wooden bridge over the Tiber River. Horatius was on
guard at the bridge when the Etruscans made a
sudden assault, causing many Roman troops to
throw down their weapons and flee. Horatius urged
them to make a stand at the bridge to protect Rome;
when they hesitated, as a last resort he told them to
destroy the bridge behind him while he held the
Etruscans back. Astonished at the sight of a single
defender, the confused Etruscans threw their spears
at Horatius, who caught them on his shield and
barred the way. By the time the Etruscans had
regrouped and were about to overwhelm the lone
defender, the Roman soldiers brought down the
bridge. When Horatius heard the bridge crash into
the river behind him, he dived fully armed into the
water and swam safely to the other side through a
hail of arrows. Rome had been saved by the
courageous act of a Roman who knew his duty and
was determined to carry it out. Courage, duty,
determination—these qualities would also serve the
many Romans who believed that it was their mission
to rule nations and peoples.
In the first millenniumB.C.E., a group of Latin-
speaking people established a small community on
the plain of Latium on the Italian peninsula. This
community, called Rome, was one of the numerous
settlements founded by Latin-speaking peoples
throughout Latium and the rest of Italy. Roman
history is basically the story of the Romans’ conquest
of the plain of Latium, then Italy, and finally the
entire Mediterranean region. Why were the Romans
able to do this? The Romans made the right
decisions at the right time; in other words, the
Romans had political wisdom.
The Romans were also practical. Unlike the
Greeks, who reserved their citizenship for small,
select groups, the Romans often offered citizenship
to the peoples they conquered, thus laying the
groundwork for a strong, integrated empire. The
Romans also did not hesitate to borrow ideas and
culture from the Greeks. Roman strength lay in
government, law, and engineering. The Romans
knew how to govern people, establish legal
structures, and construct the roads that took them
to the ends of the known world. Throughout their
empire, they carried their law, their political
institutions, their engineering skills, and their Latin
language. And even after the Romans were gone,
those same gifts continued to play an important role
in the continuing saga of Western civilization.
The Emergence of Rome
Q FOCUSQUESTION: What impact did geography have
on the history of Rome, and what influence did the
Greeks and Etruscans have on early Roman history?
Italy is a peninsula extending about 750 miles from
north to south (see Map 5.1). It is not very wide, how-
ever, averaging about 120 miles across. The Apennine
Mountains traverse the peninsula from north to south,
forming a ridge down the middle that divides west
from east. Nevertheless, Italy has some fairly large fer-
tile plains ideal for farming. Most important in Roman
times were the Po River Valley in the north, probably
the most fertile agricultural area; the plain of Latium
(LAY-shee-um), on which Rome was located; and Cam-
pania (kam-PAY-nee-uh or kahm-PAHN-yuh), to the
south of Latium. To the east of the Italian peninsula is
the Adriatic Sea, and to the west, the Tyrrhenian Sea
with the nearby large islands of Corsica and Sardinia.
Sicily lies just west of the toe of the boot-shaped Italian
peninsula.
Geography had an impact on Roman history.
Although the Apennines bisect Italy, they are less
rugged than the mountain ranges of Greece and so did
not divide the peninsula into many small isolated com-
munities. Italy also possessed considerably more pro-
ductive farmland than Greece and thus could support a
large population. Rome’s location was favorable from a
geographic point of view. Located eighteen miles inland
on the Tiber River, Rome had access to the sea and yet
was far enough inland to be safe from pirates. Built on
seven hills, it was easily defended, and because it was
situated where the Tiber could be readily forded, Rome
became a natural crossing point for north-south traffic
in western Italy. All in all, Rome had a good central
location in Italy from which to expand.
Moreover, because the Italian peninsula juts into
the Mediterranean, it was an important crossroads
between the western and eastern parts of that sea.
Once Rome had unified Italy, involvement in affairs
throughout the region was natural. And after the
Romans had conquered their Mediterranean empire,
Italy’s central location made their task of governing
that empire considerably easier.
The Greeks in Italy
We know little about the Indo-European peoples who
moved into Italy during the second half of the second
millenniumB.C.E. By the first millenniumB.C.E., other
The Emergence of Rome 95
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