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According to legend, the city of Rome was founded in 753 BCE by Romulus, a descendant of Troy, after he murdered his twin brother, Remus. The city was a union of villages based upon the Seven Hills of Rome by the River Tiber, of which the Palatine Hill served as the city center.
In the 6th century BCE, King Servius Tullius expanded Rome and organized it into four administrative regions, or quarters.
In 509 BCE, the Roman Senate overthrew King Lucius Tarquinius Superbus due to his despotic ways and established the Roman Republic. Rome continued to serve as the capital of this new republic and the center of the vast territories it would soon acquire.
The Romans were an Italic people who spoke Latin. Their neighbors included other Italic peoples such as non-Roman Latins and the Sabines, and the mysterious Estruscans.
In 387 BCE, Rome was sacked by the Senones, a tribe of the Celtic Gauls. After surviving this incident, Rome began to expand aggressively, subduing Celts, Latins, and Etruscans alike. By the end of the 4th century BCE, Rome had brought much of the Italian Peninsula under its control.
Shortly after the Senone raid, the Servian Wall was built to fortify Rome, including all seven hills. However, the pomerium, which was the religious and official boundary of the city, remained limited to the Palatine Hill. The pomerium was a strictly civilian space, banning generals and weapons alike.
As Rome expanded, it built a network of paved roads throughout its conquered territories. The roads facilitated the transportation of people, trade goods, communications, and, of course, armies. The paths of some of these roads, such as the Via Tiburtina and the Via Aurelia, are preserved by modern highways.
Rome began to expand beyond Italy and throughout the Mediterranean in the 2nd century BCE. By 146 BCE, it had conquered both Greece and Carthage, in modern-day Tunisia. Its territory stretching from Spain in the west to Turkey in the east, Rome was soon the hegemon of the Mediterranean world.
In the early 1st century BCE, the Roman general Sulla launched a coup and brought an army into the pomerium for the first time in Roman history. He revived the old office of dictator, granting him vast emergency powers. This allowed him to rewrite the constitution and expand the pomerium beyond Palatina.
Though Sulla intended to save the republic by strengthening the Senate and weakening the tribunes, who were elected officials whose powers often superseded those of the Senate. However, his reforms did not last, and had the unintended consequence of setting a precedent for future military coups.
Just one generation later, Julius Caesar seized control of Rome. As dictator for life, Caesar implemented reforms such as centralizing the government and expanding the citizenship program. He was eventually assassinated by the political elite, but his son Octavian would carry on his legacy.
After winning a civil war, Octavian abolished the republic and established the Roman Empire, becoming Augustus. He reorganized the city of Rome into the Fourteen Regions, replacing the four quarters that had existed since the Roman Kingdom. During this period, Rome exceeded one million in population.
Rome survived a major test in 64 CE when two-thirds of the city was destroyed by the Great Fire of Rome. Traditional accounts suggest that Emperor Nero blamed the fire on Christianity, a new religion at this time. Though the fire was devastating, it provided a clean slate for new urban planning.
From the beginning of the empire in 27 BCE to the death of Emperor Marcus Aurelius in 180 CE, Rome experienced a golden age known as Pax Romana, or “Roman Peace.” Though rebellions and wars continued during this period, the Pax Romana was, relatively speaking, a time of unprecedented stability.
Rome’s golden age came to an end in the late 2nd century. First, the Antonine Plague, brought back from the eastern city of Seleucia by Roman troops, killed thousands. The Crisis of the Third Century, a decades-long culmination of civil wars, rebellions, and Germanic invasions, nearly destroyed the empire.
Upon reuniting the empire, Aurelian further fortified Rome with the Aurelian Walls in 275. Despite the new fortification, Rome was no longer the favored residence of the emperors. Though it remained the de jure capital, Rome was replaced by cities such as Mediolanum (Milan), Ravenna, and Nicomedia.
Though its politial prowess was fast declining, Rome gained newfound religious significance when the empire to Christianity in the 4th century. In 380, the Edict of Thessalonica elevated the Bishop of Rome as the senior Christian figure of the empire, marking the beginning of the modern papacy.
In 395, the empire was permanently split into Western and Eastern halves, though the division had existed under the system of Tetrarchy since the end of the Crisis of the Third Century. Rome remained the de jure capital of the Western half, and was constantly threatened by Germanic invaders throughout the 400s.
In 410, Rome was sacked for the first time since 387 BCE by the Germanic Visigoths. After a series of sackings, Rome fell to the Germanic warlord Odoacer in 476. This ended the Western empire. Odoacer’s Kingdom of Italy, nominally a vassal of the Eastern Romans, was based in Ravenna rather than Rome.
Odoacer was defeated by Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths, in 493. The Ostrogothic Kingdom also set its capital in Ravenna, and Rome’s population dipped well below 100,000. Yet Gothic rule of Rome was short lived; in 536, the Eastern Romans (or Byzantines) under Justinian recaptured Rome.
/əˈfiSHəl/
relating to authority or public body. person holding public office.
/əˈstabliSHt/
having existed or done something for long time and therefore recognized and generally accepted. To use facts, evidence to show truth or clarity.
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(Of a company) with a limit of financial liability. To stop or prevent an increase past a point.
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arranged in systematic way. To arrange and plan things, e.g. a party.
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group of houses and associated buildings, larger than hamlet and smaller than town. Small towns in the country.