The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

102


A DESIRE SEIZED


ROMULUS AND


REMUS TO


BUILD A CITY


THE FOUNDING OF ROME


T


he myth of the brothers
Romulus and Remus was
not the only description
of the founding of Rome, but it
became the widely accepted story.
Early accounts claimed that the
twins were the sons of the Trojan
hero Aeneas, but most versions
set the story 15 generations later.
Aeneas’s son, Ascanius,
founded the ancient city of Alba
Longa about 12 miles (19 km) from
the site that later became Rome.
Centuries later, Alba Longa was
inherited by two brothers, Amulius
and Numitor. Amulius suggested
to his brother that they divide their
inheritance in two, one taking the
reins of the kingdom and the other

IN BRIEF


THEME
Birth of a nation

SOURCES
Roman Antiquities, Dionysius
of Halicarnassus, ca. 7 bce;
Fasti (“The Book of Days”),
Ovid, 8 ce; Romulus,
Plutarch, ca. 70 –110 ce.

SETTING
Rome, ca. 753 bce.

KEY FIGURES
Romulus Founder of Rome.

Remus Brother of Romulus.

Amulius King of Alba Longa.

Numitor Deposed brother of
Amulius.

Rhea Silvia Daughter of
Numitor.

Mars God of war.

Faustulus A shepherd.

Larentia Wife of Faustulus.

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103
See also: The Olympian gods 24–31 ■ Aeneas, founder of Rome 96–101 ■
Vesta and Priapus 108-09 The exposure of
Roman children

The element of the myth
of Romulus and Remus that
repels modern readers would
not have shocked Romans.
Infanticide by means of
exposure was commonplace
in ancient societies. The
surprise in Rome’s foundation
myth lies in the survival of the
infants, not their rejection.
Roman fathers had
absolute control over their
children and could simply
choose not to rear them. In
some instances, babies would
be left at recognized sites
where they could be adopted.
But many others were simply
abandoned. Girls, who would
in the event of marriage
require a dowry—a legally
enforced monetary donation to
their husband—were as a
result more often victims of
exposure than boys. The
extent of the practice in
ancient Rome is a matter of
scholarly debate, but it was
made illegal in 374 ce.

the treasures brought by their
ancestor Aeneas from Troy.
Numitor agreed and chose the
kingdom, while Amulius took the
treasure. But with the wealth
brought by that treasure, Amulius
schemed against his brother, and
deposed and imprisoned him.

Birth of the twins
Fearing a challenge from any
descendants of Numitor, Amulius
killed Numitor’s son Aegestus and
forced his daughter Rhea Silvia to
become a Vestal Virgin. According
to most accounts, Mars, the god of
war, seduced her as she lay sleeping
on a riverbank or in a sacred grove,
telling her that she would bear two

sons who would exceed all men in
bravery; other accounts said that
the true father was a masked
Amulius himself. When her twin
children Romulus and Remus were
born, Rhea Silvia was either put to
death for breaking her virginal
vows, or locked up for life. As for the
babies, Amulius ordered a servant
to drown them in the Tiber River.
Instead, the servant cast them
adrift in a basket, and then the river
god brought them safely to the
bank. A female wolf who had just

ANCIENT ROME


The Capitoline Wolf shows Romulus
and Remus suckling from the she-wolf.
The bronze wolf dates to the 11th or
12th century and the twins to the 15th.

Ancestry of Romulus and Remus


whelped found the babies and
suckled them to health. They
were then discovered by Faustulus,
a shepherd (or in some accounts a
swineherd or cowherd) who brought
up the children with the help of his
wife, Larentia. According to some ❯❯

Aeneas, prince of Troy
and hero of the Aeneid

Proca, king of
Alba Longa

Amulius

Mars, the war
god

Numitor

Rhea Silvia

Romulus Remus

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