the ancient experiment of building a new city upon the backs of outcasts
came to an end when the allied armies of the Latins stormed Roma.
Led by King Acron of the Caeninenses, the armies had joined upon the
suggestion of fighting to end the city of Rome once and for all after its
treachery at the festival of Neptune Equester.
Please click the
icon to follow us on Facebook.The enormous unified armies of the
Latins crushed the Romans despite heavy losses with their king Romulus
executed for crimes against womanhood.
It was an end to a tragic life. Romulus and his twin brother Remus had
been born sons of the god Mars by the Vestal Virgin Rhea Silvia, daughter
of Numitor, the deposed king of Alba Longa and descendant of the Trojan
Aeneas. Amulius, who had deposed his brother Numitor, had Rhea executed
and the boys exposed to ensure his place on the throne, but they were
discovered by a she-wolf, who suckled them to health. They would then be
found by shepherds, who would raise them to adulthood.
As shepherds, they came into arguments with the shepherds of King Amulius,
who captures Remus and discovers his identity. With the reality known,
Romulus and Remus killed Amulius, restored their grandfather Numitor to
the throne, and set off to make their own kingdom by building a city. The
brothers argued almost immediately about which hill to build upon, and
Romulus won via augury. As construction began upon the Palatine Hill,
Remus criticized the work and, for final insult, jumped over the
half-built wall. Romulus killed his brother and declared famously, "So
perish every one that shall hereafter leap over my wall!"
"This is a good one. But I dont see any meaningful
survival of the Italian culture making it through the Dark Ages without
Rome. Christianity needed Rome as well. I also doubt any long lasting
organized Carthaginiam Empire. Maybe If Alexander conquered Italy as he
panned to do (?) I see an organized Greco Roman West. " - reader's commentWhen
his city (named Roma after himself) was completed, Romulus selected the
best one hundred men, naming them Patricians and creating a senate
structure to aid him rule as fathers of the city. He organized the
fighting men into his newly invented "legion" and depended more heavily on
infantry than cavalry. The revolutionary city exploded in population,
attracting exiles, criminals, runaways, ne'er-do-wells, and general
vagrants. Most of these were males, and so the boomtown became grossly
disproportionate with the sexes.
Taking Numitor's advice, Romulus decided to celebrate the festival of
Neptune and invited the Latin people of the surrounding cities. Many came,
particularly the Sabines. At Romulus' signal, the men of Rome pounced,
carrying off as many virgins as they could - 683 according to ancient
sources. Rather than sexual rape, the kidnapped women were invited to
marry Roman husbands and granted shared property and civil rights in a
city of free men. The women agreed to these progressive ideals, but the
cities of their fathers rallied to take back their daughters. As they
began to march, the Caeninenses held as spies detected the strength of the
Roman army. Deciding to use cunning to deliver might, their king Acron
called for a council with the other kings of the Antemnates, Crustumini,
and the Sabines. Their unified army overwhelmed the Romans and decimated
the city, punishing any woman who wept for her lost husband (and rights).
Romulus, who had committed the sin of fratricide, was deserted by Mars and
punished by Juno.
As per the ancient prophecy that the descendants of Aeneas would lead to a
great nation, the truth came as Acron used the opportunity to create a
permanent military confederation with the other cities. Unlike many of the
Greek empires where dominant cities ruled over weaker ones and demanded
tribute, the confederation was one of equals, usually only seen under the
duress of war against a common enemy. The Italian Confederation would
spread over the peninsula and create many colonies in the west while
successfully defeating Greek attempts to colonize from the east.
Despite centuries of success, the Confederation would eventually be broken
by the strength of the Carthaginian Empire, the embodiment of the curse of
its ancient queen and abandoned lover of Aeneas, Dido. Carthage would go
on to build a widespread merchant empire through Europe, the
Mediterranean, and Africa until its own fall by invasion of the German
Vandals. Even with its ultimate failure, the Italian ideals of
confederation and equality would be a landmark looked back upon by
political thinkers in the Enlightenment, serving as groundwork for
breakaway Angle colonies of the New World (giving freedom to men but
notably ignoring liberties of slaves and women).