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Roma Roman A legendary figure who came to be worshiped as a goddess, Roma was the personification of the city of Rome.

Publié le 26/01/2014

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Roma Roman A legendary figure who came to be worshiped as a goddess, Roma was the personification of the city of Rome. According to modern historians and archaeologists, she was first worshiped as a deity in about 195 b.c. when a popular cult to her developed outside of the city and in Greece, which was, by then, a part of the Roman Republic. Rome had become an important city in the lives of the people in these outlying areas, and they developed a worship of this goddess as an expression of that importance. Augustus, the first emperor of Rome, became associated with Roma. After Augustus died in a.d. 14, people believed he became a god and worshiped him with Roma. In a.d. 118, Emperor Hadrian built a temple to Roma within the city. The legends of Roma are much older than her worship as a goddess. According to some ancient sources, she was a Trojan prisoner of Aeneas who took her and other captives with him when he left Troy. After years of wandering the seas, Aeneas's ship finally reached the western shores of Italy. The captives were tired of the journey and Roma convinced them to set fire to the ship so Aeneas could not leave. Eventually, the community they created became so prosperous they named the city after her in thanks for her courage. In other legends, Roma was sometimes named as the granddaughter of Aeneas, as the wife of his son, and even as his wife. She was also said to be the daughter of Heracles. Some say she was also the sister of Latinus, legendary king and founder of the Latin people. Still another tradition says that Roma was the daughter of Evander, the legendary king who fled Greece and formed a community on the Palatine Hill before Romulus founded Rome. Evander, stories say, named the city that grew up around that hill and its six neighbors after his daughter. Rome Roman A city on the Tiber River in west central Italy, which by the first millennium b.c., had grown into a major urban center and the seat of an empire that surrounded the Mediterranean Sea and reached as far north as the British Isles. Rome's beginnings are hidden behind many myths and legends. According to the most common myth, Rome was founded by Romulus on April 21, an event celebrated in ancient times by the festival of Parilia, the festival of Pales. The year of that event is reported by some ancient sources as between 772 and 754 b.c. Other legends tell of the founding of the city by the descendants of Aeneas, the Greek hero who settled in central Italy after the end of the Trojan War. Archaeological evidence shows very early settlements built by farming people on or near the seven famous hills that formed the center of the city that became Rome. The first hill people settled appears to have been the Capitoline Hill. Archaeologists have discovered some of the oldest temples to the supreme Roman god, Jupiter, on this hill. According to legend, it was on this hill that Romulus founded his city. The next hill that settlers developed was the nearby Palatine, 1,250 yards to the southeast of the Capitoline Hill. Legend says that Evander, a leader from the Arcadia region of ancient Greece, settled this hill even before Romulus was born. Rulers, citizens, and cult followers also built sites of worship on the Quirinal Hill, 2,100 yards to the north-northwest of the Capitoline Hill, and the Aventine Hill, 2,500 yards to the south of Capitoline Hill. Rome's other three hills are the Viminal, Esquiline, and Caelian. The community of Rome grew surrounded by the lands of many different cultures which, over time, interacted with and then became part of the Roman culture. No more than 20 miles to the northwest was Etruria, a region more than a kingdom, whose religions strongly influenced the people of Rome. The Sabines lived about 25 miles to the northeast. Twentyfive miles to the southeast lived the Latini people who gave their name to the language that came to dominate central Italy, Latin. Rutuli lay 20 miles to the south. According to legend, Rome's earliest rulers were kings, some of them rulers of nearby regions, who were honored over time as great heroes. One such was Latinus, king of the Latini people. The last king, Tarquinius Superbus, who ruled from 534 to 510 b.c., at first refused the books of prophecy offered him for sale by the Sibyl of Cumae. After she had destroyed the first six books, he realized the worth of the last three and bought them at the price of the original nine. During this time, also, Greek mythology began influencing the religions of the people of Rome and the surrounding areas, primarily through contact with Greek colonies in southern Italy and on the island of Sicily. This process of influence by the cultures of Greece is known as Hellenization. After this era, the people of Rome rejected kingship as a form of government and turned to a representative republic, whereby each year the people chose two chief executives to govern the city. At this time, too, Rome's history becomes a matter of authentic records available for modern study. During the Republic era (510 to 264 b.c.), Rome extended its rule to most of central Italy through military force. Romans also conquered many of the Greek colonies and brought those lands into their nation. Rome became a world power in the third and second centuries b.c., expanding its rule to North Africa, Spain, and the eastern Mediterranean. Rome's conquests included Greece. In the Macedonian Wars of the third century b.c., Roman armies defeated the ruler of the northern portion of the Greek peninsula and then took over rule of the southern portion, home to the great Greek myths and the philosophical and cultural center of that part of the world. Rome became an empire after the reign of Julius Caesar in the first century b.c. As the Romans spread their influence, they colonized many lands and built temples to their gods, as well as civic and cultural buildings, across the region. Temples to Jupiter, Minerva, Juno, and Mars stood on hills across the lands of the Mediterranean and western Europe. The ruins of many still stand today and provide evidence of the widespread influence of the Roman empire. Today, Rome is the economic, cultural, and political center of Italy. Monuments to the ancient societies stand amid modern buildings. Archaeologists continue to discover the past of this city and its influences, including evidence of its religions and myths. New discoveries continue to contribute to the understanding of the nature of Rome's great beliefs.

« became Rome.

The first hill people settled appears to have been the Capitoline Hill.

Archaeologists have discovered some of the oldest temples to the supreme Roman god, Jupiter, on this hill.

According to legend, it was on this hill that Romulus founded his city. The next hill that settlers developed was the nearby Palatine, 1,250 yards to the southeast of the Capitoline Hill.

Legend says that Evander, a leader from the Arcadia region of ancient Greece, settled this hill even before Romulus was born. Rulers, citizens, and cult followers also built sites of worship on the Quirinal Hill, 2,100 yards to the north-northwest of the Capitoline Hill, and the Aventine Hill, 2,500 yards to the south of Capitoline Hill.

Rome’s other three hills are the Viminal, Esquiline, and Caelian. The community of Rome grew surrounded by the lands of many different cultures which, over time, interacted with and then became part of the Roman culture.

No more than 20 miles to the northwest was Etruria, a region more than a kingdom, whose religions strongly influenced the people of Rome.

The Sabines lived about 25 miles to the northeast.

Twentyfive miles to the southeast lived the Latini people who gave their name to the language that came to dominate central Italy, Latin.

Rutuli lay 20 miles to the south. According to legend, Rome’s earliest rulers were kings, some of them rulers of nearby regions, who were honored over time as great heroes.

One such was Latinus, king of the Latini people.

The last king, Tarquinius Superbus, who ruled from 534 to 510 b.c., at first refused the books of prophecy offered him for sale by the Sibyl of Cumae.

After she had destroyed the first six books, he realized the worth of the last three and bought them at the price of the original nine.

During this time, also, Greek mythology began influencing the religions of the people of Rome and the surrounding areas, primarily through contact with Greek colonies in southern Italy and on the island of Sicily.

This process of influence by the cultures of Greece is known as Hellenization. After this era, the people of Rome rejected kingship as a form of government and turned to a representative republic, whereby each year the people chose two chief executives to govern the city. At this time, too, Rome’s history becomes a matter of authentic records available for modern study.

During the Republic era (510 to 264 b.c.), Rome extended its rule to most of central Italy through military force. Romans also conquered many of the Greek colonies and brought those lands into their nation. Rome became a world power in the third and second centuries b.c., expanding its rule to North Africa, Spain, and the eastern Mediterranean.

Rome’s conquests included Greece.

In the Macedonian Wars. »

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