The History of Rome - 003a- The Seven Kings of Rome
Episode Date: February 25, 2010This week we cover the first three of Romulus's successors to the throne: Numa Pompulius, Tullus Hostilius and Ancus Marcius, who they were and what affect they had on the evolution Roman law and cult...ure.
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And welcome to the history of Rome.
Last time, we finished with the death of Romulus, first and greatest king of Rome.
Today, we will cover his first three successors, who they were, and what roles they play in the evolution of Roman law and society.
I call this section the Seven Kings of Rome, because common historical nomenclature always refers to the Seven Kings of Rome,
so though we will only be talking about three kings, it seemed appropriate to use the phrase as a title,
even if it isn't technically accurate.
Just remember, there were seven kings of Rome.
Oh, by the way, in reality, there were almost certainly more than seven kings of Rome.
The idea that seven successive kings could reign for an average of 35 years each stretches credulity.
Nowhere else in the history of mankind have seven monarchs in a row managed a continuous good luck.
The stories handed down to us of Numa and Hostilius and Marius and the Tarquins are no doubt apocryphers.
meant to cover the ground between Romulus and the founding of the Republic, while explaining
the evolution of the city's culture at the same time.
So just remember, even though there weren't really seven kings of Rome, there were seven kings
of Rome.
After Romulus died or disappeared, there was a crisis, who would lead the Romans now that
their first and only king was gone?
Trouble arose not just from the question of which particular man would reign, but also from
the question of what tribe he would be from. The Sabines, who would suffer the sole rule of Romulus
in silence, now wished to see one of their own placed upon the throne. The Romans found this idea
preposterous, but the Sabines refused all Roman candidates, and the Romans, in turn, refused all
Sabine candidates. To avoid a slip in anarchy, it was decided that each senator, in succession,
would reign for a single day, until an acceptable man was found to rule. This was the first
instance in Roman history of an interregnum or period between official sovereigns.
A compromise was finally proposed that allowed the Romans to choose whomever they wished,
without Sabine veto, as long as the man was a Sabine.
The Romans agreed to this and picked a man of universal renown, Numa Pompulius.
The Sabines, delighted by the choice, agreed at once, and messengers were sent to Numa
to present him with the good news.
To the amazement of everyone, however, Numa refused the offer, and was only after much
cajoling that he agreed to take the throne.
You see, Numa was a bit of an odd bird.
He disdained all luxury and had devoted his life to religious contemplation.
He often took long walks alone, and it was believed that on these strolls he conversed with the gods.
Not that this concerned anyone, quite the opposite, it only enhanced his reputation that the gods spoke to him,
but still, not exactly a man you usually find at the head of a growing military power.
Numa did not even live in Rome.
He resided in a nearby town and was, for the most part, put off by the violence and greed of the city.
This second king of Rome was the opposite of Romulus in almost every way.
Where Romulus was brash, Numa was reserved.
Where Rambulus was a warrior, Numa was a pacifist.
Where Rambulis sought glory and fame, Numa saw peace and solitude.
Overnight, he changed the trajectory of Rome's march to greatness.
When Numa arrived in Rome, he found a warm moment.
longering population of brutes, who had known 40 years of war, and when he died, he left Rome a
population of farmers who had known 40 years of peace. The remarkable transformation was due entirely
to Numa's introduction of religion to the city. He turned the people's attention away from the
battlefield and towards the heavens. Desiring peace more than anything else, Numa devised complex
religious rights to occupy the time of the now demobilized army, so they would not grow restless
and provoke unnecessary wars.
He instilled in the Romans
an everlasting fear and awe of the gods,
which would last for the remainder of the empire.
Numa is credited with the foundation
of the most important religious institutions
in Rome. He imported the Vestal
Virgins and established the laws
governing their watch over the eternal flame.
He created the office of Pontifex Maximus,
the high priest of Rome,
who would be responsible for the maintenance
of all religious services,
and in an act of remarkable foresight,
declined to serve in that role himself, establishing a sovereign religious realm that could not be meddled with by future kings.
He believed that later kings would be so caught up in warmaking that they would neglect their religious duties and bring the wrath of the gods upon the city.
The office of Pontifex Maximus would remain an independent authority until the title was claimed for the emperors by Augustus at the dawn of the Imperium.
At the end of the empire, the title was passed to the popes, who hold it to this day, 2600 years after its enslave.
Just as Romulus is the answer to all questions about the founding of the city, Numa is the answer to all questions about the origin of religious practices.
Who divided regular days from holy days?
Numa.
Who created the priesthood of Mars?
Numa did.
The priesthood of Quirinius?
Numa.
Who built the altar to Jupiter?
Numa, of course.
In the development of Roman culture, Numa is second only to Romulus in importance, and to some he was even more important.
Machiavelli writes,
And for anyone who considers Roman history carefully, it is clear how much religion helped in the commanding of armies, in inspiring the plebeians, in keeping men good and in making the wicked feel shame.
Thus, if one were to debate about the prince to whom Rome owed the most, I think Numa would sooner obtain the first place.
For where there is religion, one can easily introduce arms, but where there are arms, but no religion, the former can only be introduced with difficulty.
Perhaps Numa's most famous addition to Rome was the Temple of Janus.
The gates of the temple were to remain open while Rome was at war and be closed in times of peace.
For the entirety of Numa's reign, the doors stayed shut.
But after his passing, they remained open almost continuously.
Numa's dream of peace, it would seem, died with him, and his reign would be an anomaly in Roman history.
Of Numa's Rome, Livy writes,
once Rome's neighbors had considered her no more than an armed camp in their midst, threatening the general peace.
Now they came to revere her so profoundly as a community dedicated holy to worship
that the mere thought of offering her violence seemed to them like sacrilege.
Numerained 43 years and died in 673 BC.
His successor to the throne, Tullus Hostilius, did his level best to banish forever this image of Rome as a city of docile farmer priests.
Just as Numa was the opposite of Romulus, Tullus was the opposite of Numa.
He longed for a return to the martial virtues of Romulus.
He believed Numa had left the Roman soft and dangerously unprepared for what Tullus saw as inevitable attack for maternally hostile neighbors.
The peace of the previous decades could not hold forever, and if Rome was to live, it had to fight.
With this in mind, Tullus looked around for a clash that would reinvigorate the warrior's spirit of his people, and found it in the place of Romulus's birth.
A cattle-rating dispute along the border between Rome and Alba led to mutual recriminations,
and for Tullus, this was enough of a pretext and war was declared.
He even managed to arrange things so that the Romans looked like the aggrieved party
who were being dragged against their will into battle.
Armies from both sides advanced on one another,
but before the order for full-scale engagement was given,
Medeus, the leader of the Albans, approached Tullus with an unusual proposal.
There was nothing to be gained, the Albin said, in a bloody struggle between two familial people,
when the Etruscans sat at both their doorsteps, eagerly awaiting any opportunity to invade.
A fight between Alba and Rome would deplete the strength that both Victor and vanquished,
leaving the door wide open for the Etruscans to make them all slaves.
Medias proposed that single combat should decide their quarrel,
that way their respective armies could still keep the ambitious Etruscans in check.
Tullus agreed reluctantly, seeing the logic of Medias' argument, though it would not be single combat per se that would decide things.
Each army's ranks held three brothers, triplets, who were chosen to fight for the fate of their people.
This fight between the Roman Harati and the Albin Curiati is an episode like the rape of the Sabine women that has found its way into countless works of art and literature, most famously in the oath of the Harati by Jacques Louis David, that great lover of antiquity.
In front of the opposing armies, the two sets of brothers squared off.
The fight was furious, and in quick succession, two of the Romans lay dead.
Horatius, the remaining brother, knowing he could not take all three of his enemies at once,
ran up a nearby hill, forcing the three Curiotti to chase him.
As the first neared, Horatius turned abruptly and killed him.
The second Albun brother arrived too late to help, and Horatius fought and killed him as well.
The third, curiati, weary from the chase and from wounds sustained in the earlier
fight was no match at all upon arrival. He fell to his knees, and Horatius did not fight him
so much as execute him, plunging his sword down the poor bastard's throat. The Romans cheered their
victory, and the Albans, grumbling at Medias' deal, were forced to withdraw and supplicate themselves
to Roman rule. But Medeus, aware of how precarious his authority was in the aftermath of this
non-defeat to Rome, conspired to release his people from subjugation. He induced VA, the nearest
Etruscan city and, as we will later see, an important early rival of Rome, to attack the Romans.
The Albans, Medias said, would be called upon to aid Rome, and he promised that at a decisive
moment in the battle, the Albans would desert, leaving the Roman flank unguarded.
VA jumped at the opportunity to crush Rome and attacked immediately.
Just as Medias predicted, Tull was called upon the Albans to join the fight, and the armies
gathered to do battle.
Just as the fight was about to begin, Medeus ordered the Albans to do.
to withdraw. The Roman soldiers were shocked to see their ally suddenly leaving, but Tullus, thinking
quickly, addressed his troops, telling them that it was his plan for the Albans to sneak
around behind the enemy. The Romans, heartened, marched into battle with confidence, and defeated the
Veyites. Back in camp, however, Tullus ordered the arrest of Medias and had him brought before the Roman
troops. Tullus then revealed the treachery of the Alban leader, and, to the horror of his men,
passed without trial a sentence of death by dismemberment.
Their leader dead, Tullus then ordered the destruction of Albonga itself.
He ordered the city destroyed and the citizens relocated to Rome
where they would become Romans forever wiping Alba from the map.
Tullus ran 32 years and died in 642 BC.
The return to arms was his lasting legacy
and the incorporation of the Albans was his most important contribution to the growth of the city.
henceforth Rome's neighbors returned to their view of the city as little more than an armed camp
and worked tirelessly to defeat the Roman menace.
Never again would Rome enjoy an extended period of uninterrupted peace,
despite the efforts made by Tullus's successor, Ancus Marcius,
the grandson of Numa, to bring the population back to his grandfather's vision of peace.
Less is known or told about Ancus than any of his predecessors,
but we do know that he attempted to follow in the footsteps of his grandfather,
fathers, but with far less success.
Events conspired to force war upon him, and despite his natural proclivities, he accepted his
fate and led the Romans into battle.
A confederation of Latin communities who chafed under Roman dominance took Ancus's succession
as the perfect opportunity to attack, believing they had another Numa on their hands who
would be an easy mark.
But Ancus accepted the challenge, and the Roman forces, battle tested by their years under Tullus,
routed each in turn.
The defeated inhabitants were forced, like the Albans, to abandon their homes and settle in Rome,
while Romans were sent to settle the vacated towns.
Through this policy, the population of the city swelled, and the surrounding countryside was filled with subjects loyal to Rome.
At the outset of the fight with the Latins, Ancus made his most important contribution to Roman society.
Disatisfied with the haphazard way war began between Rome and her enemies, he decided to inject a sacred ritual, introducing
something of Numa into the barbarism of armed conflict. A specific formula was proscribed as to how
exactly the Romans would declare war on an enemy, too tedious to spell out here, but it involves
sending envoys into enemy territory, announcing the war to the first man met in an official
pronouncement, making more official declarations at appointed times, waiting 33 days, and finally
throwing a spear into enemy territory signaling the beginning of hostilities. The entire process
may seem a bit overwrought, but it demonstrates the Roman desire to infuse all aspects of life
with the rule of law, even if the end result was savage bloodshed.
After the campaign against the Latins, Ancus won an important victory against the
Vaites, gaining control of the Mation forest and extending Roman territory all the way to the sea.
The consequences of this event cannot be overstated. Through Ostia, the port town founded by
Ancus at the mouth of the Tiber, all initial Roman forays into the Mediterranean were longed.
and received.
Ancus reigned 24 years and died in 617 BC.
At his death, Rome found itself immeasurably strengthened by the addition of countless new citizens,
a neighborhood free of enemies, and a port to call its very own.
We will leave the story here and pick up next time with the final three kings, the Tarquin dynasty,
the last of which would show himself to be such a tyrant that the very idea of monarchy would be hateful to Romans forever after,
even forcing the emperors to semantically cloak their activities so as not to be accused of monarchism.
As I said earlier, the lives of these kings are apocryphal biographies designed to explain the origin and development of Rome to later Romans.
What is mostly being fleshed out in the story of these first kings is the relationship between the two most important pillars of Roman society, war and religion.
The warlike Romulus is followed by the religious Numa, who is followed by the warlike Tullus, until finally the two pillars.
are joined in Ancus, the religious king who is dragged into battle by fate. This interplay is
instructive and offers a neat encapsualization of their character. The Romans are a warlike people
tempered by religion, not a religious people forged into warriors. Ultimately, it is war, not prayer,
that defines the Romans. Imagine if it had been the opposite, a people founded by a religious pacifist
and succeeded by a warrior who was then succeeded by a pacifist, who was then succeeded by a warrior,
dragged by fate into a religious life.
It paints a very different picture.
The Romans are fighters through and through,
though Machiavelli's point is well taken.
Without religious tempering,
it is doubtful the Romans could have sustained a republic
based upon the rule of law
and would have remained an unremarkable tribe
of violent barbarians.
To sum up, the Romans were soldiers
who took oath seriously,
not priests, who took swordsmanship seriously.
Join me next time as we discuss
the last days of the Roman monarchy
and what was so bad about Tarkoenius Supervis, the last king of Rome,
that led the city to transform itself into a republic that lasted for 500 years.
