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Chapter Twenty-Three Lecture Two. The Etruscan Dynasty and the Wicked Tullia. Etruscan Dynasty / Wicked Tullia. Servius Tullius (the slave’s son) becomes king of Rome Signs of destiny when flames danced around his head His daughters, two Tullias
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Chapter Twenty-ThreeLecture Two The Etruscan Dynasty and the Wicked Tullia
Etruscan Dynasty / Wicked Tullia • Servius Tullius (the slave’s son) becomes king of Rome • Signs of destiny when flames danced around his head • His daughters, two Tullias • Both married to sons of the previous king, Tarquin the Elder • One Tullia has an affair with Tarquin the Proud, her brother-in-law
Etruscan Dynasty / Wicked Tullia • Tarquin the Proud kills his own wife, the other Tullia and kills the husband of his lover Tullia. • They overthrow and murder the elderly Servius Tullius
Lucretia and the End of Monarchy • Lucretia is the virtuous wife of Tarquin Collatinus • Sextus Tarquin, a son of Tarquin Superbus, rapes her • Lucretia denounces Tarquin; kills herself out of shame in front of her father, husband, and others • Also there is Lucius Junius Brutus
Lucretia and the End of Monarchy • Brutus reveals that he is not “stupid” and rallies the people to overthrow and end monarchies in Rome • The Republic is established (traditionally date to 510 BC)
The Etruscans • Rome has deep cultural roots in the Etruscans • City plan, cult places, and institutions • Tarquin built the first Temple to Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill. • Much of what the Roman inherit from Greece came through the Etruscans • Religious practices • fulguriator, haruspex, hecatoscopy • Perhaps the gladiatorial games came from the Etruscans
Heroes of the Early Republic Brutus and his Sons
Brutus and his Sons • “He who kisses his mother first . . .” • Allowed his own sons to be killed for treason • Died in battle for Rome
Horatius at the Bridge • Lars Porsenna • Horatius Coclas defended the bridge until the last
Mucius Scaevola • Thrust his hand into the fire, proving his courage to die for Rome • Porsenna withdrew • Scaevola (“lefty”)
Other Patriotic Heroes • Coriolanus • But later fell out of favor because of his contempt of common men • Brings a foreign army (Volscians) against Rome, but the pleas of his wife persuaded him to withdraw
Other Patriotic Heroes • Cincinnatus • Accepted the imperium only long enough to avert the crisis, but then set it down and returned to his plow
Myth and Public Display at Rome • The Triumph • Rome: “He (Augustus) found it in brick, but left it in marble.” • The Great Forum • Campus Martius • Horologium Augusti
Past Preserves the Present • Roman government remarkably stable while the world around it changed • Rule was violent, but it provided stability and security • Its understanding of the moral nature of its history provided its tenacity: the selfless devotion of its founders and equality • Even the emperor was referred to only as princeps