nothing would
                have been easier for the fertile brain of a Greek than to invent a long succession
                of chequered campaigns and fierce battles, with events of exciting interest,
                like the tales of Theseus or Minos. The sterile imagination of the Roman
                annalists contented itself with borrowing a few traits of later chronicles, and
                ascribing to Romulus two wars, one with Fidenae and one with Veii.
                The town of Fidenae has been of good service to the annalists. Whenever there was little to relate of any
                particular year, there was always a war with Fidenae ready to fill up
                the gap. Accordingly in the annals this town is conquered no less than eight
                times. The war of Romulus with Fidenae is manifestly the same which
                is referred to the year 426 B.C. What we are to think of the war with Veii is
                apparent by the statement that Romulus slew “7,000 enemies with his own hand”.
                Such was the material used to fill up the gaps in the narrative. It is not to
                be wondered at that thoughtful men like Cicero were struck by the emptiness and
                vagueness of the so-called history of the kings, though they were far from discovering
                the real cause.
                   The ancient history of no people is written in the
                order of time, nor do the earliest accounts relate to the oldest periods.
                Curiosity and attention are turned first to events not far distant. The wish is
                then excited to know something of what happened before. Thus going back,
                history arrives by degrees at the foundation of a town, and the origin or
                immigration of a people. But even with this, speculation is not satisfied. It
                endeavours to penetrate into the darkness of the past, and supplies by fiction
                a primeval history, which, as it recedes further and still further, naturally
                becomes more and more cloudy and more and more mythical.
                   Rome also had such a primeval history, which in
                uncritical times was held to be as authentic as that of the kings. It told how,
                in the beginning, King Janus ruled over the shepherds of the district on
                the Janiculus, how Saturnus came to him from
                beyond the sea, taught his people agriculture, reigned on the Saturnian hill
                which was afterwards called the Capitoline, and that it was a time of peace,
                happiness, and justice. Picus, Faunus, and
                Latinus came then in order of succession, and, during the reign of the latter,
                Aeneas came to Latium and founded the Trojan colony in Lavinium.
                The Greeks had also something to say, and they brought their hero Heracles on
                his wanderings from the land of Hesperia with the cattle of Geryon to the banks
                of the Tiber. At that time there ruled on the Palatine, Evander, from Arcadia,
                the “good man”, and in a cave hard by lived Cacus,
                the “bad man” who stole the best oxen of Hercules, and dragged them into his
                cave by their tails, but was killed by the god. If these fables were received
                with less implicit faith than the stories of Romulus, the reason is, not that
                the latter are better authenticated, but because in them fiction is kept more
                within the bounds of probability and nature, and the narrative does not deal so
                much with beings who in later times were recognized only as gods and heroes.
                   The result of the preceding examination is that the
                so-called history of Romulus is wanting in all historical foundation, that not
                one feature in it can be supported by satisfactory evidence, with the single
                exception of the Sabine conquest, and that the details even of this historical
                fact have been lost or obscured by arbitrary fiction.
                    
                 CHAPTER III.
                 The Legend of Numa Pompilius.
                  
                 When Romulus had left the earth and had become a god,
                the fathers met together and nominated intermediate kings from the senate, to
                reign in turn for five days, in the place of the king, till a new king was
                chosen. And this intermediate government or interregnum lasted a whole year;
                for the Romans were at variance with the Sabines and quarrelled about the
                choice of the new king. At last they agreed that a Sabine should be taken, but
                that the Romans should choose him.
                   There lived at that time in the land of the Sabines a
                righteous man called Numa Pompilius, who was honoured and beloved by everyone
                on account of his wisdom and integrity. This man the Romans chose to be king
                over Rome. And when Numa had ascertained the consent of the gods by the flight
                of the holy birds, he called together an assembly of the thirty Curiae, and
                asked them whether they would willingly obey all his commands. Then the people
                consented, and Numa reigned in Rome forty-three years, until his death.
                   Now the Romans were a rude people, whose thoughts were
                intent on war and plunder, and might was more to them than right. Therefore
                Numa was grieved, and he undertook to accustom the people to milder habits, to
                a peaceful life, to strict discipline and justice and fear of the gods. But he
                was wise from his youth upwards, and as a proof of this his hair was grey from
                his birth, and he was trained in all the wisdom of the Greeks; for Pythagoras,
                the wisest of the Greeks, had instructed him. His wife was Egeria, a divine
                Camena; he met her every night in a cave, and she taught him the true worship
                of the gods and the duties of a pious life. He deceived Faunus and Picus, the prophesying spirits of the wood, by wine which
                he poured into the spring from which they drank; and he intoxicated them and bound
                them with fetters, till they told him the secret charms by which they compelled
                Jupiter to reveal his will.
                   But the people did not believe Numa, and mocked him.
                Then he prepared a simple meal, and invited guests to his house, and set before
                them plain food on earthen plates and water in stone bottles. Thereupon
                suddenly all the dishes were changed into silver and gold, the plain food into
                the choicest viands, and the water into wine. Then everyone knew that a divine
                power dwelt in Numa, and they were willing to receive his statutes.
                   Now in order to divert the people from their wild and
                rough life, and to bring them up to piety and righteousness, Numa taught them
                which gods they should adore, and how they should arrange their worship with
                prayers, sacrifices, and hymns, and other pious usages. And all bloody
                sacrifices and all human victims he forbade, and permitted only the fruits of
                the field, simple cakes, and milk and other like offerings to be presented to
                the gods. He allowed no images to be made of the gods, for he taught the people
                to believe that the gods had no bodies, and that as pure spirits they pervaded
                and ruled in the elementary powers of nature. Moreover he told the people what
                prayers, solemn words, and sacrifices they should use in all the concerns of
                their domestic life, and in their intercourse with men; and he ordained that
                the Romans should not undertake anything important without first calling on the
                gods and seeking their favor.
                   Then Numa instituted priests to Jupiter, Mars, and
                Quirinus, whom he called flamines, that
                is, kindlers of fire, because they were to kindle the fires for the sacrifices.
                And for the service of Vesta he chose pure virgins, who had to perform the
                service in the temple and to feed the holy flame on the altar of Vesta, the
                common hearth of the city. And in order to discover the will of the gods he
                instituted the office of augurs, and instructed them in the science of the
                flight of birds. And he appointed many more priests and servants of the altars,
                and prescribed to each what he should do. And that they might all know what was
                right in the service of the gods, and not from ignorance employ the wrong
                prayers, or at the sacrifices and other services leave out or neglect something
                whereby they might incur the anger of the gods and suffer great punishment,
                Numa wrote all his statutes in a book. This he handed over to Numa Marcius, and
                made him chief pontifex, that is, overseer and watcher over the service of the
                gods, and recommended him to pursue the study of divine things, and to guard
                the purity of the religion which he had founded.
                   Numa took care also of the peaceful arts, that the
                people might live by the produce of their labour, and not think of robbing from
                others. For this purpose he divided the land which Romulus had conquered among
                the citizens, and bade them cultivate it; and he consecrated the stones which
                marked the boundaries of the fields, and erected an altar on the Capitoline
                hill to Terminus, the god of boundaries.
                   In the same manner he took care of all artisans in the
                town who possessed no land. He divided them into guilds, and set masters over
                them according to each kind of trade, and set apart for them markets,
                sacrifices, and festivals; and in order that truth and good faith might be
                practiced in common intercourse, and that promises might be kept as sacred as
                oaths, he founded the service of the goddess Fides, or Faith, and built a
                temple to her on the Capitol.
                   While Numa was thus occupied with works of peace, the
                weapons of war lay idle, and the neighbouring people were afraid of disturbing
                the rest of this righteous king. So the gate of Janus remained closed, for it
                was the custom among the Romans to open it only in time of war.
                   Thus the reign of Numa was a time of peace and of
                happiness, and the gods testified their pleasure in the pious king and his
                people; for they guarded the country from all plagues and sicknesses, and they
                sent health and good harvests, and blessing and prosperity upon all that the
                people undertook.
                   Now, when Numa had become old and weak, he died
                calmly, without illness and without pain, and the Romans mourned for him as for
                a father, and buried him on the Janiculus beyond
                the Tiber, on that side which lies towards the west.
                    
                 Critical Examination of the Legend of Numa Pompilius.
                  
                 Numa Pompilius is evidently the complement of Romulus.
                As Romulus was the founder of the state and of political and military order, so
                the legend regards Numa as the founder of the national religion. His uneventful
                reign of thirty-nine or forty-three years was entirely devoted to the
                organization of public worship. All the neighbours lived in peace with the
                righteous king. It was a golden age, in which the gate of Janus remained
                closed, and the sword rested in its sheath. Only the arts of peace were practiced.
                Agriculture and trade prospered. Right and justice ruled. The gods themselves
                held intercourse with the pious priest-king and revealed to him their divine
                wisdom.
                   In this description fiction is so evident that serious
                discussion is almost out of place. The supernatural and the miraculous do not
                challenge more scepticism than the all-prevailing peace in an age of incessant
                wars. That which appears most of all historical, the intercourse of Numa with
                Pythagoras, was invented when it was not known that Pythagoras is said to have
                lived nearly two hundred years after the assumed age of Numa.
                   The idea that the religion of the Romans was created
                by one individual lawgiver who could be named, is even less tenable than that
                the political institutions and the civil order were produced in the brain of
                the founder of the state. The religion of a people is not adventitious or a
                chance attribute. It is one of the essential elements which determine national
                individuality and national existence. It is impossible to imagine a people
                without religious conceptions and practices. It can be shown that the Roman
                religion is older in its principal features than the Roman state, and older
                even than the Roman people, as we find it in Rome and in Latium. It is
                essentially Italian, common to all the branches of the Sabine stock, as are
                also the elements of the Roman language. It cannot, therefore, have originated
                in Rome. The Romans brought it with them into the valley of the Tiber, and
                there was no period of time when the Roman state existed without the religious
                forms which were ascribed to Numa. Accordingly the legend of Romulus mentions
                not only some of the principal deities, as Jupiter, Janus, Faunus, and Vesta,
                but also the auguries, the most important part of the Roman state religion.
                Other parts of the Roman ceremonial law were ascribed to other kings, as for instance
                that which regulated the intercourse with neighbouring people, and especially
                prescribed the form of the declaration of war. As this did not seem to suit the
                peace-loving Noma, the Roman legend-makers did not hesitate to ascribe it to
                King Tullus or Ancus, of whom there were at least wars to relate.
                   As the personality of Numa resolves itself into that
                of an ideal priest-king, the founder of the sacred rites and laws, whom the
                pontifices, the keepers and guardians of these laws, regarded as their legislator,
                it follows that the law books, which in later times contained the precepts and
                were attributed to Numa, cannot have been genuine. Writings of this kind
                belong, it is true, to the oldest products of civilization; nevertheless, it is
                certain that what passed in Rome as writings of Numa Pompilius, did not
                originate even in the regal period. It is tolerably certain that at that time
                the art of writing was not yet practiced in Rome, but was brought from Southern
                Italy shortly before the downfall of the monarchy. In the uncritical ages of
                the republic, nobody hesitated to ascribe to the kings any documents which
                seemed to be very ancient. Even an audacious forgery belonging to the year 181
                B.C. seems to have been looked upon as a genuine document. In that year a stone
                coffin, containing Greek and Latin writings of Numa on religious and
                philosophical subjects, was discovered in a field at the foot of the Janiculus. But their contents appeared to the Praetor
                Q. Petillius to be so much at variance with
                the prevailing religious views, and with the whole system of the state
                religion, that, with the consent of the senate, he ordered the books to be
                publicly burned. They were evidently considered as real, in spite of their
                being written on paper, which was not used for writing for many centuries after
                the alleged time of Numa, and although the paper looked quite new and fresh.
                Nobody seems to have been surprised that in Numa’s time—long
                before Greek prose was written in Greece—Romans should have written Greek fluently.
                Nor did it apparently seem surprising that Numa’s Latin
                was so smooth and easy to be read, although the priests themselves were not
                able to understand the hymns ascribed to the same Numa. The pretended discovery
                was evidently a scheme for the purpose of religious innovation, but the whole
                of the Roman people took for granted, with childlike simplicity, the
                authenticity of the writings of Numa. This occurrence in the year 181 BC, 500
                years after Numa, shows what care is needed in the examination of the
                statements of the Roman chroniclers concerning their older history, before we
                can receive them as well-founded and credible.   
                    
                 CHAPTER IV.
                 The Legend of Tullus Hostilius.
                  
                 After Numa’s death
                the Romans chose for their king Tullus Hostilius, the grandson of Hostus
                Hostilius, who had fought in the battle with the Sabine, Mettius Curtius. Now the
                time of peace and quietness was at an end, for Tulius was not like Numa, but
                like Romulus, and he loved war and glory beyond everything. Therefore he looked
                for causes of dispute among the neighbours, for he thought that in a long peace
                the Romans would grow effeminate, and lose their ancient courage.
                   Now when some Roman and Alban country people quarrelled
                with one another, and each one accused the other of robbery, and each
                complained that he suffered wrong, Tulius sent fetiales,
                or heralds, to Alba, to demand compensation for the plunder. The Albans did the
                same, and sent messengers to Rome to complain and to insist on justice.
                   Then Tulius employed a fraud; for he received the
                messengers with great kindness and treated them with such hospitality that they
                delayed the execution of their disagreeable commission. But the Roman fetiales who were sent to Alba, demanded without delay
                satisfaction from the Albans, and when this was refused they declared war in
                the name of the Roman people. When Tulius heard of this, he asked the Alban
                ambassadors what their commission was, and, having heard it, he sent them home
                without satisfaction, because the Albans had first refused it, and had thus
                provoked an unjust war. Now the Romans and Albans met together in the field.
                The Albans, led by their king Cluilius, encamped
                with their army on the frontier of the Roman territory, and made a deep trench
                round their camp. And the trench was called, for ever after, the trench
                of Cluilius. But in the following night the king
                of Alba died. Then they chose in his place a dictator, whose name was Mettius Fufetius.
                   Now when Tullus advanced, and the two armies stood
                arrayed against one another, and the bloody fight between the kindred nations
                was about to begin, the leaders came forward and consulted together, and
                determined to decide the war by a single combat of Albans and Romans, that so
                much blood might not be spilt. There were by chance in the Roman army three
                brothers born at one birth, and likewise in the Alban army three brothers born
                at one birth. These were the sons of twin sisters, and equal in age and
                strength. Therefore they were chosen as the combatants, and the Romans and
                Albans bound themselves by a sacred oath that the nation whose champions should
                be victorious should rule over the other. Then began the decisive battle
                between the three Horatii, who fought on the
                side of the Romans, and the three Curiatii, who
                fought for the Albans. Quite at the beginning two of the Horatii fell and the three Curiatii were
                all wounded. Then the surviving Horatius took to flight, and the Curiatii pursued him. But he turned suddenly round and
                killed the one of the three who was the most slightly wounded and had hurried
                on before the others. Then he ran towards the second and conquered him also,
                and at last he killed the third, who, on account of his wounds, was able to
                pursue him but very slowly. Then the Romans rejoiced and welcomed Horatius as
                conqueror, and they collected the spoils of the slain Curiatii and
                carried them before Horatius, and led him in triumph to Rome.
                   When the procession came near the gate of the city,
                the sister of Horatius went forth to meet it. She was betrothed to one of
                the Curiatii who had been killed.
                And when she saw the bloody coat of her lover, which she herself had
                embroidered, she sobbed and moaned and cursed her brother.
                   At this Horatius fell into a violent rage, and drew
                his sword and stabbed his sister, because she had wept over a fallen enemy. But
                the blood of the slain sister called for vengeance, and Horatius was accused
                before the criminal judge, who sentenced him to death. The people, however,
                rejected the sentence of the judge out of compassion for the old father of
                Horatius, who would thus lose three of his children in one day, and because
                they would not that the man should be led to death who had ventured his life
                for the greatness of his native country, and had gained the victory over Alba
                with his own hand. But to atone for the death of his sister, Horatius had to do
                public penance, to pass under a yoke, and to offer up expiatory sacrifices to
                the manes of his murdered sister. The beam of the yoke under which Horatius
                went, remained as a token till the latest times, and was called the “sister
                beam”. But the memory of the heroism of Horatius was also preserved; and the
                arms of the Curiatii were hung up on a
                pillar in the Forum; and the pillar was called the pillar of Horatius for all
                time.
                   Thus Alba became subject to Rome, and the Albans were
                obliged to help the Romans in their wars. But Mettius Fufetius, the dictator of the Albans, meditated treason,
                and hoped to overthrow the power of Rome. Therefore, when war had broken out
                between the Romans and the Etruscans of Fidenae and Veii, and when
                the Romans and Albans stood opposite to the enemy, and the battle was raging
                fiercely, Mettius kept his army back from
                the fight, and hoped that the Romans would be subdued. But Tullus, perceiving
                the treason, bade his soldiers be of good courage, and conquered the Etruscans.
                And when Mettius came to him after the
                battle to wish him joy on account of the victory, thinking that Tullus had not
                discovered his treachery, Tullus ordered him to be seized and torn to pieces by
                horses, as a punishment for wavering in his fidelity between the Romans and
                their enemies. Then the Albans were disarmed, and Tullus sent horsemen to Alba,
                who burned the whole town, with the exception of the temples, and led the
                inhabitants away to Rome. From that time Alba Longa was desolate, but the
                Albans became Roman citizens, and their nobles were received among the
                patricians, and Albans and Romans became one people, as at one time the Romans
                and the Sabines had become under the dominion of Romulus.
                   After this Tullus waged many wars with his neighbours,
                the Etruscans and the Sabines, and he became proud and haughty, and forgot the
                gods and their service, and regarded not justice and the precepts of Numa.
                Therefore the gods sent a plague among the people, and at last they smote him
                also with a grievous disease. Then he became aware that he had sinned, and he
                tried to investigate the will of Jupiter according to the spells of Numa. But
                Jupiter was wroth at his sinful attempt,
                and struck him with lightning, and destroyed his house, so that it left no
                trace behind. Thus ended Tullus Hostilius, after he had been king for
                thirty-two years; and Ancus Marcius, the grandson of Numa Pompilius, succeeded
                him in the kingdom.
                    
                 Critical Examination of the Legend of Tullus
                Hostilius.
                    
                 As Romulus is the hero of the legend which refers to
                the foundation of the city, and as the introduction of religious order is
                ascribed to Numa, so the name of Tullus Hostilius serves to introduce the
                legend of the destruction of Alba Longa in Roman history. There was nothing
                else to be related of Tullus Hostilius. All the rest which is told of him is a
                repetition of the story of Romulus in a slightly changed form; and even the
                Alban war, as we shall presently see, reminds us so much of the legend of
                Romulus, that it loses its weight as evidence to prove the real existence of
                King Tullus Hostilius.
                   The position of Alba in Roman history is an inexplicable
                mystery. Rome is described as a colony of Alba, but from the moment of the
                foundation of Rome, Alba completely disappears. The legend mentions nothing of
                any assistance of the parent town in the pressing danger that Rome was in, nor
                does it explain how Romulus was shut out from the throne of Alba after the race
                of Aeneas became extinct with Numitor. Under Romulus and Numa, Alba and Rome
                were entire strangers to each other, and in the legend of the fall of that town
                no Silvii are reigning there, but C. Cluilius, or Mettius Pufetius as praetor or dictator.
                   In like manner the story of the conquest of Alba by
                the Romans under Tullus does not agree with the fact that the Romans
                subsequently were not in possession of the Alban territory. The Latins hold their
                federal meetings near the ruins of Alba, at the spring of Ferentina, whence Niebuhr draws the conclusion that Alba
                was not destroyed by Rome, but by its revolted Latin subjects. But in the utter
                lack of trustworthy testimony, and even probable tradition, it would be lost
                labour to investigate more minutely the discrepancies and contradictions of
                these prehistoric legends, with the object of finding in them historical truth.
                   The story of the destruction of Alba, which is, as we
                have seen, at variance with the events supposed to have preceded and followed
                it, bears moreover in itself the stamp of fiction. It turns upon the combat
                between the Horatii and the Curiatii, who, by their relationship as sons of twin
                sisters, represent symbolically the blood connection between the Romans and the
                Albans. Thus the twin brothers Romulus and Remus had fought for the possession
                of power. The Romans and Sabines, who had become related by intermarriage,
                fought in a similar manner under Romulus and Tatius. At that time the chief
                combatants of the two nations were Hostus Hostilius and Mettius Curtius; and it is
                significant that these two men are mentioned by name, whereas in general so
                very few names occur in the ancient legends. In the oldest form the war between
                Sabines and Romans was most likely described as settled by single combat, after
                the general battle was stopped by the intervention of the women. And it is
                clear, from the slightly altered names of the chiefs, that the legends of
                Romulus and of Tullus are in reality simply two versions of the same story. In
                the Hostus Hostilius of the army of Romulus we easily recognize the King Tullus
                Hostilius, and the Sabine Mettius Curtius turns up again as Mettius Fufetius. Now, if we reflect that the Albans were of Sabine
                origin, we cannot fail to recognize in the story of Romulus and Tullus a
                tradition referring to the union of the Romans with the Sabines. For the Albans
                are transferred to Rome, and the city is doubled, just as it was under Romulus.
                   Legendary history plays in the most lively colours,
                and these sometimes change most unexpectedly. Seen from different points of
                view, a story frequently turns into the very opposite. An example of this is
                exhibited in the story of the Sabine war of Tullus Hostilius. At the festival
                of Feronia in the country of the Sabines, frequented by many strangers on
                account of the games and the traffic, Roman citizens were robbed and taken
                prisoners by the Sabines. The Sabines would not listen to the ambassadors of
                Tullus, and the consequence was a war between the two nations. Here we have the
                corresponding picture to the rape of the Sabine women. Instead of women, men
                are carried away; instead of Sabines, Romans are the victims; instead of its
                taking place in Rome, it takes place in the land of the Sabines.
                   If the stories of the war of Tullus with the Albans
                and Sabines are only different forms of the same legend which figured in the
                tale of Romulus as the Sabine war, there remains nothing peculiar to Tullus
                Hostilius, and he appears only as the shadow of Romulus. Even the ancients
                recognized the similarity between the two, as they were also struck with that
                between Numa Pompilius and Ancus Marcius. In the story of Tullus, it is true,
                all that is wonderful and supernatural is suppressed; but his identity with
                Romulus is nevertheless manifest. He, like Romulus, grows up among the
                shepherds. Like Romulus, he wages war with Fidenae and Veii. Like
                Romulus, he doubles the number of Roman citizens and joins the Mons Coelius to the city, he organizes the army, he
                introduces the insignia of royal power, an act which is ascribed to Romulus and
                also to Tarquinius Priscus. Even in his conquest of Alba, he is anticipated by
                Romulus, who in some versions of the legend appears to have caused the
                destruction of that town. According to some accounts, Romulus degenerated into
                a tyrant; of Tullus this is the common report. Finally the identity of the two
                warlike kings appears in their death. They were both removed from the earth in
                the midst of thunder and lightning, and were never seen again.
                   The legend Thus, wherever we begin, and whichever
                portion we examine of the legends of Romulus and Tullus, we arrive always at
                the same result; viz., that the alleged histories of these two kings are simply
                different versions of the same old legend, in which the most careful research
                can discover no trace of genuine historical truth.
                    
                  
                 CHAPTER V.
                 The Legend of Ancus Marcius.
                  
                 Ancus Marcius was a just and peaceful king, and his
                first care was to restore the service of the gods, according to the precepts of
                Numa; for Tullus had not honoured them, nor kept their worship pure. For this
                reason Ancus caused the sacred laws of Numa to be written on wooden tablets,
                and to be exhibited before the people; and he endeavoured to preserve peace and
                the peaceful arts, as Numa had done, whose example he wished to follow in all
                things.
                   But it was not vouchsafed to him always to avoid war.
                For when the Latins heard that Tullus was succeeded by a peace-loving king, who
                passed his time quietly at home in prayer and sacrifice, they fell upon the
                country of the Romans, and thought they could plunder it with impunity. Then
                Ancus left the management of the public worship to the priests, and took up
                arms, and fought with his enemies, and conquered their towns and destroyed
                them. And many of the inhabitants he brought to Rome, and gave them dwellings
                on the Aventine hill. Therefore Ancus enlarged the city, and dug a deep trench
                in that part where the slope of the hills was not steep enough to protect Rome
                from her enemies. After this he fortified the hill Janiculus on
                the right bank of the Tiber, and built a wooden bridge over the river; and he
                conquered all the land between Rome and the sea, and planted a colony at the
                mouth of the Tiber, which he called Ostia, and made there a harbour for
                sea-going ships. And when Ancus had been king for four-and-twenty years, he
                died calmly and happily like Numa, and the Romans honoured his memory, for he
                was just in time of peace, and courageous and victorious in time of war.
                    
                 Critical examination of the
                Legend of Ancus Marcius.
                    
                 The story of Ancus Marcius is entirely destitute of
                miracles. All events lie within the bounds of possibility, perhaps even of
                probability. But in proportion as it is credible, it is scanty. The story
                contains nothing characteristic, there is nothing in it which could call forth
                surprise or admiration, horror or fear, and might on that account live for
                centuries in the mouth of the people. Ancus is the dullest and most prosaic of
                all the Roman kings.
                   He is called the grandson of Numa, and is indeed only
                a second Numa. As such he betrays himself by his name Marcius, for this is the
                name of Numa Marcius, the first high pontiff, and friend of king Numa, to whom
                Numa confided the sacred books; in reality this Numa Marcius is the same person
                as Numa Pompilius, and appears as an independent person only because the
                founder of the Roman religion was represented sometimes as a priest and
                sometimes as a king. The legend clearly identifies Ancus with the royal priest,
                for it makes him literally a bridge-builder (pontifex) by ascribing to him the
                building of the first wooden bridge over the Tiber.
                   It is especially in his priestly functions that Ancus
                coincides with his supposed grandfather Numa. He discharges the duties of a
                priest in person, he causes the ceremonial law to be recorded, he introduces
                the international law of the fetials, he
                endeavours to maintain peace, he encourages agriculture, and lastly he and Numa
                were the only two Roman kings who died a natural death. The story of Ancus is
                stripped of the miraculous element. Even the account of the uninterrupted peace
                which prevailed during the reign of Numa is not repeated without modifications.
                Ancus is represented as peaceful, but at the same time as ready and able to
                fight. There is by this means nothing left to provoke scepticism, while at the
                same time an opportunity is given to attribute to this king the introduction of
                the fetials, and the laws of peace and war.
                Hence a war with the Latins is attributed to Ancus, in which he is said to have
                conquered four a towns, and to have transplanted their inhabitants to Rome.
                Dionysius, moreover, tells long and tedious stories of wars with Fidenae,
                the Sabines, Volscians, and Veientines, with all
                of which wars Livy is unacquainted. What is further related of Ancus, viz.,
                that he built a prison, founded Ostia, and established saltworks, belongs to a
                class of statements which, for reasons that are not always intelligible,
                the annalists apparently referred at
                random, now to one king, now to another. Thus, for instance, the excavation of
                a trench (the so-called Fossa Quiritium) is
                ascribed not to Ancus alone, but to Numa, to Servius Tullius, and
                Tarquinius Superbus, with this difference, that
                it is called at one time a sewer constructed in Rome, at another a ditch for
                the fortification of the Quirinal, at another a ditch surrounding Ostia. Thus
                the credit of having added the hill Coelius to
                the town is claimed for Romulus, for Tullus Hostilius, for Ancus Marcius, and
                for the elder Tarquin. The Etruscan captain, Coeles Vibenna, from whom the name of the hill is generally
                derived, has no settled place in the chronicles of the regal period, and by
                Festus is even split into two persons, called respectively Coeles and Vibenna.
                According to Dionysius, Varro, and Paulus Diaconus,
                he came to Rome under Romulus; according to Tacitus, under Tarquinius Priscus.
                   What we have said is sufficient to show the worth of
                the alleged history of Ancus Marcius. We might now take leave of this king, if
                the high authority of Niebuhr did not compel us to examine an hypothesis
                concerning the origin of the Roman plebs, which he has ventured to base on the
                story of King Ancus, and which has been adopted by most modern historians.
                   The ancients, and all modern writers before Niebuhr,
                were opinion that from its very beginning the Roman people consisted of
                patricians and plebeians. According to this view the plebeians were clients,
                that is, dependants or tenants of the patricians, bound to perform special
                services, in return for which they enjoyed the protection of the patricians,
                especially in cases of legal prosecutions.
                   This view, though simple and intelligible, is rejected
                by Niebuhr as untenable, and altogether wrong. He puts in its place a theory
                for which no evidence can be found in the ancient writers, and which has not
                even the merit of clearness, simplicity, and probability. According to this
                theory, there was at first no plebs in Rome at all, and the people consisted
                only of patricians and clients. It was Ancus Marcius, according to Niebuhr, who
                added the plebs to the original inhabitants, by transplanting the conquered
                Latins to Rome, under new conditions and on a new legal footing, neither
                placing them as patricians and clients in the existing three tribes of Ramnes, Tities, and Luceres, nor making a new tribe of them, as Tullus had done
                with the Albans, but forming them into a distinct class of citizens, with
                peculiar rights and duties. From this time forward there were three classes of
                citizens in Rome,—the patricians, their clients, and the plebeians, whose
                political contests make up the principal part of the internal history of Rome.
                To establish this theory Niebuhr brings the following arguments.
                   In historical times the Aventine Hill was the
                principal quarter of the Roman plebs. This hill was peopled by Ancus Marcius
                with the conquered Latins. Ancus was unable to form them into a new tribe; for,
                by the establishment of the third tribe, that of the Luceres under
                Tullus Hostilius, the framework of political organization was complete, and
                could be disturbed no more. Ancus was consequently compelled to create a new
                legal status for the citizens whom he had incorporated, and this he did by
                placing them as plebeians by the side of the patricians and their clients.
                   This reasoning is exposed to several serious
                objections;
                   1. The plebeians did not dwell on the Aventine alone,
                but in every part of the city, and especially in the country.
                   2. The Aventine and the valley which lay between it
                and the Palatine were far too small to receive the many thousand Latins whom
                Ancus is said to have settled there.
                   3. It was not before the Icilian law,
                fifty-one years after the expulsion of the kings, that the Aventine appears to
                have become the principal plebeian quarter. Up to that time it had been mostly
                arable land and pasture.
                   4. The story of the transplanting of conquered
                populations to Rome deserves no credit. It is not at all probable that the
                cultivators of the surrounding districts were taken away from their fields and
                their farms, and made to live in the city, where they could only be a useless
                rabble. Nor can we imagine that a hostile population, just conquered in war,
                were transplanted in great numbers to Rome to be settled on such a hill as the
                Aventine, which formed a respectable stronghold, where they might have become
                troublesome or dangerous. In historical times the Romans were accustomed to
                adopt a policy the very reverse of that ascribed to Ancus. Instead of carrying
                their conquered enemies to Rome, they sent Roman colonists into the conquered
                towns. The unauthenticated accounts of the regal period which speak of the
                reception of Sabines, Albans, and Latins in Rome, are either invented to
                explain the alleged rapid growth of the city, or they proceed from a
                misunderstanding. The expression that the conquered Latins were received into
                the city, implying that they were made Roman citizens, may have been
                erroneously interpreted as meaning that they were bodily transferred to Rome.
                   5. There is no ground for supposing that the conquered
                Latins were received under conditions different from those under which the
                alleged transfer of Albans took place under Tullus, even if we allow, for
                argument’s sake, that they were brought to Rome at all by Ancus. If it be true,
                as Niebuhr supposes, that Tullus formed the tribe of the Luceres out of the Albans, it is difficult to see why
                Ancus could not have formed a fourth tribe out of the Latins, or what prevented
                him from distributing them equally among the three existing tribes.
                   6. There was no difference in historical times, in
                point of constitutional rights, between Clients and Plebeians. It is a
                groundless assumption that any such difference existed in the time of the early
                kings, of which we possess no authenticated records.
                   7. All accounts concerning King Ancus are
                unhistorical. If Ancus was only the reflected image of Numa, and Numa himself
                only the personification of an imaginary religious lawgiver, the story of the
                settlement of Latins in Rome falls to the ground, and it would be unsafe to
                base upon such doubtful facts any hypothesis about the origin and the rights of
                the different classes of citizens in ancient Rome. The stories of Tullus
                Hostilius and Ancus Marcius are like shadowy forms, which vanish into nothing
                as we approach them. Perhaps even the names and the order of succession of the
                seven kings, and the character of the story, as it is found in Livy and
                Dionysius, are the result of mere chance. By some other chance Romulus might
                have been succeeded by Servius, and instead of Tullus the third king might have
                been called Coelius. We must altogether cast
                aside the notion that the neatly adjusted series of events in the regal period
                is even so much as an outline of real events. The whole history of the kings is
                of the regal worthless in its detail. All that we can hope to do is to form
                from the various materials a rough picture of the Roman people, its
                constitution and religion, at the beginning of the republic. But how the
                different parts arose one after another, how they were modified and enlarged,
                is not to be learnt from the traditional story of the kings. The ancients
                themselves knew nothing of it, and endeavoured to supply by guesses the want of
                evidence.
                   Whether with such a view as this we gain or lose is a
                question with which we are not concerned; for the search after truth is
                independent of all calculations of the possible gain. Yet it is a real gain to
                get rid of deception, and to draw the line between that which precedes and that
                which follows the beginning of genuine history.
                    
                  
                 CHAPTER VI.
                 The Legend of Lucius
                Tarquinius Priscus.
                    
                 At the time when Ancus Marcius was king, there lived
                in the town of Tarquinii, in the land of the Etruscans, a rich and intelligent
                man called Lucumo, the son of Demaratus, a noble of the race of the Bacchiads of Corinth, who had been driven by the
                tyrant Kypselos out of his native town, and
                had fled to Etruria. Now, because Lucumo was the son of a stranger, the people
                of Tarquinii despised him, and refused him every place of honour and dignity.
                His wife Tanaquil therefore advised him to leave the town of Tarquinii and to
                emigrate to Rome, where strangers were kindly received. Thus Lucumo went to
                Rome. And when he had come to the hill of Janiculus,
                near the town, an eagle shot down from the air, and took his hat from his head
                and flew away with it; and after he had wheeled about for a time over the
                carriage in which Lucumo and his wife Tanaquil sat, he flew down again and
                replaced the hat on the head of Lucumo. Then Tanaquil, who was familiar with
                heavenly signs, knew that her husband was destined to attain high honors in Rome.
                   Now in Rome Lucumo altered his name, and called
                himself Lucius Tarquinius, after his native town, and he was soon highly
                regarded, for he was wise in council, himself courageous in war, as well as
                kind and generous towards his inferiors. For this reason King Ancus took him
                for his counsellor, confided to him the most weighty matters, and before he
                died appointed him the guardian of his sons. Then Tarquinius so contrived that
                the people chose him, and not one of the sons of Ancus, for their king; and
                thus the divine omen which Tanaquil, his wife, had explained to him, was
                fulfilled.
                   Now when Tarquinius had become king, he carried on w
                with the Latins and conquered many of their towns. He made war also on the
                Sabines, who had invaded the Roman country with a large and powerful army, and
                had penetrated even to the walls of the city. And when Tarquinius was at war
                with them and was in great danger, he vowed a temple to Jupiter, and so he
                overcame his enemies. Then he waged war against the Etruscans, and subdued the
                whole land of Etruria, so that the Etruscans recognised him as their king and
                sent him the royal insignia, the golden crown, the sceptre, the ivory chair,
                the embroidered tunic, and the purple toga, and the twelve axes in the bundles
                of rods. Thus these emblems of royal power came to Rome, and remained to the
                Roman kings as a sign of their dominion over the people.
                   when all enemies were conquered, and Rome had
                increased in power, in size, and in the number of its citizens, Tarquinius
                determined to arrange the people anew and to appoint other tribes in the place
                of the tribes of the Ramnes, the Tities, and the Luceres which
                Romulus had ordained. But the gods sent unfavourable signs, and the augur Attus Navius opposed
                the king, and forbade an alteration of the old division of the people against
                the will of the gods. Then Tarquinius thought to mock and to humble the augur,
                and told him to consult the sacred birds, whether what he had now in his mind
                could come to pass. And when Attus Navius had consulted the birds and had obtained a
                favourable answer, Tarquinius gave him a whetstone and a razor, and said, “This
                is what I had in my mind; you shall cut through the stone with this knife”.
                Then Attus cut the stone through with the
                knife and compelled Tarquinius to give up his intentions. But the knife and the
                stone were buried in the Forum, and hard by the spot a statue of Attus Navius was set up
                in remembrance of the miracle he wrought.
                   As Tarquinius could not alter the names of the old
                tribes nor increase their number, he doubled the number of the noble houses in
                each tribe, and called those which he now admitted the younger houses of
                the Ramnes, the Tities,
                and the Luceres. And the centuries of the
                knights he doubled also, and the senate, so that the division of the people
                which Romulus had made remained unaltered with the old names, only in each
                division was the number of the houses doubled.
                   And to fulfil the vow that he had made in the war with
                the Sabines, Tarquinius began to build a temple to Jupiter on the Capitoline
                hill. And he levelled a place on the hill to lay the foundation of the temple.
                And as they were digging into the mountain, they found a human head. This was
                interpreted as a sign that that place should be the head of all the earth. And
                the old sanctuaries which stood in the place where the temple of Jupiter was to
                be built were transferred to other places, according to the sacred rites which
                the pontifices prescribed. But the altars of the god of youth and of the god of
                boundaries could not be transferred, so they had to be left in their places,
                and were enclosed in the temple of Jupiter. This was a sign that the
                boundary-line of the Roman commonwealth would never recede, and that its youth
                would be everlasting.
                   Tarquinius built large sewers underground, and drained
                the lower valleys of the city which lay between the hills, and which, till
                then, were marshy and uninhabitable. And in the valley between the Capitoline
                and the Palatine hills, he laid out the Forum for a market-place, and
                surrounded it with covered walks and booths. He drained also the valley of
                Murcia, between the Aventine and the Palatine, and there he levelled a
                race-course, and introduced games like those of the Etruscans. These were
                celebrated every year, and were called the Roman games. Thus Tarquinius gained
                great renown in peace and in war, and he reigned for thirty-seven years, until
                he reached a great age.
                    
                 Critical examination of the
                Legend of Tarquinius Priscus.
                    
                 The story of Tarquinius Priscus has at the first
                glance the appearance of a plausible historical tradition. Yet upon closer
                examination this picture also vanishes before our eyes, and resolves itself
                into the elements of legend and fiction. There are two distinct political
                measures which, apart from his wars, are ascribed to Tarquinius Priscus;
                namely, the alterations he made in the constitution, and the works and
                buildings with which he improved the town. With reference to the former,
                Tarquinius appears like another Romulus or Tullus Hostilius, and with reference
                to the latter he is identical with Tarquinius Superbus.
                   The substance of the internal reform is nothing more
                than a doubling of the number of citizens, and is, therefore, a measure similar
                to those which are ascribed to Romulus after the Sabine war, and to Tullus
                after the conquest of Alba. Nor is it possible to discover in the acts of the
                three kings any essential difference. Different writers represent the
                innovation in different ways, namely:—
                   1. As a doubling of the three old tribes of the Ramnes, the Tities, and
                the Luceres.
                   2. As a doubling of the corresponding three centuries
                of knights.
                   3. As an increase of the senate.
                 These different representations do not contradict each
                other. For as the tribes, the centuries of knights, and the senate were all
                organized on the basis of the threefold division of the people, in such manner
                that the numbers of each were three, or multiples of three, it is clear that an
                alteration in any one of these parts implied a corresponding alteration in the
                other parts. It was therefore sufficient for a writer to refer to the change in
                one or the other body in order to characterise the whole reform. Now, as the
                writers of the republican period had but a dim recollection of the old tribes
                of Ramnes, Tities,
                and Luceres, but were familiar with the
                centuries of knights, they naturally, for the most part, represent the reform
                of Tarquinius Priscus exclusively with reference to the change which he made in
                these centuries.
                   We find that even the ancients endeavoured to
                harmonise the increase of the knights effected by Tarquinius with the
                traditions concerning the number of knights under Romulus and Tullus Hostilius.
                Modern writers have followed in the same track, which in the end could only
                lead to the discovery that the traditional numbers reported with reference to
                the gradual increase of the knights are not derived from positive testimony,
                but are only worked out to show the gradual development of the organization as
                it existed at a later period, and that all the statements with reference to it
                are the result of conjectural calculation.
                   It is not difficult to prove that this is perfectly
                true. In the constitution of Servius there were eighteen centuries or companies
                of knights, namely, six old centuries— the so-called six “suffrages”, which are
                generally supposed to be the original patrician centuries of knights—and twelve
                new centuries. Romulus had at first made only three such centuries. It was,
                therefore, requisite to show how the later number had gradually arisen out of
                the former. The process was supposed to be the following. The 300 knights of
                the three centuries of Romulus were doubled after the conquest of Alba by
                Tullus Hostilius, and brought, therefore, to the number of 600. Tullus left the
                old centuries of Ramnian, Titian, and Luceran knights unchanged in name and organization. He
                effected his purpose by simply doubling the number of knights in each century.
                His proceeding, therefore, was precisely the same as that ascribed to
                Tarquinius Priscus.
                   The next step was taken by Tarquinius, who acted like
                his predecessor, and, without altering either name or organization, doubled the
                number of 600, composing the three centuries of Ramnian,
                Titian, and Luceran knights, which Tullus
                Hostilius had formed. He had, therefore, now 1,200 knights nominally in three
                centuries, but really in twelve centuries, and these are the twelve centuries
                of knights which are found in the constitution of Servius Tullius apart from
                the six suffrages. This is the report of Festus, and there is perfect order and
                symmetry in this calculation. But unfortunately it is contradicted by the
                statement of Livy, which appears to have been more generally accepted, that
                Servius Tullius, when he reorganized the constitution, did not find twelve but
                six centuries of knights, viz., the six old suffrages, and that he added to
                them twelve new centuries of knights. This view cannot be made to agree with
                the statements which ascribe a doubling of the number of knights, first to
                Tullus Hostilius, and then to Tarquinius Priscus, for the rules of arithmetic
                are inexorable, and according to them twice three are six, and twice six are
                twelve. We are lost here in a labyrinth, out of which we can extricate
                ourselves only by the discovery that the doubling of the original three
                centuries, which according to all accounts took place at one time or another,
                was erroneously ascribed by some writers to Tullus Hostilius, by others to
                Tarquinius, and that by later compilers these statements were combined. Thus
                the number of the centuries of the knights being supposed to have been doubled
                twice, no longer agreed with the commonly received accounts of the Servian
                constitution.
                   The same difficulties present themselves if we attempt
                to explain the gradual increase of the number of senators from 100 under
                Romulus to 800 under Tarquinius. According to the common account, the senate of
                Romulus consisted at first of 100 members. This number was doubled after the
                union with the Sabines. At the accession of Tarquinius, accordingly, the senate
                counted 200 members. The usual number afterwards was 300. It was therefore
                clear that Tarquinius did not double the number of senators, as by doing so he
                would have raised their number to 400. Consequently it was alleged that he only
                added 100 members. Yet we find it also stated that Tarquin doubled the number
                of senators. To make this statement tally with the normal number of 800, it was
                necessary to suppose that before the time of Tarquin the senate consisted of
                150 members. These, again, were made to consist of 100 Roman senators appointed
                by Romulus, and fifty Sabines added to the original 100 after the union of the
                two nations. It is evident that all these calculations and theories are
                worthless. Wherever we turn, and whatever part of the narrative we examine,
                everywhere we meet with contradictions and impossibilities, which one and all
                arise from the circumstance that the doubling of the number of citizens was
                related several times instead of being related once. That this duplication took
                place at one time seems to be certain. The memory of it was kept alive by the
                designation of senior and junior houses. But whenever this union really took
                place, it doubled the patrician houses and the number of fighting men only
                once. It raised the army from one legion to two, and the knights from 300 to
                600. It made no alteration in the existing division of the people into three
                tribes, which seems to have been primeval. All attempts to trace a successive
                development of the fundamental, political, and military organization under
                Tullus Hostilius and Tarquinius Priscus break down and involve us in
                inextricable confusion. The fact is that these two kings are not historical but
                legendary, and the actions and measures ascribed to them are repetitions of the
                actions and measures of the ideal founder of the city.
                   As to the public works of Tarquinius Priscus they are
                the ascribed not only to him, but also to the younger Tarquin. This
                contradiction was supposed to be removed by the hypothesis that the elder
                Tarquin began, and the younger finished them—an idea plausible enough, because
                the grandeur of such works as the public sewers and the Capitoline temple seems
                to have surpassed the resources of one king. But this hypothesis will hardly
                command our approval when we bear in mind that, according to the usual
                statement, these works were interrupted and at a standstill during the whole
                period of the reign of Servius Tullius. It is clear that the oldest tradition
                ascribed those works simply to King Tarquinius. Afterwards, when instead of one
                Tarquinius, two kings of that name were inserted into the list of Roman
                sovereigns, and for the sake of distinction were denominated respectively the
                “elder Tarquin” and the “tyrant Tarquin”, the annalists indulged
                their favourite propensity, by ascribing the same facts to both, although the
                long reign of Servius Tullius intervened between the two Tarquins. It would
                have been easy to remove the doubts which this interruption of the works
                suggests. Servius might have been made to take up and continue the buildings of
                his predecessor. The fact that this was not done shows that the tradition must
                have been firmly established which ascribed the great public works to the
                Tarquins alone, whose character as Etruscans is thereby marked, and kept
                distinct from the other kings of Rome.
                   Our inquiry has led us to the same conclusion, namely,
                that the accounts of Tarquinius Priscus are unsupported by historical evidence.
                The strength of this conclusion is not impaired by the statements regarding the
                wars of Tarquinius Priscus. On the contrary, if anything is perceptible in
                them, it is the dim reflection of the wars of Romulus. The Sabine war of
                Tarquinius reminds us more especially of the war of Romulus with Tatius. The Sabines
                advanced as far as the walls of Rome, just as Tatius had advanced to the very
                gate of the town on the Palatine hill; and in his distress, Tarquin, like
                Romulus, vows a temple to Jupiter. In his Etruscan wars Tarquin gains the
                insignia of the royal dignity precisely as Tulius Hostilius, and even Romulus,
                had done before. Thus, then, the three kings resolve themselves into one in
                this respect also, and it is confirmed on all sides that the alleged story of
                Tarquinius Priscus is nothing but a version of the same old legend which
                furnished the materials for the stories of Romulus and of Tullus Hostilius.
                   The alleged descent of the Tarquinii from Corinth
                deserves no more credit than the intercourse of Numa with Pythagoras, and the
                landing of Aeneas in Latium. The chronology of the Tarquinian dynasty (if we
                can speak of such a thing) is in utter and hopeless confusion. If we take the
                story as Livy gives it, nobody will think it possible that the father of the
                second Tarquin, expelled in 495 B.C., can be the son of a Corinthian citizen
                expelled by Kypselos about 650 B.C., that
                is 155 years before. Moreover, the genuine Roman tradition represents the
                Tarquinii always as Etruscans, and never as Greeks. The story of their
                Corinthian origin is due, no doubt, to Greek imagination, which has adorned the
                older history of Rome with a variety of unhistorical facts, intended to show
                the intimate connection between the mighty Roman people and their humble
                admirers and subjects beyond the Ionian Sea.   
                    
                 CHAPTER VII.
                 The Legend of Servius Tullius.
                  
                 In the house of King Tarquinius was a virgin,
                called Ocrisia, who watched the holy fire sacred
                to the house-hold god. Once, as she sat by the hearth, the god appeared to her
                in the flame. And she loved him and bore him a son, who grew up in the house of
                the king, and they called him Servius, because he was the son of a slave. One
                day, when the boy had fallen asleep in a chamber in the king’s house, a flame
                played about the head, till he awoke from his sleep. And Tanaquil, the king’s
                wife, saw from this that Servius was destined for great things. On this
                account, when he was grown up to manhood, Tarquinius gave him his daughter for
                his wife, and entrusted to him the most important business, so that Servius was
                in the highest repute among the elders, as well as among the people. When this
                became known to the sons of King Ancus, who were wroth with Tarquinius because
                he had deprived them of their paternal heritage, they were afraid that
                Tarquinius would name Servius as his successor. For this reason they resolved
                to have their revenge, and they hired two murderers, who came to the king
                disguised as shepherds, and said they had a dispute, and that the king should
                judge between them. Now, as they were wrangling with one another, and
                Tarquinius was attending to what one of them was saying, the other struck him
                with an axe, and they both took to flight.
                   As now the king lay in his blood, and a noise and
                tumult arose, Tanaquil ordered the gates of the royal house to be shut, to keep
                out the people. And she spoke to the people out of an upper window, and said
                the king was not dead, but wounded, and he had ordered that Servius should
                reign in his stead until he had recovered. Therefore Servius filled the king’s
                place, sitting as judge on the royal throne, and he conducted all affairs as
                the king himself was wont to do. When it became known, however, after some
                days, that Tarquinius had died, Servius did not resign the royal power, but
                continued to rule for a time, without being appointed by the people and without
                the consent of the senate. But after he had won over a large number of the
                people by all kinds of promises and by grants of land, he held an assembly and
                persuaded the people to choose him for their king.
                   Thus Servius Tullius became King of Rome, and he ruled
                with clemency and justice. He loved peace, like his predecessors Numa and
                Ancus, and waged no wars, except with the Etruscans. These he compelled to be
                subject to him, as they had been to King Tarquinius before him. But with the
                Latins he made a treaty, that the Romans and the Latins should live always in
                friendship with one another. And, as a sign of this union, the Romans and the
                Latins built a temple to Diana on the Aventine, where they celebrated their
                common festivals, and offered up sacrifices every year for Rome and for the
                whole of Latium.
                   Then Servius built a strong wall from the Quirinal to
                the Esquiline, and made a deep trench, and added the Esquiline to the town, so
                that all the seven hills were united and formed one city. This city he divided
                into four parts, which he called tribes, after the old division of the people,
                and he divided the land round about the city into twenty-six districts, and
                ordered common sanctuaries and holy days, and headmen for the inhabitants of
                the districts which he had made.
                   Now, as Servius was the son of a bondmaid, he was a
                friend of the poor and of the lower classes, and he established equitable laws
                and ordinances to protect the common people against the more powerful.
                Therefore the commons honoured him and called him the good King Servius, and
                they celebrated the day of his birth as an annual festival. But the greatest
                work that Servius did was to make a new division of the people, according to
                the order of the fighting men, as they were to be arranged in the field of
                battle, and as they should vote in the assembly of citizens when the king
                consulted them concerning peace or war, or laws, or elections, or other
                important things. For this purpose Servius divided the whole people of the
                patricians and the plebeians into five classes, according to their property,
                without regard to their blood or descent, so that from that time forward the
                three tribes of Romulus—the Ramnes, the Tities, and the Luceres—and
                their thirty curies, formed no longer the principal assembly of citizens, but
                lost their power in most matters that affected the government.
                   The first class Servius made to consist of forty
                centuries of the younger men, who were under forty-six years of age, and of
                forty centuries of the elder; the latter for the defence of the town, the
                former for service in the field. The second, third, and fourth classes he
                divided each into twenty centuries, ten of the older men and ten of the
                younger. But he made the fifth class stronger, for he gave it thirty centuries,
                fifteen of the older men and fifteen of the younger. The arming of the centuries
                was not the same in all five classes. Only the men of the first class wore
                complete armour, composed of breast-plate, helmet, shield, and greaves, with
                javelin, lance, and sword; the second class fought without the breast-plate,
                and with a lighter shield; the third without the greaves, and so on, so that
                the men of the fifth class were but lightly armed. Now, as the citizens had to
                procure their own equipments for war, and
                as the complete armour was very expensive, Servius chose for the first class
                only the richest citizens, whose properly was estimated at more than a hundred
                thousand asses, that is, pounds of copper. The assessment for each of the
                following classes was twenty-five thousand asses less, so that in the fifth
                class were those citizens who were assessed at less than twenty-five thousand
                asses. But those who had less than eleven thousand asses Servius arranged in no
                class at all, but made of them a separate century—the century of the
                Proletarians—and these he exempted from all military service.
                   Thus Servius arranged the infantry in 170 centuries,
                and for the horse he took the six double centuries of horsemen which Tarquinius
                had established, and to them he added twelve new centuries, chosen out of the
                highest and richest families. And the horsemen consisted all of younger men, as
                they had to fight only in the field.
                   As it was necessary also to have in the army
                trumpeters, armourers, and carpenters, Servius made four centuries of them, so
                that altogether 193 centuries were formed. Of the
                   That was the military order of the people. And when
                they assembled for making laws or for elections, they observed the same order,
                and each century had a vote, and the chief influence was in the hands of the
                wealthiest, who formed the eighty centuries of the first class, and the
                eighteen centuries of knights. But the poorer people, although much more
                numerous, had but few votes, and their influence in the assembly was small, and
                the greatest number had not the greatest power. Nor was this arrangement
                unjust, for the rich provided themselves with heavy armour and fought in the
                foremost rank, and when a war tax was laid on, they contributed in proportion
                to their property. And Servius showed his wisdom especially in this, that in
                the assembly of citizens he placed the older men and the younger on an equality
                in the number of their votes, although there were fewer of the older, according
                to the nature of things. For he wished that the experience and moderation of
                the older citizens should restrain the rashness of the younger. In this manner
                the people were arranged as an army for the protection of their country, and at
                the same time as an assembly of citizens, to decide in all matters which
                concerned the well-being of the city; and no man was entirely shut out from the
                commonwealth, but to each one were assigned such burdens and services as he
                might be able to bear, and such a measure of rights and privileges as was just.
                The order of centuries which Servius Tullius had made, remained for many ages
                the foundation of the Roman commonwealth; and although, in the course of time,
                it was altered in many ways, it was never entirely abolished, so long as the
                people of Rome retained their freedom.
                    
                 Critical Examination of the
                Legend of Servius Tullius.
                    
                 In the story of Servius Tullius we look in vain for
                traces of a genuine historical tradition. It is as meagre and vague as that of
                any of the preceding kings. In some respects it resembles the legend of Numa
                Pompilius. Numa Servius Tullius is the name of an imaginary author of the
                constitution of centuries and of the laws which appeared to the Romans to be
                more or less connected with it, precisely as Numa represents the author of the
                ceremonial laws of the Roman religion.
                   The legend of the wonderful birth of Servius Tullius
                presents him clearly as the founder of the city. It is in all essentials the
                same legend as that of the birth of Romulus, of Caeculus,
                the founder of Praeneste, and of Modius, the founder of Cures; and it shows the
                conception which the Latins and Sabines had of the divine descent generally
                attributed by them to the hero to whom they ascribed the origin of their towns.
                As the domestic hearth, the symbol of family union, was consecrated to
                the lar or genius of the house, so every state, as a political
                community, had a common hearth, and a virgin of the hearth gave birth to the
                founder of the commonwealth. Servius Tullius, therefore, was considered the
                originator of the Roman commonwealth, and this conception was so far justified
                as he passed for the founder of that constitution which, differing in its
                groundwork from the constitution of Romulus, marks the starting-point for the
                political development of the plebeians. Just as Romulus was considered the
                author of the patrician tribes, curies, and houses, which were the groundwork
                of the Roman constitution in the regal period; so Servius Tullius is
                represented by the legend as the author of a new division of the people, which
                was the germ of the development in the republican period.
                   The Soman legend of the birth of Servius Tullius,
                which represents him as a Latin by descent, is directly opposed to an Etruscan
                tradition which the Emperor Claudius discovered in Etruscan annals. According
                to this tradition Servius Tullius, originally called Mastarna,
                came from Etruria, with the remnants of the army of Coeles Vibenna, settled on the Coelian hill,
                and, after assuming the name of Servius Tullius, acquired the royal dignity in
                Rome. It would be useless to attempt to decide which of these traditions is
                most entitled to credit. They prove only one thing, namely, that the story of
                Servius Tullius rests entirely on the imagination of the earliest writers, and
                that Servius was inserted among the kings of Rome chiefly because it was
                considered necessary to name an author of the constitution of centuries.
                   Concerning the origin of this constitution we have no
                tradition which deserves to be called historical. It is as improbable that it
                was due to a single act of legislation as it is unlikely that all the religious
                ordinances were established by Numa. It grew out of the constitution of curies
                which preceded it in the course of a gradual and natural development.
                   The thirty patrician curies furnished the original
                army, the legion of 3,000 men. In these curies the plebeians were included as
                members bound to perform political services, but enjoying no political rights.
                As the number of patricians diminished, plebeians were added as light armed
                soldiers to the patrician legion, and for a time patricians and plebeians
                formed each an equal number of companies or centuries which stood side by side
                in the army. Gradually the plebeian warriors acquired an influence in the
                divisions of the popular assembly formed by the divisions of the army,
                especially in decisions regarding peace and war. In proportion as the number of
                the plebeian fighting men increased, this influence naturally increased. Thus,
                by taking a share in the defence of the country, the plebeians gradually
                acquired a share in the suffrages of the popular assembly. Still there was a
                distinct line of separation between the two classes, as descent and blood marked
                every man as belonging either to one class or to the other. This was removed by
                the introduction of the census, which made property instead of descent the
                principle of the new division. From this time forward the plebeians could no
                longer be kept separate as a distinct and inferior caste. In proportion to the
                amount of their property they were ranged side by side with the patricians in
                one of the five classes of citizens where nothing prevented them from reaching
                the highest.
                   The introduction of the census, therefore, is the
                starting-point of the Servian constitution properly so called. When this
                development of the old organization took place, and to whom it is due, we are
                unable to discover; but so much seems probable, that the establishment of the new
                principle involved in it did not take place without civil struggles. In these
                struggles the plebeians must have had a champion, and perhaps we may be
                permitted to call such a champion Servius Tullius, and to look upon him as the
                great innovator. But the history of the civil contests has not been handed down
                to us. The principle of the constitution ascribed to Servius Tullius is
                perfectly plain. It is the distribution of political rights according to the
                measure of political duties. It holds a middle course between the pure
                aristocracy of hereditary nobility, and pure democracy which only counts heads.
                Property is the only available test for judging of the comparative
                qualification of citizens for a share in the government. This test, therefore,
                was successfully applied in Greece as well as in Rome, and also in most of the
                constitutions of modern Europe. When it was introduced in Rome the old
                constitution, based on the comitia of curies, was superseded. Though these
                comitia were not altogether abolished, they possessed now no more power than
                other relics of antiquity which owed their preservation to the influence of
                religion and the respect for old forms which was characteristic of the Romans.
                They were assembled from time to time to go through certain formalities,
                especially those of a religious character, but they were stripped of all
                political power. This power passed over to the comitia of centuries, and as
                long as these enjoyed life and vigour the Roman commonwealth grew and
                prospered.
                   It follows from what has been said that the original
                form of the comitia of centuries is involved in obscurity. The numbers
                preserved by Livy and Dionysius are evidently taken from a much later time. The
                so-called “Commentaries”, or books, of Servius Tullius, mentioned by some
                writers, are no more genuine than the commentaries of Numa. If Fabius Pictor
                and other writers report that in the first census made by Servius Tullius the
                number of citizens capable of bearing arms was eighty thousand, we feel sure
                that this evident exaggeration is sufficient to show how thoughtless and
                unskilful those annalists were who drew
                upon their imagination for the materials of the so-called history of the Roman
                kings.
                   Besides the introduction of the comitia of centuries,
                other measures are ascribed to Servius Tullius, such as the division of Rome
                into four tribes or quarters, that of the Roman territory into twenty-six
                districts, the distribution of the plebeians in small communities of villages
                and wards , and, lastly, the organization of guilds or companies. In short, he
                was looked upon as a great legislator, to whom everything might be referred of
                which it was impossible to name another author.
                   With regard to his foreign policy, the only measure of
                importance ascribed to Servius Tullius is the conclusion of a treaty with the
                Latins, which is said to have been ratified by the erection of a temple of
                Diana on the Aventine as a federal sanctuary. In proof of this statement an
                historical document is quoted which is alleged to be the original charter of
                confederation, engraved on a pillar of brass, and preserved in its original
                state at the time when Dionysius wrote his history, that is, under the reign of
                Augustus. On a close examination we find that this statement, apparently so
                well attested, is entirely delusive, and in no way calculated to convert by its
                authority the tissue of fables with which it is surrounded into real history.
                   Of all the ancient writers Dionysius alone quotes this
                document, which, if it had been genuine, and had really existed at the end of
                the republic, could not have failed, as the oldest written monument of
                antiquity, to attract general attention. It is clear, however, that Dionysius
                never saw the actual document himself. It is not even certain, from his
                expressions, that it was in existence at the time he wrote. If it had existed,
                the most learned antiquarians would not have been able to read it, as is proved
                by the fact that a document from the year 348 BC, more than two
                hundred years later, was, at the time of Polybius, almost unintelligible on
                account of its obsolete language.
                   A treaty of confederation between Rome and the Latin
                cities would certainly have contained the names of the members of the league,
                and would have enabled Dionysius to give these names. As he omits to do this,
                the authenticity of the document to which he refers must be called in question.
                We must, therefore, consider the statement of Dionysius as one of the downright
                frauds of which he is frequently guilty, and with which he endeavors to palm off the fables of antiquity as
                well-authenticated and trustworthy historical records.
                   The story of the violent death of Servius Tullius
                belongs to the period of the succeeding king, and will there be discussed.
                    
                 CHAPTER VIII
                 The Legend of Tarquinius Superbus.
                  
                  
                 Servius Tullius had two daughters; one was good and
                gentle, and the other was haughty, imperious, and heartless. In like
                manner Aruns and Lucius, the two sons of
                the elder Tarquinius, were of different character; the one was good-tempered,
                and the other was vicious and violent. These sons of Tarquin Servius Tullius
                married to his own daughters, thinking to soften the hearts of the wicked by
                the gentle sweetness of the good; and so he gave to the wicked Lucius the
                sweet Tullia to wife, and the proud Tullia he married to the good-natured Aruns.
                   But matters turned out differently from what Servius
                had expected. The wicked ones longed for each other’s company, and they
                despised their amiable consorts as wife of weak and mean-spirited. Therefore
                the bad Lucius murdered his wife and his brother, and he took to wife the
                daughter of Servius, who had a like disposition to his own. Now this reckless
                pair excited one another mutually to new enormities. They desired to possess
                power, and they practiced deceit and cunning, and made for themselves a party
                among the nobles and those of the people who were the enemies of Servius on
                account of his innovations.
                   Now when everything was prepared, Lucius Tarquinius
                entered the market-place clothed in the royal robes, and, surrounded by a band
                of armed men, summoned the senate to appear before him, and harangued them as
                king. At the report of this usurpation, Servius was alarmed and hurried to the
                spot, and there arose a quarrel in the senate-house between him and his
                son-in-law. Then Tarquinius seized the weak old man, and cast him down the
                steps of the senate-house, and sent after him men who overtook him on his way
                to his own house, and slew him in the street, and let him lie in his blood. But
                the wicked Tullia, the daughter of Servius, full
                of joy at what had happened, hurried to the market-place in her carriage, and
                welcomed her husband as king. And as she was driving home through the street
                where her father was lying dead, she gave orders that the horses should not be
                turned aside, and she drove on over the corpse of her father, so that the
                carriage and her dress were spattered with his blood. And from this the street
                was called for ever after the street of crime.
                   Thus Tarquinius gained the royal power without the
                consent of the senate, and without the choice of the people; and as he had
                acquired it so he exercised it; so that the people called him the Proud, and
                hated and detested him as long as he lived. For he regarded neither justice nor
                equity, nor the laws and ordinances of good King Servius, nor did he summon the
                senate for counsel, but reigned entirely according to his own will, and
                oppressed all, whether high or low. Moreover, he surrounded himself with a
                body-guard, after the custom of the Greek tyrants; and those among the citizens
                who were against him, or whose wealth provoked his avarice, he punished, upon
                false accusation, either inflicting heavy fines, or driving them into exile, or
                putting them to death. The poor he compelled to work at his buildings, and made
                them serve like slaves beyond their strength, so that many killed themselves
                out of despair.
                   After Tarquinius had established his power in Rome, he
                turned against the Latins; and those that did not willingly submit he made war
                upon, and made them subject to himself. But the people of Gabii resisted him manfully, and he could not prevail
                against them. Then his son Sextus devised a stratagem. He went to Gabii, as if fleeing from his father, and he showed his
                back covered with bloody stripes, and begged the people of Gabii, with supplications and tears, to protect him from
                his father and to receive him into their town. Thus the people of Gabii were deceived, and they trusted his words, and
                befriended him, and made him the commander of a company. But the Romans fled
                when Sextus led the men of Gabii, because it had
                thus been agreed upon between Sextus and his father. When Sextus had thus
                gained the confidence of the Gabine people
                and possessed great power in Gabii, he sent a
                messenger to his father to ask what he should do. The king was walking in his
                pleasure-ground when the messenger came, and, instead of giving him an answer
                in words, Tarquin struck off with his stick the tallest poppies and sent the
                man back. But Sextus understood the meaning of his father’s reply, and began to
                bring false charges against the first and noblest of the men of Gabii, and so caused them to be put to death; and when he
                had done this, he surrendered the helpless town to his father.
                   In order now to strengthen his power, Tarquinius
                united himself to Octavius Mamilius, who reigned
                in Tusculum, and gave him his daughter to wife; and he established the festival
                of the Latin games, which were solemnized every year on the Alban hill at the
                temple of Jupiter Latiaris, and in which all the
                Latin cities took part. After this he waged war on the Volscians, a powerful
                people who lived in the south of Latium. And he conquered Suessa Pometia, their
                greatest and richest town; and the spoils he gained in war were very large; and
                he used them to finish the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol, which his father
                had begun. And he sent for artists from the towns of Etruria to decorate the
                temple with works of art, and for the summit of the temple he ordered a chariot
                with four horses to be made of clay in the town of Veii. Now when the chariot
                was in the oven to be baked, it did not shrink as clay always does, but it
                expanded and became so large that it could not be taken out again without
                breaking down the oven. Then a prophet announced to the Veientines that the chariot was a pledge of fortune
                and power, and therefore they would not give it up to the Romans. But when a
                chariot race took place in Veii, and the charioteer who won the race drove away
                from the course, his horses suddenly took fright and could not be held, and
                they ran straight to the Roman Capitol and at the Ratumenian gate
                they overturned the chariot, and the driver was hurled down dead on the
                ground. Then the Veientines saw that the
                vengeance of the gods threatened them if they kept the clay chariot against the
                laws of justice and the will of Fate, and they brought it to Rome, where it was
                placed on the gable of the temple.
                   After this the large sewers, which the elder
                Tarquinius had begun, were finished by Tarquinius Superbus,
                and so strong and firmly were they built that they exist even to the present
                day, bringing the water from the lower parts of the town into the Tiber. And
                then Tarquinius completed the Forum, which was used for buying and selling and
                for the general assemblies of the people; and he improved the large race-course
                in the valley between the Palatine and the Aventine hills; he also adorned the
                town with many other buildings, for he loved pomp and splendour, and he thought
                by his great extravagance and by compulsory labour to make the people poor and
                helpless, that he might govern them more easily.
                   Now, when he was in full possession of power, there
                appeared one day before him a strange woman and offered him nine books of
                divine prophecy, which the inspired Sibyl of Cumae had written on loose leaves.
                But, because she asked a high price, Tarquinius laughed at her and let her go.
                Then the woman burnt three of the books before his eyes, and returned and
                offered to sell the other six for the same price which she had at first asked
                for the nine. But Tarquinius laughed at her still more, and thought she was
                mad. She then burnt three more of the books, and offered the last three for the
                original price. Then Tarquinius began to reflect, and he felt persuaded that
                the woman was sent to him by the gods, and he bought the books. In this manner
                he obtained the books of Sibylline prophecy, which were consulted in stress of
                war, or in time of plague or famine, in order to ascertain how the wrath of the
                gods was to be appeased. They were carefully preserved, and two men who knew
                the language of the Greeks, in which the books were written, were appointed to
                take care of them and to consult them when necessary.
                   Up to this time Tarquinius had been always fortunate
                in his undertakings, and he became ever more and more proud and overbearing.
                Then he was frightened by dreams and great signs and wonders, and he determined
                to consult the oracle of the Greeks at Delphi. For this purpose he sent his two
                sons to Delphi, and with them Junius, his sister’s son, who, on account of his
                stupidity, was called Brutus. But the stupidity of Brutus was only a pretence
                to deceive the tyrant, who was an enemy of all wise men, because he feared
                them. Now when the king’s sons brought costly presents to the Delphian god,
                Brutus gave only a simple staff. The others ridiculed him, but they did not
                know that the staff was hollowed out and filled with gold, as an emblem of his
                own mind. After the king’s sons had executed the commission of their father,
                they asked the god who would reign in Rome after Tarquinius. And the answer of
                the oracle was, that he should reign who would be the first to kiss his mother.
                Then the two brothers agreed to draw lots, which of them should first kiss his
                mother on arriving at home. But Brutus perceived the real meaning of the
                oracle, and when they had left the temple, he pretended to stumble, and he fell
                down and kissed the ground, for the earth, he thought, was the common mother of
                all men.
                   Now when Tarquinius had reigned twenty-four years, it
                came to pass that he besieged Ardea, the town of the his wife Rutuli, in
                Latium; and one evening, when the king’s sons were supping with their cousin,
                Tarquinius Collatinus, who lived in Collatia, they talked of their wives, and each praised the
                virtue and thriftiness of his own wife. Thereupon they agreed to go and see
                which of the ladies deserved the highest praise. Without delay they mounted
                their horses and galloped quickly to Rome, and then to Collatia to
                take the ladies by surprise. They found the daughters-in-law of the king
                enjoying themselves at a feast, but Lucretia, the wife of Collatinus, they found sitting up late at night with her
                maids busy with spinning and other household work. Therefore Lucretia was
                acknowledged to be the matron most worthy of praise.
                    
                 Sextus Tarquinius wronged Lucretia.
                  
                 But Sextus Tarquinius, when he had seen Lucretia,
                conceived a base design against her, and so he came again one evening to Collatia. After he had been kindly received and led into
                his chamber, he rose in the middle of the night, when every
                  one was asleep in the house, and came into Lucretia’s room and
                surprised her alone. And when she refused to yield herself to him, he
                threatened to murder her and to put a murdered slave to lie beside her, and
                then to accuse her to her husband that he had found her with a slave. Then
                Lucretia resisted no longer. The next morning Sextus went away and returned to
                the camp before Ardea.
                   But Lucretia sent messengers to Rome and to Ardea to
                fetch her father Lucretius and her husband Collatinus.
                These two hastened to Collatia, and with them
                came Junius Brutus, and the noble Publius Valerius Poplicola,
                and they found Lucretia in her room clothed in deep mourning. And when they
                were all collected together, Lucretia told them of the deed of Sextus, and of
                the shame brought upon her, and she challenged the men to swear that they would
                avenge her. And when she had ended her words, she drew a knife and plunged it
                into her heart and died.
                   Then the men were seized with grief, and they carried
                her corpse to the market-place, and told the people what had happened, and sent
                messengers with the news to the army at Ardea. But Brutus assembled the people
                together and spoke to them, and called upon them to resist the tyrant. And the
                people determined to expel King Tarquinius and his whole house, to abolish the
                regal power, and to suffer no king any more in Rome. And they chose, in the
                place of a king, two men who should exercise the royal power for one year, and
                should be called not kings but consuls; and for the management of the
                sacrifices, which the king had to offer, they chose a priest, who should be
                called the king of sacrifices, but should have no power in the state, and
                should be subject to the high pontiff. Otherwise they altered nothing in the
                laws and ordinances of the state, but they let them all remain as they had been
                during the time of the kings. And for the first consuls they chose Lucius
                Junius Brutus and Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus.
                These consuls shut the gates against Tarquinius, and the Roman army before
                Ardea abandoned Tarquinius and went back to Rome. Thus the death of Lucretia
                was avenged, and Rome became a free city after it had been subject to kings for
                two hundred and forty years.
                    
                 Critical Examination of the
                Legend of Tarquinius Superbus.
                    
                 The reign of the Tarquins immediately precedes the
                establishment of the republic, that is, the time in which the history of Rome
                is suddenly changed in character and assumes the form of contemporary
                historical narrative, for from this time forward the names of the annual
                magistrates and the most important events are recorded year after year, in the
                form of annals or annual registers. Hence it might be inferred that the dawn of
                genuine history ought to penetrate as far as the reign of the last Tarquin, and
                this has indeed been the general opinion of recent historians. Nevertheless, if
                we examine closely the alleged events, we find neither in their matter nor in
                their form an essential difference from the traditions of the earlier kings.
                The personal adventures of Tarquinius Superbus,
                it is true, are a little more varied and interesting. This is, however, the
                result not of a more authentic tradition, but of tales borrowed from ancient
                Greek writers.
                   It has already been remarked that the oldest tradition
                knew only one Tarquin; and that at a later time, when the history of the kings
                was arranged into a connected story, two Lucii Tarquinii
                were substituted for one, and separated from one another by the insertion of
                the reign of Servius Tullius. Thus it is explained that some events are
                referred to the elder and also to the younger Tarquin, as, for instance, the
                construction of the great public works, and the purchase of the Sibylline
                books. Hence arise also the chronological difficulties which Dionysius
                attempted to remove by inserting a whole generation between the elder and the
                younger Tarquin, and by making the latter not the son but the grandson of the
                former; for, he argued, if Tarquinius Priscus came to Rome as a middle-aged
                man, and reigned thirty-seven years, he could not at his death leave little
                children, one of whom, after the lapse of forty-four years, occupied by the
                reign of Servius, became king, reigned twenty-five years, and died several years
                afterwards in exile, so that from the birth of the father to the death of the
                son about a century and a half must be supposed to have elapsed.
                   The Greek colouring of the legend is unmistakable, and
                appears to be of comparatively late origin. It represents Tarquin like a Greek
                tyrant of the older period. He seizes the government by force without any
                regard to legal forms, assisted by a number of partisans, and by a bodyguard;
                he is hard and cruel to the old nobility and to the rich; he oppresses the
                people by forced labour; endeavours to strengthen himself by family connections
                with foreign rulers; he loves magnificence, is a patron of art, bold and
                successful in his foreign politics, and victorious in war. This conception of
                Tarquin was formed at a comparatively late period under the influence of Greek
                ideas. There was however an older national, and less unfavourable, conception
                of him, according to which he was not a tyrant, but a vigorous king, like
                Romulus. This view of Tarquinius was embodied in the history of the elder king
                of this name, who is never represented as an unjust tyrant. It is not
                improbable that this difference of conception has contributed to make two
                Tarquins out of one. The story of the stratagem by which Gabii was conquered is probably taken from Herodotus,
                who relates a similar story with regard to the capture of Babylon by Cyrus. The
                same Greek author tells the story of the poppy-heads, which he relates, with
                slight variations, of Periander and
                Thrasybulus. Not more authentic is the account of the alleged embassy to
                Delphi, which was inserted for the purpose of showing the hidden wisdom of
                Brutus. The embassy leads to nothing; it is accounted for not by political
                events, but by dreams and miracles. It was evidently of Greek origin. There was
                no lack of native Italian prophets, especially in Etruria. Rome had at that
                time no intercourse with Greece proper, whatever may have been its relation to
                Italian Greeks. It is utterly impossible, therefore, that in such an early
                period an isolated instance of an embassy to the Delphic sanctuary should have
                occurred. In like manner the narrative of the purchase of the Sibylline books
                by Tarquin is very suspicious, although the general tradition speaks in its favor, and only one author, the Greek lexicographer Suidas, informs us that, according to some statements, this
                purchase took place in the time of the republic. Yet the reason for assigning
                it to Tarquinius is apparently only an inference made from the circumstance
                that the Sybilline books were preserved in
                the temple of the Capitoline Jupiter. Nothing seemed more natural than to
                suppose that Tarquin, who built the temple, purchased the sacred books of
                the Sybill.
                   From the Greek tales in the history of Tarquin has
                been argued that, in the Tarquinian period, a lively intercourse took place
                between Greeks and Romans, and that Rome then received the first impression of
                Greek Civilization. We hold that this inference is erroneous, and we consider
                the stories upon which is based as so many attempts to represent the aboriginal
                Romans as connected with Greece, attempts which we have met with in the Legend
                of Aeneas, in the alleged intercourse of Numa and Pythagoras, in the legend of
                the temple of Diana on the Aventine, built, as it is said, after the model of
                that of the Ephesian Artemis, and the alleged descent of the Tarquins
                from Demarathus of Corinth. At what time
                and in what manner Greece began to exercise her influence upon Rome, is a
                question for the solution of which we obtain no materials from the
                unauthenticated history of the regal time. The alphabet, the system of weights
                and measures used in Rome, appear to have been introduced from the Greek cities
                in Southern Italy, but we have as yet no evidence to show how and when.
                   If, from what we have said, it must be conceded that
                the history of the reign of Tarquinius Superbus is
                unauthentic, it follows that the account of his expulsion is likewise without
                foundation. It is contrary to all experience, and to the laws of human nature,
                that a powerful dynasty should have been expelled without any difficulty,
                without any internal struggles, simply by a resolution of the people, and that
                a monarchy which had lasted for centuries should have been changed, as by magic,
                into a republic in complete working order, with responsible annual magistrates
                and the laws necessary to secure the permanence of these institutions.
                   We venture to conjecture that the expulsion of the
                Tarquins from Rome implied not merely a change in the constitution, but that it
                was connected with a national rising of the Latino-Sabine people against the
                Etruscans, who for a time had held dominion over Latium. This, it is true,
                cannot be proved with absolute certainty. The evidence to which we must refer is
                too vague and untrustworthy; it depends too much upon individual conceptions,
                and may often be interpreted in various ways. We must, therefore, rest
                contented if the result of our investigations satisfy the rules of probability,
                and if we get rid of conceptions which our judgment rejects as untenable and
                false.
                   The Etruscans or Tuscans, called by the Greeks
                Tyrrhenians, differed in descent, language, and manners from all the other
                races of Italy, and from the Greek settlers on Italian soil. They had spread
                themselves at the time of their greatest power over the wide plain of the Po in
                the north of Italy; in the south they occupied Campania; and in central Italy
                the land of Etruria, to which they gave its name. In each of these three
                districts they built towns at a very early period, which were ruled by kings
                and formed several confederacies. At the time of their immigration they had
                either expelled or conquered the original inhabitants; and in some
                districts—for instance, in southern and eastern Etruria—they had amalgamated
                with them to a certain extent. In the settlements north of the Apennines the
                Etruscans were gradually overpowered by successive invasions of Gauls; in
                Campania their dominion seems to have been of short duration, and to have been
                broken towards the end of the regal period by the Greek colonies in union with
                the advancing Sabellians; but in Etruria proper—between the Arno, the
                Tiber, the sea, and the Apennines—the Etruscans reached a high degree of
                national development. Here were situated the maritime cities, which commanded
                the western sea, called after them the Tyrrhenian, by which they extended their
                commerce, as well as their piratical excursions, to the furthest shores. In
                this country, which still bears a name derived from them, they left traces of
                their national peculiarities, bearing witness to the present day of their
                ingenuity and their wealth.
                   Of the history of the Etruscans we know hardly
                anything. The Greek and Roman writers give but a scanty and untrustworthy
                account of them. Like the Egyptians, they are known to us chiefly by the ruins
                of their buildings and by the numerous sepulchral monuments which are still
                preserved. Their literature has perished entirely, and even their language,
                which was spoken down to the time of the civil wars of Marius and Sulla,
                gradually died away, and was so neglected that we have no key to decipher the
                inscriptions they have left behind. The Etruscans, therefore, have become in
                many respects a mysterious people, and will remain so until some fortunate
                accident, like the discovery of the Rosetta stone, shall come to our help. It
                follows that we must speak with great reserve of this nation, of their
                character, their religion, and their civil institutions, and that it is
                difficult to judge with certainly of the influence which they exercised on
                Rome.
                   Concerning the origin of the Etruscans, historical
                science has not yet arrived at a final and satisfactory result, although this
                question has been most eagerly discussed from the oldest times to the present
                day. The ancients were satisfied that the Etruscans migrated from Asia Minor to
                Italy, and that they were of kindred blood with the Tyrrhenians spread in all
                directions over the eastern shores and islands of the Mediterranean. Since
                Niebuhr wrote, the hypothesis has been very generally accepted that the
                Etruscans migrated into Italy from the mountainous districts of Rhaetia, and
                that they gradually advanced in the peninsula from north to south. It is
                impossible to decide which of these two views is correct. Whatever the original
                country of the Etruscans was, we know them only after they had settled in
                Italy, and the history of Rome is not concerned with the events which preceded
                this settlement.
                   In all probability the Etruscans were first brought
                into contact with the Latins when, after the conquest of the whole of Etruria
                as far as the Tiber, they penetrated farther southward towards Campania. It is
                most likely that the Etruscans reached Campania by land, that their dominion
                extended at one time without interruption from the foot of the Alps to Mount
                Vesuvius, and that consequently the coast districts of Latium were once
                Etruscan. These southern conquests of the Etruscans, however, were not
                permanent like those in Etruria proper. They appear not to have been made by a
                migration of the whole people, or by a settlement in great numbers; but rather
                seem to have had the character of a military occupation, effected at a time
                when the colonization of Etruria proper had absorbed the principal strength of
                the Etruscan race. Even the southern part of Etruria, between the Ciminian hill
                and the Tiber, appears to have been subdued considerably later than the
                northern parts of the country, and to have adopted the Etruscan language and
                manners but partially and imperfectly. Thus it is explained that the Etruscan
                power in Campania and Latium was overthrown at a comparatively early period,
                and left few traces behind.
                   The memory of Etruscan rule over Latium was preserved
                in the old popular tradition of the Etruscan tyrant, Mezentius,
                who in the time of Aeneas subdued the Latins, imposed a tribute on them, and
                was at last, after a hard struggle, defeated and expelled from Latium. Another
                mythical character of similar nature was Turnus, evidently a Tyrrhenian by his
                very name, who, as prince of the Rutuli in Ardea, fought against Aeneas. As
                Etruscan conquerors of Latium, we have already met with Mastarna and the Lucumo Coeles Vibenna. In the current narrative the two Tarquins were
                inserted among the Roman kings, as Etruscan conquerors of Latium; and lastly we
                shall find that the conquest of Rome by Porsenna is nothing but another version
                of the same popular tradition which has preserved the memory of Etruscan
                dominion in Latium.
                    
                  
                 CHAPTER IX.
                 The attempts of Tarquinius to
                regain the Royal Power.
                    
                  
                 When the wicked Tarquin had been driven, with his
                whole house, out of Rome, he did not give up all hope of regaining his power.
                He had still a strong party in Rome, especially among the younger patricians,
                who had lived to bring evil lives under his rule. Therefore he sent messengers
                to Rome, who should pretend to apply for the restoration of his movable
                property, but who consulted secretly with his adherents how the king could be
                brought back to Rome. One day, when the conspirators were conferring privately
                together, they were overheard by a slave, who betrayed them to the consuls.
                Then they were all seized and thrown into prison. But the slave was rewarded
                with freedom and the Roman citizenship.
                   Then Brutus, who was consul with Tarquinius Collatinus, showed how a true Roman must love his country
                more than his own blood. For when it was found that his two his sons, sons were
                among those who wished to bring Tarquin and his family back to Rome, he
                condemned them to death as traitors, even as he condemned the other
                conspirators, and did not ask mercy of the people for them, but had the youths
                bound to the stake before his eyes, and then gave orders to the lictor to
                scourge them and to cut off their heads with the axe.
                   Now the people were still more embittered against the
                banished Tarquins, and the senate declined to give up their movable goods, and
                divided them among the people. But the field between the town and the Tiber,
                which belonged to the Tarquins and was sown with corn, they consecrated to the
                god Mars, and called it the field of Mars, and the corn they caused to be cut
                down and thrown into the Tiber. It drifted down the bed of the river to a
                shallow place, where it became fixed; and as, in the course of time, mud and
                earth collected there, an island was formed in the river, which was afterwards
                surrounded by embankments and walls, so that large buildings and temples could
                be erected on it.
                   Now, after the conspiracy had been discovered and
                punished, the senate and the people made a law that all those who were
                Tarquinian race should be banished for all time to come. And all the secret
                adherents of the royal party escaped from the town, and collected around the
                expelled Tarquin. But Tarquinius Collatinus, who
                was consul with Brutus, was a friend of the people and an enemy of the banished
                king and his house, on account of the shame which Sextus Tarquinius had brought
                upon his wife Lucretia. But as he was of the race of the Tarquins, he obeyed
                the law, laid down his office, and went into exile, and the people chose
                Publius Valerius to be consul in his place.
                   Now when the plan of Tarquinius to regain the dominion
                cunning and fraud had been defeated, he went in the land of the Etruscans,
                which was the home of his father, and he excited the people of Tarquinii and of
                Veii to make war upon Rome. Then the Romans marched out against the Etruscans,
                and fought with them near the wood Arsia. And in
                the battle Aruns, the son of Tarquinius, saw
                Brutus at the head of the Roman army, and thinking he would revenge himself
                upon the enemy of his house, he put spurs to his horse and ran against him with
                his spear. And when Brutus saw him, he did the same, and each pierced the other
                through the body with his spear, so that both fell down dead from their horses.
                But the battle was fierce and bloody, and lasted until the evening without
                being decided. And in the night, when both armies were encamped on the field of
                battle, a loud voice of the god Silvanus was heard coming out of the wood, saying
                that the Romans had conquered, for among the Etruscans one man more was slain
                than among the Romans. Then the Etruscans went away to their homes, and the
                Romans also went home, taking the body of Brutus with them, and the Roman women
                wept and mourned for him a whole year, because he had so bravely avenged the
                dishonour of Lucretia.
                   Thereupon Tarquin the tyrant betook himself to Clusium to King Porsenna, who ruled over all the
                Etruscans, and he implored help of him against the Romans. And Porsenna collected
                a powerful army, and marched towards against Rome to restore Tarquin to his
                kingdom. And as the Etruscans approached, they took the hill Janiculus, which lies on the right side of the Tiber
                opposite the Capitol, and they drove the Romans back over the wooden bridge
                into the city. Then the Romans were seized with great fear; and they did not
                venture to oppose the enemy, and to defend the entrance of the bridge, but they
                fled across the bridge back into the city. When Horatius, who was
                surnamed Cocles, saw this, he placed himself
                opposite to the enemy at the entrance of the bridge, and two warriors, who were
                called Larcius and Herminius,
                stayed with him. These three men stirred not from the place, but fought alone
                with the whole army of the Etruscans, and held their position, while the Romans
                pulled down the bridge behind them. And when only a few planks were left, Larcius and Herminius hurried
                back, but Horatius would not move until the bridge was broken down and fell
                into the river. Then he turned round, and, with his arms upon him, just as he
                was, sprang into the Tiber and swam back to Rome unhurt. Thus Horatius saved
                the city from the Etruscans, and the Romans rejoiced and led him in triumph
                into the city, and afterwards they erected a monument to him on the Comitium, and gave him as much land as he could plough in
                one day.
                   Meanwhile, the town was hard pressed by Porsenna, and
                there arose a famine in Rome, and the people were driven to despair. Then Mucius, a noble Roman, determined to kill King Porsenna, and
                he went into the Etruscan camp, even into the king’s tent. But, as he did not
                know him, he slew the treasurer of the king, who sat near him, and who was
                distributing the pay to the soldiers. And he was seized and threatened with
                death. Then he stretched out his right hand into the flame which was burning on
                an altar, until it was burnt to ashes. Porsenna was so much amazed at the
                courage of the youth that he forgave him, and allowed him to return free.
                And Mucius, in gratitude for the magnanimity of
                Porsenna, revealed to him that 300 Roman youths had sworn to attempt the same
                deed that he had undertaken, and that they would not rest until they had taken
                his life. When Porsenna heard this, he feared to distress the Romans any
                longer, and made peace with them. He took no land from them, except seven
                villages of the Veientines, which the Romans had
                conquered in former times; and, having made them give hostages, he insisted no
                longer that they should receive Tarquin again as their king.
                   Among the hostages was a noble virgin called Cloelia, who would not suffer herself to be kept captive
                among the Etruscans. Therefore, when the night came, she slipped out of the
                camp, reached the river, and swam across to Rome. But the Romans, although they
                honoured her courage, blamed her conduct, and brought her back to Porsenna,
                because she had acted in opposition to the treaty and to the right. Then
                Porsenna admired the faith of the Romans, and released Cloelia,
                and also as many of the other hostages as she selected; and when he went away
                from Rome, he left his camp there, and gave to the Romans all the things
                contained in it. The senate sold these goods to the people, and thus it became
                customary to say at public sales, “The goods of King Porsenna are being sold.”
                   When Porsenna had become tired of the war, he went
                home to Clusium; but he sent his son Aruns with an army against Aricia, a town of the
                Latins, where all the people of Latium were accustomed to meet together. But
                Aristodemus, the Greek tyrant of Cumae, helped the Latins, and the Etruscans
                were beaten in a great battle, so that few escaped alive. These the Romans
                received hospitably, nursed them and healed their wounds, and to those who
                wished to remain in Rome, they gave dwelling in that part of the town which, after
                them, was called the Etruscan quarter.
                   But Tarquin had not given up all hopes of regaining
                Rome. For this reason he went to Tusculum, to his son-in-law Octavius Mamilius, and excited the Tusculans and. the
                other Latins to make war upon Rome. And the Romans trembled before the strength
                of the Latins; and as they thought that perhaps the two consuls might not agree
                in war, they nominated a dictator, who should have power over Rome like a king,
                and be sole leader of the army, for six months. And for this post they chose
                Marcus Valerius. After this a great battle was
                fought near the Lake Regillus, between the Romans and the Latins; and the
                Romans began to give way when the banished king, at the head of a band of Roman
                exiles, came against them. Then the Roman dictator vowed a temple to Castor and
                Pollux, if they would assist the Romans in battle. And behold! two youths rode
                on white chargers at the head of the Roman horse, and pressed down upon the
                enemy. And the Romans saw that they were the sacred twins, and took courage and
                overthrew the Latins, and conquered and killed many of them. Now, when the
                battle was lost, Tarquin gave up all hope of coming back again to Rome, and he
                went to Cumae, to the tyrant Aristodemus, and dwelt there till he died.
                   When the battle was yet hardly ended, two youths
                appeared in Rome on white chargers, and announced the victory over the Latins;
                and when they had washed their Rome horses at the spring of Juturna in the Forum, they suddenly disappeared and
                were never seen again. Then the Romans knew that they had seen Castor and
                Pollux, and they built them a temple on the place where they had washed their
                horses. From this time the Romans were no more troubled by Tarquin and his
                house. And they made new laws and ordinances, that they might keep the freedom
                which they had gained and never again be under the power of kings.
                    
                 Critical examination of the Story of the attempts of
                Tarquinius to regain the royal power.
                    
                 The stories of the various attempts of the expelled
                Tarquin to regain his lost dominion are not without some traces of a true and
                genuine tradition pointing to the circumstance that the revolution was by no
                means limited to a change of the constitution. The conspiracy among the nobles,
                in favor of Tarquin, appears not to have
                been formed by young men, as it is represented, but by the younger patrician
                houses. These younger houses, which are said to have been added to the old
                nobility by the first Tarquin, appear to have been Etruscans, and to have
                settled in Rome at the time of the Etruscan conquest. Their union with the
                older population is the circumstance so often mentioned as an augmentation of
                the senate and of the knights, and ascribed to Romulus, to Tullus, and to the
                first Tarquinius. It cannot be doubted that such an increase of the noble
                houses by the addition of Etruscans took place, and it was these younger houses
                who took the side of Tarquinius, and were banished with him in great numbers.
                Thus Rome regained about this time its original nationality; it became again a
                Latin town. The Etruscan element, which had never penetrated the body of the
                people, was cast out again, leaving only those few traces behind which, at a
                later period, kept alive the memory of the Etruscan conquest.
                   In the usual narrative the last Tarquinius is charged
                with having humbled and degraded the senate, banished and murdered many
                senators, and with having reigned at last without consulting the senate at all.
                Hence, as it is said, it became necessary for Brutus to nominate a considerable
                number of new senators for the purpose of restoring the senate to its own
                functions in the commonwealth. This story cannot be accepted as it stands. It
                was neither possible nor desirable for a Roman king to reign without a senate.
                A tyrant like Tarquinius might fill the senate with his adherents, and might
                avail himself of them for his tyrannical purposes, but it would have been a mad
                and suicidal policy in him to weaken a body of men whom he could make useful
                instruments of his policy. If, therefore, the senate was not complete under
                Tarquinius, the cause of it must have been the absence from it of the
                representatives of the old Latin nobility. After the revolution, when most of
                the Etruscan noble families had emigrated, there were again numerous vacancies,
                which were filled by the nomination of national senators.
                   The war with the Etruscan cities Tarquinii and Veii,
                which endeavoured to restore the expelled king by force of arms, need not
                occupy us long. It is entirely fabulous, as is apparent from the circumstance
                that the voice of a god proclaimed the Romans as conquerors. But the war would
                not have been introduced into the narrative, if the insurrection against the
                Tarquins had not been looked upon as a national struggle of the Latins with the
                Etruscans.
                    
                  
                 CHAPTER X.
                 THE WAR OF PORSENNA.
                  
                 Porsenna belongs to those parts of the history of the
                Roman kings which were first successfully attacked by modern criticism as
                unauthentic. The story betrays itself on the first glance as fictitious. The
                heroic deeds of Horatius Cocles, of Mucius Scaevola, and of Cloelia,
                are indeed not miracles, but are of such a nature that, upon the evidence which
                we possess of them, we cannot receive them as historical. Moreover, the entire
                war, in its causes, its whole course, and in its conclusion, as it is commonly
                represented, appears mysterious and contradictory. Porsenna, the powerful King
                of the Etruscans, warmly espouses the cause of his expelled countryman and of
                the kingly power, makes war upon the Romans, but allows himself to be so
                terrified by the attempt of Mucius Scaevola
                to murder him, that he makes peace, abandons the cause of Tarquinius, and shows
                himself to the Romans as a most magnanimous enemy.
                   On the other hand, the report that the Romans had to
                give hostages to Porsenna, showing that they were conquered implies a totally
                different result of the war. Moreover, two statements have been preserved by
                Pliny and Tacitus, from which we see that, not only was Rome conquered by the
                Etruscan king, but completely overthrown. So thoroughly were they at the mercy
                of the conqueror that they were obliged to give up their arms, and were allowed
                the use of iron only for agricultural purposes. We may rest assured that no
                Roman has invented this story, so injurious to national pride. We certainly
                cannot assume that the alleged treaty with Porsenna, which contained the hard
                conditions of subjection, was preserved in any authentic form; but we cannot
                help believing that the tradition existed of an Etruscan conquest in Rome, and
                that in the account of the victory of Porsenna we have one of the numerous
                versions of the dominion of Mezentius over
                Latium.
                   If this be the case, it is clear that the war of
                Porsenna had originally no fixed date in the Roman chronicles, and was
                introduced arbitrarily and unskilfully into the history of the Tarquins. It is
                in no way connected with the preceding or with the subsequent attempts of the
                Tarquins to regain their power. Porsenna appears as a foolish adventurer. From
                pure magnanimous sympathy with a countryman he undertakes a war, is victorious
                in it, yet makes no use of his victory, either for himself or for the expelled
                king. On the other hand, conquered and humbled Rome is able at once to carry on
                a great war with the Latin confederacy. More than that; Porsenna’s son Aruns marches
                with the Etruscan army from Rome against the Latins, who appear soon afterwards
                as allies of Tarquinius in his new attempt against the Romans, and he is beaten
                by them and the Greeks from Cumae, under Aristodemus, at Aricia.
                   If we suppose that the story of an Etruscan conquest,
                as it is represented in the legends of Mezentius and
                Porsenna, rests on a real tradition, and points to actual events, then the
                question arises to what age does it belong? Certainly not to the first period
                of the republic, with the events of which it can in no way be reconciled. It
                seems much rather to belong to the period which we can designate as that of the
                Etruscan dominion, and which preceded the beginning of the republic. If thereby
                Porsenna is removed to a still darker and more fabulous age, it can hardly be
                considered an injustice to him; for he appears in various particulars as an
                entirely mythical personage. It may be a mere accident that the current story
                places Porsenna in the first years of the republic, and that no contradictory
                statement has been preserved. But, in like manner, it is related that the
                Claudian family was received at this time into the Roman state; and by a mere
                chance we learn from Suetonius that, according to another opinion, their
                reception took place in the time of Titus Tatius; that is to say, at the
                commencement of Roman history, almost two centuries and a half earlier.
                   Whatever we may think of the possible events to which
                the story of Porsenna refers, thus much is certain, that the common narrative
                throws no historical light on the first years of the republic, but is entirely
                incomprehensible and incredible.
                    
                 
                 CHAPTER XI.
                 The War with the Latins.
                  
                  
                 The war with the Latins was celebrated and rendered
                conspicuous in the oldest annals especially by the battle of the Lake Regillus,
                with which it ended. The thirty towns of united Latium insisted on placing
                Tarquin on the throne of Rome. Tusculum was particularly attached to him, for
                Octavius Mamilius, the son-in-law of Tarquin,
                reigned in that town. As the Romans would not consent to the demand of the
                Latins, there arose a great war between Rome and united Latium. In a
                hard-fought battle at the Lake Regillus, in the neighbourhood of Tusculum, the
                Latins were completely conquered, and from that time the freedom of Rome was
                for ever after secure from the Tarquins.
                   In the narratives of this war considerable uncertainty
                in the chronology is discovered by Livy, who honestly confesses it; while
                Dionysius, in his smooth description, does not allow the reader to guess from
                what a chaos of conflicting accounts he has taken it. Livy places the battle of
                Regillus in the year 499 BC., while by other historians it was placed in the
                year 496. But what do a few years matter at a time when history is only
                beginning to get disentangled from legends and myths? We should be contented if
                apart from the chronology everything else were authenticated. How much is
                wanting in this respect will be seen from what follows.
                   It is singular that this war is not brought into any
                sort Latins of connection with the other attempts to restore Tarquin to his
                kingdom. Neither in the war with the towns of Tarquinii and Veii nor in that
                with Porsenna does it appear that the Latins took any part. They allowed
                Tarquinius to exhaust all his other resources, and then, when Rome had got rid
                of her other enemies, they took up arms. If there is any historical truth in
                this narrative, the Tarquins must have called upon their friends in Latium to
                unite with their Etruscan allies in fighting against Rome. But is it likely
                that all Latium, as one man, stood up for the tyrant? The dominion which the
                Tarquins exercised in Latium was assuredly not milder than their tyranny in
                Rome. They had subjected the whole of Latium by force of arms. The story of the
                treacherous conquest of Gabii by the
                cunning and deceit of Sextus Tarquinius points to the existence of an enmity
                between the Tarquins and Latium. And is this not expressed in the legend of the
                siege of Ardea? After the expulsion of the kings, this town is said to have
                concluded a peace with the Romans for sixteen years; is it likely, supposing
                all the stories to have been authentic, that this town fought against Rome on
                the side of the Tarquins? Moreover, there was the town of Praeneste, which,
                like Tusculum, Ardea, and Aricia, was at that time hardly inferior to Rome
                itself. According to a meager report
                preserved by Livy, which by its very meagreness betrays a good annalistic
                source, Praeneste joined the Romans. This town, therefore, did not take the
                side of united Latium against Rome. Of Gabii we
                may suppose the same; for, according to the legend, the Gabines avenged the treachery of Sextus, by killing
                him soon after the expulsion of his family from Rome.
                   In Lavinium there
                lived, according to the legend, Collatinus, the
                colleague of Brutus, after he had voluntarily resigned his office, and had left
                Rome. This town also must, therefore, be supposed to have been friendly to
                Rome. And if we had more accurate reports of the events of this time, we should
                probably find that many other Latin towns were united with Rome in the struggle
                for national independence and political liberty. It is due only to the national
                vanity of the Roman annalists, that the whole of
                Latium is mentioned as hostile, whereas perhaps only a few towns opposed, and
                the majority supported, Rome. In some towns, indeed, it may be that a strong
                Tarquinian party was in favour of a war against Rome. This may especially be
                supposed of Tusculum, a town in the hands of Tarquin’s son-in-law,
                Octavius Mamilius. The same can easily be
                believed of Fidenae, for it was perhaps more Etruscan than any other town
                on the left bank of the Tiber. With others other motives may have operated. We
                cannot guess the detail of these events, but from a few traces that are
                preserved it appears clear that the war cannot be considered as one between
                Rome and united Latium. On the contrary, it seems that the dominion of the
                Tarquins was detested, not only in Rome, but everywhere in Latium, on account
                of its despotism, and from national hostility; that rebellion took place, as
                for instance, in Ardea, and that at last, in a great decisive battle, the
                national element of the Latins and the aristocratic republic gained the victory
                over the Etruscan monarchy. Let us try to discover what gave the first impulse
                to this movement.
                   In the period of the fall of Tarquin, as far as we can
                trust the uncertain chronology, Aristodemus was Tyrant of Cumae. Of him
                Dionysius relates a long story, how he possessed himself of power, killed the
                nobles, expelled their sons from the town, but fell at last a victim to their
                revenge. This Aristodemus is said to have driven back a powerful army of
                Umbrians, Daunians, and Tyrrhenians, who marched
                against Cumae; afterwards he went to assist the Latins against the Etruscans,
                who, under Aruns, the reputed son of Porsenna,
                besieged Aricia. Here Aristodemus, with his allies, gained a victory over the
                Etruscans. At last, Aristodemus supported the Romans against the Etruscans, who
                wished to restore the expelled Tarquins.
                   These statements suggest the conclusion that
                Etruscans, after the conquest of Rome and Latium, advancing southward, came in
                contact with the towns of Campania, especially with Cumae. Repulsed here, they
                began to lose their hold on Latium. Several towns, such as Ardea and Aricia,
                rebelled. Then Rome rose against them. Praeneste and other towns joined the
                party which opposed the Etruscan kings, perhaps more from national than
                political enmity. In the war which arose, the towns of Etruria proper seem to
                have taken no part; the Latins were divided and stood on both sides. In the
                battle of Regillus the victory was decided in favour of Roman and Latin
                independence. It was not a victory of the Romans over Latium. Consequently
                when, a few years later (493 B.C.), a league was concluded with the Latins
                under the consul Sp. Cassius, the Latins were treated as an independent nation.
                The Romans were satisfied with having again obtained their independence by the help
                of the Latins, and they made no attempt to regard themselves as the heirs of
                the power of the Tarquins over Latium.
                   As for the detail in the narrative of this war, it is
                full poetry, as may be expected at this period. The description of the battle
                of Lake Regillus reminds us of Homer’s battle-scenes. The armies fight, but the
                leaders decide the battle. It is a succession of single combats in which the
                heroes of that period perished. The old King Tarquin fought and fell. Even the
                gods took part in the battle: Castor and Pollux stormed the enemy’s camp, and
                appeared in Rome as the first messengers announcing the victory. A horse’s
                footprint in stone testified in later times to their presence in the
                battle.       
                    
                 CHAPTER XII.
                 The
                Sabine War.
                    
                 We have not yet done with the wars, which, in the
                beginning of the republic follow one upon another with marvellous rapidity.
                According to the received chronology, the Latin war which we have just referred
                to was preceded by a dangerous war with the Sabines, which lasted from the year
                505 to 501 B.C. Dionysius and Plutarch give detailed accounts of this war, full
                of vivid descriptions of marches, stratagems, battles, victories, and triumphs.
                Livy mentions it in few words, and Zonaras appears to give it the place of the
                war with the Latins, which he entirely passes over. The war will find but
                little mercy at the hands of historical criticism.
                   It is at the very outset surprising that this war,
                although coming between that of Porsenna and that of the Latins, appears unconnected
                with the exertions of the Tarquins to regain their power in Rome. The shrewd
                Dionysius alone has endeavoured to remove this objection, by making Sextus
                Tarquinius take part in it. But in the older unsophisticated account this war
                has no connection with the Tarquinians. The Sabines harass Rome for four
                years; Tarquinius waits until they are defeated, and then he makes his attack
                upon Rome in conjunction with the Latins. This is clearly most improbable. The
                whole story is not, however, to be condemned on account of a chronological
                error. If we could save the war by placing it after the war with the Latins
                instead of before it, we should be satisfied. But even with such a
                transposition very little is gained. The foul spot is in the subject-matter itself,
                and cannot be removed by transposing the war to another place.
                   The descriptions of the war connect it especially with
                the name of the Valerian house. In the first campaign (505 B.C.) the Consul
                M. Valerius, the brother of Poplicola, beats the
                Sabines in two great battles; in the second of these the Sabines lose 13,000
                men, but the Romans not one man. In the following year (504 B.C.) the same
                story is repeated, with this difference, that instead of M. Valerius, his brother, the principal hero of the Valerian
                house, P. Valerius Poplicola, is mentioned
                as consul and conqueror over the Sabines. This time also, according to
                Dionysius, 113,000 Sabines are killed; but Dionysius is too shrewd a writer to
                discredit his report by adding that the Romans lost not a single man. He is
                silent about this, and, to make his report more plausible, he adds the number
                of 4,200 prisoners.
                   It might be supposed that, after such defeats, Sabines
                must have been reduced to submission. But it is not so. The war begins afresh
                in the following year, and the indefatigable Dionysius relates new victories
                and triumphs.4 It was only in the fourth year of the war (502 B.C.) that peace
                was concluded, after the Sabines had been again signally beaten, and had again
                lost 13,000 men in battle, and about 4,000 prisoners.
                   What is to be thought of the whole of this war? Can
                any historical foundation be brought to light by removing exaggerations, or
                have we to deal with a simple fiction?
                   Niebuhr remarks, in reference to the early wars
                (before Tarquinius Priscus), that it is difficult to see how Romans and Sabines
                could get into collision, so long as independent towns, like Tusculum and Nomentum, separated both nations. With this opinion we must
                agree, if we limit the name of Sabines to the inhabitants of the highlands on
                the east side of the mountain range stretching from Tibur to Narnia. Yet in the
                lowlands also, between this chain of hills and Rome, there were Sabines who had
                invaded this country, and had established themselves in Rome itself. Nomentum, Cures, Collatia, Caenina, Crustumerium,
                and Antemnae are mentioned as Sabine
                towns. Fidenae seems to have been Sabine and Etruscan at different
                times. Dionysius names the Anio as the
                boundary between the Sabines and the Romans. But even south-west of the Anio, the town Regillum, in
                the region of Tusculum, was called Sabine, and that Sabines lived there follows
                from a passage in Dionysius, where he relates that the Aequians had to march to
                Rome through the country of Tusculum and that of the Sabines.
                   The fact that we find Sabines in the very heart of
                Latium agrees with the view already expressed, that the Sabines in the oldest
                time overran Latium and settled there. In course of time the Sabines and Latins
                became one people, and for a time the name of Latins was just as appropriate to
                designate them as that of Sabines. In the oldest sources referring to the
                intercourse of the Romans with their easterly and southerly neighbors, there was an uncertainty in the name which was
                applied to the latter; they were sometimes called Latins, and sometimes
                Sabines. This is evident from the story of the temple of Diana, which was built
                by Servius Tullius on the Aventine as a common sanctuary of the Romans and
                Latins. At that time it came to pass that a certain Sabine had a cow of unusual
                size, and the soothsayers predicted that whoever sacrificed this cow to Diana
                would secure the supremacy to his nation. The Sabine brought the cow to Rome to
                the common sanctuary of the Romans and Latins on the Aventine, but was outwitted
                by the Roman priest, who sent him down to the Tiber for purification, and in
                his absence offered up the cow in the name of Rome. In this story the Sabines
                and the Latins are evidently looked upon as the same nation. We cannot,
                therefore, be surprised that Sabine towns, like Nomentum,
                were reckoned among the thirty allied Latin towns, and that Collatia is called Sabine as well as Latin. We
                conclude from this uncertainty in the designation of the neighbouring people,
                that a Latin war could easily be called a war with the Sabines. But if once the
                words “Sabine war” were uttered, descriptions of battles and triumphs would
                follow as a matter of course. We arrive at the same result if we pursue another
                line of argument.
                   The Latin war was especially famous on account of the
                battle of the Lake Regillus under the dictatorship of Aulus Postumius Albus Regillensis.
                The names Regillum and Regillensis were, therefore, intimately connected in
                the memory of this war. The people of Regillum were
                Sabines. They were the bitter enemies of Rome, and before the beginning of the
                war they expelled the house of Claudius which counselled peace with Rome, and,
                therefore, emigrated to that city. The stories of both these wars, therefore, have
                reference to the same locality. Still clearer proof of the identity of the two
                wars is contained in the name of the Roman general, who is said to have
                conquered the Sabines as well as the Latins, as consul or dictator. This
                was Postumius, called at one time Aulus, at another Fublius,
                and surnamed either Albus Regillensis or Tubertus. The best known and the most celebrated name for
                the conqueror in the battle of Regillus was A. Postumius Albus Regillensis. But the first and third of the
                before-mentioned campaigns against the Sabines (505 and 503 B.C.) are also
                ascribed to a Postumius who was called
                P. Postumius Tubertus.
                In addition to this we find that in the year 495 B.C., immediately after the
                battle of Regillus, under the consuls Appius Claudius Sabinus, and P. Servilius Priscus, there occurs another Sabine war,
                although in the year 502 peace had been concluded. The war is, indeed,
                represented as nothing more than a night attack of the Sabines on the Roman
                territory, which was quickly repulsed. Yet its identity with the great Latin
                war is perceptible; for it is not one of the two consuls for the year,
                but Postumius again, who beats the enemy,
                though in this year he held no public office. Can there be any doubt that the
                P. Postumius of 503, and the A. Postumius of 496 and 495 are one and the same person,
                and that the victories ascribed to them are repetitions of the same fact?
                   The defeat of the Latins at Lake Regillus was followed
                in 493 B.C. by the conclusion of the treaty which joined Latium and Rome as
                allies, enjoying equal rights. We have already seen that this equality of the
                two nations is a proof that Latium was not subjected to Rome, but that Latins
                and Romans united together to free themselves from the Etruscan dominion. Now the
                man who in the Roman annals was celebrated for the conclusion of this treaty
                was the consul Sp. Cassius Viscellinus. How
                strange that the same man is said to have concluded the peace with the Sabines
                in the year 503!
                   What we have said of the improbability of a collision
                of the Romans and the Sabines proper, in the first period of the republic, is
                applicable to the whole of the first century, that is up to the time when the
                territory of Rome extended to Cures. All the Sabine wars of that early period
                are exposed to the suspicion that they were received into the annals by the
                same process as the first Sabine war, viz., by confounding Sabines with Latins,
                or even Aequians, a kindred and neighbouring race. This suspicion is confirmed
                by the observation, that Sabine wars are mentioned especially in those years
                when members of the great Valerian house were magistrates, as, besides the
                years 505 and 504, a member of this family is named in the Fasti, in the years
                475, 470, 460, 458, and 449; and again in the attack on the Capitol, when it
                was seized by the Sabine Appius Herdonius in
                the year 460, a Valerius is said to have
                been slain. On the other hand, after the consulate of L. Valerius and M. Horatius, 449 B.C. a whole century
                passes without mention being made of Sabine wars. Niebuhr concluded from this
                circumstance that in the year 449 BC the Sabines suffered such a complete
                overthrow that their strength was for ever broken. But, by a curious
                coincidence, no member of the Valerian house is mentioned in the Fasti from 449
                to 414. Is not the conjecture justified that the absence of Valerii in the Fasti is the real cause of the absence
                of the Sabine wars; that the domestic records of the Valerian house were the
                principal, if not the only, source of the stories of these wars; that the
                author of the family document was in the habit of using the designation Sabine,
                instead of Latin or Aequian; and that after the great break in the domestic
                annals (from 449 to 414) another writer continued the family records, and
                avoided the error of his predecessor?
                   If this conjecture is well founded, it suggests a
                conclusion with reference to the age of the Roman family chronicles, viz.,
                that, in the Valerian house, such writings were in existence before 414 BC. At
                what period these documents originated, it is impossible to ascertain, but
                probably they were not much younger than the decemviral legislation, when the
                last of the Valerii mentioned in them was
                consul. If we take this time as the date of the composition of these annals,
                the contradictions and uncertainties of the statements referring to the
                earlier Valerii are accounted for. Half a
                century could not elapse without obscuring the memory of events to an extent
                which favoured the exaggerating fictions and excused the confusion of the
                family annalists.       
                    
                 
 CHAPTER XIII.
                 The Roman People
                in the Time of the kings.
                    
                 Hitherto the
                result of our researches has been almost exclusively negative. We have seen
                that the so-called History of the Kings is neither in itself credible nor
                supported by such evidence as to make us believe statements which in themselves
                are improbable. It rests neither on authentic records nor on real tradition,
                but it was put together at a comparatively late period, according to a certain
                artificial design. It consists mainly in attempts to explain, in a connected
                historical narrative, the origin of political institutions, religious and
                social customs, the names of places and buildings, and generally the vague
                conceptions of the people concerning their own antiquities. Hence the great
                poverty and baldness of these stories, and, in spite of many contradictory
                statements, a general harmony of the narrative, which gives rise to the
                suspicion that the whole was worked out according to a uniform plan and design.
                The History of the Kings is therefore entirely worthless, in so far as it lays
                claim to be an account of a gradual development, and to relate events in their
                regular succession and connection. The whole of the regal period is to us only
                the given point of departure for the development of the republic, and we must
                be satisfied if we succeed in gaining out of the scanty materials a picture of
                the political life, the social condition, and the religions views and culture
                of the Romans in this early period which precedes the beginning of real
                history.
                   When the Romans first appear on the stage of history as a separate people, they had passed through a long period of national development, along with kindred races, and the groundwork of their religious, legal, and social life was already formed. A division of the people into a ruling and a subordinate class may be traced to the very beginning, and points indisputably to a conquest of the lands, and to the subjection of the former inhabitants, an event which had been preserved in the recollection of the people, and gave rise to the stories of the advance of the Sabines to the Capitol and of the conquest of Latium by the Etruscans. Thus there arose
                the contrast between citizens and Divisions subjects, Patricians and Plebeians.
                The body of the people, plebeians, again, consisted of two classes. They were
                either clients, i.e. dependants of patrician houses, or they had no special
                connection with individual patricians, and were subject only to the body of
                patricians as a whole, i.e. to the Roman state. It was the
                latter class which, being free from all special subjection to patrician
                patrons, formed the body of the independent plebs, and carried on the contest
                for political equality with the privileged order of citizens.
                   We find similar
                arrangements among different peoples of antiquity. Where a state was founded by
                conquest (and this was the general rule), the aboriginal inhabitants were
                reduced to a state of dependence on the conquerors, which in some places, as
                for instance in Sparta, was a complete servitude, but under more favourable
                circumstances was a more or less oppressive political inferiority. The most
                usual plan was, that the subject population resigned a part of their lands, and
                kept the rest only under certain onerous conditions. These conditions were
                principally services to be rendered and portions of the produce of the land to
                be paid. From this obligation to pay arose the debts of the subject population
                and the oppression under which they languished at all times. The lords of the
                soil were always exerting themselves to increase the services to be rendered by
                the clients, which in all cases were fixed either by contract or by custom.
                Thus arose the inability of the clients to pay, and their gradual eviction from
                their inherited and original landed properly, the absorption of small
                freeholds, a corresponding enlargement of estates in the hands of the ruling
                body, and a more general employment of slaves in agriculture.
                   The Roman clients,
                according to the ideal conception, described by Dionysius, were supposed to be
                united to their patrons by bonds of mutual affection and trust, and to regard
                them as their natural protectors, as sons regard their fathers. They were
                placed under the paternal authority of the head of the family, but also under
                his protection. They formed with the whole family a distinct community on a
                small scale, represented in the larger community of the state by the patron.
                The state as such did not interfere with the relations of the client to his
                patron. On this score, therefore, the client was without any protection from
                the law, and exposed to any act of injustice, as he had no legal redress
                against his master. But his claim to mild and equitable treatment was acknowledged
                by the religion of the community, which threatened the unjust masters with the
                vengeance of the gods. What such protection of the gods could effect, it is
                hard to say. The treatment of the client depended, no doubt, less on the
                generosity, the equity, or the religious scruples of the masters, than on their
                interest, on custom, and public opinion. It is unlikely that the protection of
                religion could preserve them effectually from oppression and injustice. The
                abuse of irresponsible power is too deeply rooted in human nature to make it
                probable that the Roman patricians conscientiously observed a self-imposed
                moderation, merely from a feeling of justice and religious duty. The history of
                Rome is full of proofs to the contrary, and shows that the patricians were not
                guided by such moderation, and that a sense of justice never controlled their
                selfishness.
                   Even during the
                regal period, as it seems, the ties that united clients and patrons began to be
                loosened. The impulse towards this change was given by the organization of the
                army according to centuries, which subjected the clients to military service
                without reference to their dependence on their patrons. Subsequently, when, by
                the establishment of the tribunes of the people, the plebs collectively obtained
                patrons recognized by the state, the institution of the old clientship began by
                degrees to disappear, and to sink into oblivion, so that even our oldest
                historians could obtain no clear conception of it.
                   It appears that
                slavery, the greatest curse of antiquity, had reached no great development in
                ancient Rome, as long as the clients were to some extent the substitutes for
                slaves. It was only after the successful wars with Etruscans, Volscians, and
                Samnites, in which numerous prisoners were made, that slavery became more and
                more common in Rome, while at the same time the old clientship disappeared. We
                may take for granted that, during the regal period, the number of slaves in
                Rome was very inconsiderable.
                   The Roman people,
                properly so called, consisted at the time of the kings, of patrician houses.
                The patricians alone were citizens in the enjoyment of all political rights.
                They alone had access to the gods of the state. They alone were in possession
                of the auspices, by means of which the intercourse between gods and men was
                effected. They were invested with a peculiar sanctity and dignity, which could
                not be communicated to strangers, but was transmitted only to natural
                descendants. Purity of blood was, therefore, above all things important, and
                inter-marriages with plebeians were not only degrading but sinful. The
                patrician people were divided into tribes (tribus),
                houses (gentes), and families (families),
                and each of these divisions was consecrated by religious rites, and had its
                peculiar sanctuaries. In the Roman family the father of the house ruled with
                patriarchal authority over his wife and children, his clients and his slaves.
                Even a grownup and married son, with his whole family, was subject to his
                father, as long as he lived; and no position in the state, no public office and
                no dignity, could modify the subjection of a member of the family to the common
                head. The father was priest and judge in his own house, with power of life and
                death. All the earnings of the members of the family belonged by law to the
                head. This dependence was dissolved only by death, and then the sons became
                independent heads of families. Every Roman woman was, either as wife, or
                daughter, or sister, in the power of her nearest male relative. Marriage was
                held sacred. Polygamy was unknown. A strictly regulated family was the
                foundation of a healthy political life. The virgin and the matron enjoyed
                proper respect. They were subject to the father and the husband, but as free
                agents, not as slaves. The wife was priestess by the side of the husband, and
                at the domestic hearth, which was also the family altar, attended to the
                service of the Penates, the household gods. In the temple of Vesta, which
                symbolized the common hearth of the whole people, pure virgins watched the
                eternal flame.
                   The Roman state
                was built up on the moral and severe organization of the family. Several
                families, united together, joined themselves into one House (gens), on the
                ground of real or supposed relationship. The house represented a higher unit
                than the family, less strictly bound together, and without a monarchical head,
                but the members were united by common sanctuaries and rights of inheritance,
                and marked as relations by a common family name (nomen gentile).
                In this manner arose a family pride which was quite distinct from the national
                pride. Not only had the Valerii, Claudii, Fabii, and Furii their own sanctuaries, legends, and traditionary
                politics, but even the way of thinking and the character of a Roman seemed
                differently coloured according to the house to which he belonged.
                   A certain number
                of houses joined together formed a Curia. Thirty of these curiae made up the
                whole people of the patricians. The curia again was regarded as an enlarged
                family; the members of each, the Curiales, met,
                at stated times, for common festivals and sacrifices, for which purpose priests
                were appointed at the sanctuary of Juno Curitis.
                Of any political functions of the curiae there is, however, nothing known. The
                thirty curiae formed collectively the body of the Roman people, and this
                assembly decided on all matters which did not belong to the current business of
                the executive, especially on the election of the sovereigns, and questions of
                peace and war; it was the legislative body, and at the same time the supreme
                court of justice. The subject population was not entitled to vote in the
                assembly of the curiae. But it is possible, and indeed probable, that, during
                formal business and religious ceremonies, those plebeians who were clients were
                admitted by their patrons, and that on the whole they were not shut out from a
                certain passive presence in the assemblies. They were in a similar position to
                those Latins, and other foreigners, who were received in considerable numbers
                into the Roman state after the great Latin war. They were citizens without the
                right of voting; they shared the burdens, but not the honors and
                privileges of the patricians, with whom they did not really form one people,
                until they were enrolled into the centuries of Servius Tullius.
                   By a farther union
                of ten curiae into one body was formed a tribe. There were consequently three
                tribes—the Ramnes, the Tities,
                and the Luceres—whose almost forgotten names
                sounded strange in the ears of the later Romans, and were as unconnected with
                the existing political divisions and institutions of later times as the
                kingdoms of Mercia, Northumberland, and Wessex are with the England of our
                days. The Roman antiquarians knew nothing of their origin and practical working
                in the state, nor have modern critics arrived at a satisfactory theory.
                Probably the divisions had reference only to the army. Originally the Roman
                legion is said to have consisted of 3,000 foot and 300 horse. This made 1,000
                foot soldiers for each tribe and 100 horse. The military tribunes, six in
                number in each legion, appear from their names to have been officers of the
                tribe. The eighteen centuries of horse—being the six original centuries and
                twelve younger ones—appear to have been formed out of the three tribes, so that
                it may be presumed that the division of the Roman people into three parts had
                reference to the military organization. The oldest popular assembly of the
                Romans therefore, as well as the later one of the centuries, had for its basis
                the organization, into an army, of the men capable of bearing arms.
                   No state of Greece
                or of Italy could dispense with a council of elders, which, on account of the
                unwieldy character of large popular assemblies, was in reality called upon to
                conduct the government. The Roman senate consisted, as alleged, in the regal
                period, of three hundred members. These, the real, if not the acknowledged,
                representatives of the people, the heads of the first families, and therefore
                appropriately called Patres, i.e. Fathers,
                were chosen by the king for life, and exercised no doubt a decided influence on
                his policy.
                   In the time of the
                republic the senate was the centre of political life. In the regal period its
                power was probably less, considering that the executive was in the hands
                period, not of annually changing magistrates like the consuls, but of princes
                elected for life. Unimportant, however, it could not have been, as the crown
                was not hereditary, and the choice of each new king lay de facto in the hands
                of the senate.
                   In the absence of
                trustworthy traditions regarding the regal period, it is not possible to form a
                clear view of the position and functions of the kings. It may, however, be
                assumed with certainty, that, at the time of the establishment of the republic,
                the kingly power continued in the consulship, and was only lessened by being
                divided between two colleagues, and by the limitation of the office to one
                year. This diminution, however, was very important. The king, who had neither
                to apprehend any interference from a colleague, nor to look forward to the time
                when he would be obliged to retire into private life and give an account of his
                acts, stood invested with a power which placed all the resources of the people
                at his disposal, if he understood how to make their interests his own. Still we
                must not think of him as of an Asiatic despot, placed by the slavish submission
                of his subjects above the control of all law, or as a Greek tyrant, trampling
                on the established liberties of his country, and ruling by sheer force and
                violence in defiance of law and justice. Both these forms of absolute power
                were made impossible in Rome by the strictly legal mode of electing the
                sovereign, which excluded hereditary right on the one side and arbitrary
                assumption of it on the other. The Roman kings were placed under the authority
                of the laws, and were bound by the terms of a contract with their people,
                which, if not formally expressed in words, was fully implied and understood.
                The consent of the gods to the election of a king, given in the solemn
                auspices, the voluntary homage on the part of the citizens (the lex curiata de imperio),
                the obedience of the citizen-army, were given to the king only on condition
                that he did not abuse the power entrusted to him. Moreover, an aristocracy like
                that of the Roman patricians was incompatible with unlimited kingly power. The
                Romans were formed by nature to be governed not by arbitrary will, but by laws.
                For their guidance in all the incidents of social and political life they
                elaborated legal maxims and enforced them on all contracting parties; nay, even
                their intercourse with the gods was not an unconditional service, no simple
                subjection, but a performance of certain services on the part of men for which
                a corresponding service on the part of the gods was claimed as a right.
                Accordingly, it must be presumed, even without direct evidence, that the Roman
                kings had to rule according to law and justice, and not by arbitrary will. As
                high priests they were mediators between the gods and men, just as every father
                of a family was in his own house; as judges they decided on important cases of
                dispute and breaches of the peace, either personally or by deputies, according
                to unwritten but fixed principles of law; as commanders of the armed citizens, they
                conducted the wars, which had been previously discussed by the elders and
                determined on by the people.
                   As a sign of their
                supreme military and judicial power legislative over life and death, the Roman
                kings had a retinue lictors with bundles of rods and axes, and in every respect
                they exhibited royal pomp before the people. Much has been said respecting the
                personal legislation of the kings: how Romulus organized the state, how Numa
                established the religion and introduced other parts of public law; but none of
                these reports are borne out by satisfactory evidence. They were invented to
                account for the origin of institutions, and cannot prove that new principles of
                public or private law could be introduced by the kings without the consent of
                the senate and the people.
                   Perhaps the most
                important limitation of the kingly power was exercised through the forms which
                religion supplied to the ruling aristocracy. Without the divine sanction no
                important act could be undertaken in private life. It was, of course, still
                more important for all public measures to obtain the divine consent. But the
                access to the gods through the auguries was open to the body of patricians. The
                possession of the auspices was their birth right; it was, for political
                purposes, exercised in their behalf by priests and augurs, who were members of
                their body, and chosen for life as well as the kings. It would, therefore, have
                been no easy matter for a Roman king to emancipate himself from the restraints
                which the patricians were able to put upon him through the national religion.
                   The Romans were an
                eminently religious people. Their minds were penetrated by religious feelings,
                and their co sciences bound up in religious duties. This was indicated by the
                name itself, for religio meant
                spiritual bondage; it implied pangs of conscience and terror of the divine
                wrath. It exhibited itself in a conscientious attention to all observances
                prescribed in the service of the gods, in the right interpretation of the
                divine will as revealed by extraordinary natural phenomena, in the offerings,
                supplications, prayers, and purifications which the priests prescribed. The
                Romans saw everywhere, and in all things, the agency and direction of the gods.
                The whole of nature was to them pervaded by divine power. The heavens, the
                earth, the water—all things swarmed with divine beings. Every change in
                nature—growth, decay, and death—was the work of some deity. Wherever man
                turned, whatever he undertook, he was everywhere controlled by the Deity, in
                the whole course of his life, from the cradle to the grave.
                   But the Romans had
                only an abstract conception of the Deity; they did not see it revealed in a
                form palpable to the senses, and within reach of human sympathies. To them the
                gods were only mysterious spiritual beings without human forms, without human
                feelings and impulses, without human virtues or weaknesses. They emerged from
                the all-surrounding and all-pervading spiritual world to influence human life,
                like the unfeeling elements of nature; and before the eye of man had caught
                their form, and the heart had drawn near to them, they retired from sight and
                contact, to merge in the godhead of the universe, like a wave in the ocean.
                   Roman religion,
                therefore, has gods, but no mythology. Though the divine beings were conceived
                as male or female they did not join in marriage or beget children. They did not
                live together like the Greek gods in Olympus, after the manner of men; they had
                no intercourse with mortals. No genuine Roman legend tells of any race of
                nobles sprung from the gods; no oracle uttered a divine revelation by the mouth
                of inspired prophets. For the inspiration of prophecy was substituted the dry
                formal science of augury, which aims at nothing but the discovery of the simple
                assent or dissent of the gods, by means of the anxious observation and almost
                mechanical interpretation of a strictly defined set of phenomena, and which
                gave no hint, no warning, no advice, as a sign of the divine sympathy in the
                affairs of men.
                   Such an
                unimaginative conception of the Deity could not create ideal pictures or statues
                of the gods. A simple spear, even a rough stone sufficed as a symbol; a
                consecrated space, a sacrificial hearth, as temple or altar. For 170 years, it
                is said, Rome knew no religious images. Afterwards, when the Romans had learnt
                from the Etruscans to represent the gods as men after the Greek fashion, the
                old views and ideas still remained in the hearts of the people. The gods
                transplanted from Greece took no root in the minds of the Roman people. They
                remained external ornaments, recommended by Greek literature, by foreign
                influence, by fashion, by love of show; and these external additions gathered
                around the kernel of the Roman religion, without affecting or transforming its
                inmost core. The Greek gods never were truly domesticated in Rome. At the household
                hearth the Lares and Penates continued to
                be worshipped, their presence was only dimly seen in the glowing ashes, and
                always filled the heart with secret awe.
                   Thus the Roman
                people could not create a national epic. No Roman Homer ever sang the heroic
                deeds of bygone generations. With all the pride of ancestry which animated the
                Romans, with all their respect for epic tradition and the past, the Romans
                never had heroic songs, because they lacked the most important element of
                poetic imagination. When they extolled their ancestors, they never rose beyond
                a jejune enumeration of their deeds, honours, and virtues, just as they could
                draw up only dry lists of the powers, peculiarities, and rites due to the gods
                and were never inspired to real religious poetry. Religion, therefore, it is
                true, had among the Romans a powerful influence over men. It governed them
                entirely in all their doings, in all public and social relations. It made them
                courageous, constant, firm, and confident of the divine protection as long as
                they fulfilled their prescribed duties. It was designed for use in practical
                life. To the husbandman it promised a rich harvest, to the shepherd increase
                of his flocks, to the housewife plenty in her stores, to the warrior victory,
                to the state prosperity. It offered protection from all evils and sufferings,
                from sickness among men and cattle, from blight and vermin, from poverty and
                disgrace. Piety consisted in appeasing the evil spirits, and procuring
                the favor of the good. This was done by
                strictly prescribed prayers and rites. But of any intimate relationship between
                man and God, of purity in thought, word, and deed, of the consciousness of sin,
                of hearty penitence and reform, of a sanctified love of virtue and truth for
                their own sake, of untiring aspirations after the knowledge of God and union
                with Him, of all that is most exalted, most heavenly, and most beautiful, in a
                greater or smaller degree, in the religion of other nations—of all this there
                is hardly a trace among the Romans. They were, therefore, even to the end, a
                heartless, cold, calculating, and uncharitable people, without enthusiasm
                themselves, and awakening none in others, great and powerful only by their
                self-control, their intelligence, and their iron will.
                   Art is an
                offspring of religion. When the first necessities of life are satisfied, when
                bare existence is secured, man rises to the enjoyment of the beautiful. His
                first leisure he devotes with grateful zeal to the service of the Deity. The
                dwellings of the gods are the first which he endeavours to adorn. At the
                festival of the gods he throws off the anxieties connected with his daily toil,
                and enjoys the pleasures which life offers him. Here poetry and music spring up
                hand-in-hand with architecture, sculpture, and painting. The temples and holy
                images and religious songs are, among all nations, the first products of art.
                Amongst a people, therefore, like the Romans, whose gods had assumed no human
                form, where strictly prescribed litanies checked the free effusion of the heart
                in prayer, there is no fruitful soil for art to flourish.
                   The oldest Roman
                festivals of which we hear were rustic games. At the Lupercalia, youths ran
                through the streets dressed in goats’ skins, beating all those they met with
                strips of goats’ leather. The dances of the Saliarian priests,
                the perambulations of the Ambarvalian brethren,
                the processions with the holy shields appear, as the scanty remains of the old
                hymns indicate, to have been without any artistic element. The flute, the
                public games, the solemn processions, and magnificent robes were first made
                known to the Romans by the Etruscans; and down to a comparatively late period,
                the Romans continued to be dependent on their Etruscan neighbours, and learned
                from them the first lessons of dramatic art. In architecture likewise the
                Romans were pupils of the far more advanced Etruscans, and for a long period,
                Etruscan sculptors made for Rome the holy images and executed the decorations
                of the temples. Rome never produced real artists. Even at the time when the
                streets and palaces were filled with Greek masterpieces, the true feeling for
                art was wanting, both as regards appreciation and productive skill. A true
                Roman may be said to have enjoyed the possession of rare, costly, and famous
                works of Greek art, rather than to have comprehended their intrinsic beauty.
                   In the time of the
                kings, therefore, and even late in the time of the republic, Rome stood on a
                very low level with regard to art, and was dependent on foreign, chiefly on
                Etruscan, models. Works of art are indeed ascribed to the regal period; for
                example, a statue of the augur Attus Navius, the figure of the Ephesian Diana on the Aventine,
                and an equestrian statue of Cloelia, are named.
                But all these works, if they really did exist, date from a later period, like
                the augural staff and the hut of Romulus, and the Capitoline she-wolf.
                   The great public
                works, erected for the use and defense of
                the town, the sewers and the walls, were constructed at the time of Etruscan
                dominion. The temple of the Capitoline Jupiter was probably the first edifice
                of architectural pretensions in Rome. Nothing can be further from the truth
                than the idea that Rome in the regal period was an imposing city. Inside the
                line of fortifications which were formed partly by the steep declivities of the
                hills, and partly by walls and ditches, different villages, separated from one
                another by fields and meadows, lay on the several hills, and in them distinct
                local traditions, customs, and religious ceremonies were for a long time preserved.
                The town was full of consecrated places and altars of the simplest
                construction, either of stone or turf. The dwellings of the Roman peasants were
                miserable straw huts, where the family assembled at meal times and offered
                sacrifices around the hearth in the smoky atrium.
                   The Roman peasants
                however did not spent much time in their houses, beyond the hours for eating
                and sleeping. By day the farmer was in the field or at the market, where he
                bought and sold, and attended to the transaction of public affairs.
                Agricultures was much esteemed among the Romans. The proudest patrician
                practiced it with his own hand, and with the help of his sons. Trade, on the
                contrary, was despised. Clients and freedmen might occupy themselves with it,
                but for a patrician it was thought to be degrading. On this account the
                industrial arts could not flourish in Rome, as they did in Athens, Corinth, and
                the Etruscan towns. The trades of the artisans never rose to the dignity either
                of art or of industrial pursuits on a large scale.
                   Commerce could not
                prosper without the existence of a profitable industry. Rome was never a
                commercial city. The indispensable exchange of the products of agriculture and
                of trade could not be developed into an active intercourse with foreign states,
                as Rome possessed no articles for exportation; moreover, in the regal period,
                the Etruscans ruled the Western Mediterranean. The Romans could not have
                competed with them, if even their geographical situation had been more
                favourable for commerce.
                   Although the
                Romans in the regal period were still in the infancy of civilization, they had
                already laid the foundation for great excellence at least in one art, that of
                war. They knew the importance of strict organization, and indiscriminate
                subordination of the individual will to that of the whole for all purposes of
                defence and attack. The basis of the political organization was formed by
                military requirements. The old constitution of curiae corresponded with the
                form of the Roman legion. This becomes still more evident in the constitution
                of centuries, which, down to the smallest detail, exhibits its military
                character. If the Roman generals were deficient in strategic skill, the army
                made up for this fault by such admirable bearing and calm bravery, that even great
                blunders of the commander seldom endangered the safety of the army, and the
                soldiers often gained a victory which the generals had lost.
                   The annals of the
                older Roman history contain hardly anything but accounts of wars and
                descriptions of battles. The wars of that time were no doubt frequent, as in
                the case of small, independent, half-barbarian nations seems to be unavoidable.
                But it is surely a mistake to suppose that the wars were uninterrupted. The
                Roman annalists, who thought it incumbent on
                them to report battles and sieges for every year, did not hesitate to invent
                wars, victories, and triumphs, and, as can be satisfactorily shown, made
                frequent use of the simple expedient of repeating the same story several times.
                In many of these successive narratives it is easy to recognise the same
                materials, worked up and varied with more or less skill, boldness, and
                impudence. If allowance is made for these numerous inventions, and if we bear
                in mind how the most trifling events were exaggerated, and how many of these
                wars were only plundering expeditions, which ended without great harm being
                done, we can understand that, in spite of the wars, a certain degree of
                prosperity was possible among the Roman people. There must have been times of
                rest and of peaceful industry; otherwise Rome would not have emerged from
                barbarism, but would indeed have remained a nest of robbers, such as it appears
                in the legend of the asylum of Romulus.
                   But Rome grew and
                grew, not only by the warlike qualities of its armies, but also by the peaceful
                industry of its citizens. As it increased externally by the force of arms, it
                grew internally in the elements of culture and of public well-being; otherwise
                its history would not have become what it is, a great epoch in the development
                of the human race.
                   
                  
             
 WILHELM IHNE’S HISTORY OF ROME |