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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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644 THE NATURE OF ROMAN MYTHOLOGY<br />

however, and its processions, celebrated in April, were a colorful and popular<br />

feature of the Roman religious calendar. Lucretius (2. 614-624) and Ovid (Fasti<br />

4. 181-186) have left vivid descriptions of the Galli with their wild music, and<br />

Catullus (Poem 63) has brilliantly told the myth of Attis (see pp. 178-179).<br />

Other Eastern gods made their way to Rome, especially in the time of the<br />

empire. The Egyptian Isis, the Asiatic Ma, the Syrian Baal, and the Persian<br />

Mithras were widely worshiped (see pp. 365-367).<br />

LEGENDS OF THE FOUNDING OF ROME<br />

AENEAS AND ROMULUS<br />

The origins of Rome traditionally went back to Aeneas, whose son lulus (also<br />

called Ascanius) was ancestor of the gens lulia, the family of Augustus. 6 But Aeneas<br />

left Troy some 475 years before the traditional date for the founding of<br />

Rome in 753 B.c. The gap between the two dates was filled by a line of kings at<br />

the Latin city of Alba Longa. Aeneas succeeded in establishing a foothold in<br />

Latium but died soon after. lulus then founded Alba Longa, and from there Romulus<br />

came eventually to found Rome itself. The earliest settlement at Rome<br />

may indeed date from the eighth century B.c., and it is also known that early<br />

Rome was an alliance of villages on the different hills by the Tiber, which in<br />

time were unified. As Rome became a city, it was sometimes under the control<br />

of neighboring peoples (the Tarquins, the fifth and seventh kings of Rome, were<br />

Etruscans, and the sixth king, Servius Tullius, may have been Etruscan), but by<br />

the early part of the fifth century, the city was strong enough to assert its independence.<br />

Then it extended its control over the Etruscan cities and the Sabine<br />

and Latin tribes, whose customs and gods it often absorbed. The legendary connection<br />

between Rome and Alba Longa is historically likely. That between Rome<br />

and Troy is more doubtful.<br />

AENEAS: THE TRADITION BEFORE VERGIL<br />

In the foundation myth that connects Rome with Troy, the central figure is Aeneas,<br />

son of Aphrodite and Anchises. In the Iliad he was an important warrior<br />

but inferior to the Trojan champion Hector. When he meets Achilles in single<br />

combat (Iliad 20. 158-352), he is saved from death by Poseidon, who makes this<br />

prophecy (Iliad 20. 300-308):<br />

f<br />

Come, let us lead him away from imminent death, lest Zeus be angry if Achilles<br />

kill him. For he is fated to escape, so that the race of Dardanus may not perish<br />

without seed and invisible. For Zeus loved Dardanus most of all his children<br />

whom mortal women bare to him. Already Zeus is angry with the family of<br />

Priam. Now indeed strong Aeneas and his children's children will rule over the<br />

Trojans.

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