Imajin
April 30th, 2006, 01:32 AM
Roma Numquam Res Publica Fore
A History of the Kings of Rome
PART I:
From the Founding of the City
To The Gaulish Sack
Non-Dynastic
Romulus 1-37 AUC
Pompilian Dynasty
Numa Pompilius 38-79 AUC
Non-Dynastic
Tullus Hostilius 80-111 AUC
Pompilian Dynasty
Ancus Marcius 111-136 AUC
Tarquinian Dynasty
L. Tarquinius Priscus 137-174 AUC
Ser. Tellus 175-218 AUC
L. Tarquinius Superbus 219-242 AUC
L. Tarquinius Collatinus 243-269 AUC
Junian Dynasty
L. Junius Brutus 270-274 AUC
Ti. Junius Brutus 275-296 AUC
C. Junius Brutus 296-331 AUC
Ti. Junius Hostilius 331-360 AUC
Tiberia Junia Quinta 360-363 AUC
Introduction
Hail to my fellow citizens of Rome!
I have learned to my dismay that many Romans are ignorant of our glorious history. We know of warlike Romulus and Tullus, of religious Numa and Ancus, and even something of the Tarquins, but beyond that is a great hole in the History of Rome. Therefore I have endeavored to create a history of the Kingdom of Rome that shall solve these problems. Beginning with Collatinus, I plan to take the history of Rome to the present day. This is compounded by several difficulties. Following the sacking of Rome, many changes were made to the official record to profane the memory of the Junian Dynasty. As the massive official record is often the only source we have to go by, I have attempted to be impartial, but it is rather difficult. Nevertheless, I feel that I have created an accurate history, one that shall be open to the people. This is the first part of that, detailing the last of the Tarquins and the Junians.
Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus, sometimes referred to as Lucius III, was the Eighth King of Rome. A member of a lesser branch of the Royal House of Tarquin, he seemed unlikely to gain the throne. However, in 243 AUC the wife of Collatinus, Lucretia, was assaulted and sexually exploited by Sextus Tarquinius, the son of the current King, L. Tarquinius Superbus. After a confession and suicide, the enraged prince, along with one L. Junius Brutus, swore an oath to expel Sextus and his family from Roman territory. An army was raised in Rome, which marched on the royal camp in Ardea, where they had been stationed putting down a revolt. Through the planning of Brutus more than anything else, the King was forced to flee, eventually ending up in the city of his father, Tarquinii. The Senate proclaimed Collatinus King of Rome unanimously, but to prevent future tyranny, a new office was legislated, the praetor. The first to hold this office was Brutus, however the office was to be limited to one year, but renewable. In fact, Brutus would hold the Praetorship for his entire reign. In addition, many of the duties of religion the King once held were transferred to the Pontifex Maximus, and the Senate was given greater rights of assembly.
However, the trials of the Kingdom were not over. Superbus declared the selection of Collatinus invalid, and the Kings of Tarquinii and Veii supported him in this. However, Lars Porsena, the King of Clusium, refused to give aid to the revolt, as he failed to see any difference between the harsh Superbus and Collatinus. Despite this, the minor Etruscan cities led an army against Rome. The battle resulted in complete failure and a slaughter at the Vatican Hill, however, later expeditions failed to take revenge for the attack. Roman assassins broke into the camp, and while they did not get to the King of Veii or Tarquinii, they managed to kill many major commanders of the Etruscans.
The throne secure, Collatinus allowed little power to the Praetors to rule Rome during the day-to-day matters of the Kingdom, preferring to take an active role in governing. Ever faithful to his late wife, he had no children.
In 280 AUC, Lucius Junius Brutus, now much older than the man who had aided Collatinus in his revolt and still Praetor despite protests, seized upon the readmission of Arruns Tarquinius in 269 AUC to Rome as a justification to dethrone Collatinus on the same grounds as Superbus was dethroned. The Senate was convinced to accept this for the public good in a stirring speech by Brutus. Collatinus was found dead in mysterious circumstances soon after.
Lucius Junius Brutus was the ninth King of Rome. He undid many of the reforms of Collatinus that related to the plebeians, and in fact made their position worse in some ways than under the early Tarquins. This was too much for the plebeians to bear, and they declared secession, and intended to build a new city called Collatinium after the late King who had supported them.
Before the suppression of the plebs is given in detail, it is interesting to look at a supposed decline in Brutus. At the overthrow of L. Tarquinius Superbus he seemed a patriot, and yet a look at his history seems to show a constant demand for power. Early in the reign of Collatinus, he is known to have made suggestions that Collatinus himself should be exiled, as he bore the hated name of Tarquin. This suggestion shows little more than a demand for power, as Brutus was related just as closely to the tyrannical king. And looking even earlier in Brutus’ life, we see evidence that he wished to be King, though many of these stories are likely apocryphal.
The actions of the plebs were met with anger by Brutus, who led the Roman army to slaughter and burn the city of Collatinium. Despite the effectiveness of these moves, even the patricians were shocked by these actions. To keep power in his hands, Brutus often switched out praetors even before the end of their terms, and made sure that they were in the hands of his friends. This backfired near the end of his fourth year, when the man Publius Valerius Publicola was appointed praetor. He immediately instituted processes of dethroning for Brutus, for overuse of force in cutting down the seceding plebs. The king was shocked, and ordered the army to march on the Curia Hostilia to prevent the Senate from taking action. However, the army mutinied behind Publicola, and forced Brutus to stand down in 274 AUC. The Senate elected Tiberius Junius Brutus, a general in the Roman Army who helped lead the mutiny, king of Rome in that year.
Tiberius Junius Brutus was a general in the Roman Army when he was selected as King of Rome. As such, he was very warlike. He campaigned against the other Italic tribes, greatly expanding the sphere of the Roman state. Traditionally, his reign is used as the date when Rome finally subsumed nearly all of the land between the Tiber and Neapolis, excepting Samnium and several regions loyal to the Etruscans. Veii finally made a peace agreement when the remnants of the descendants of L. Tarquinius Superbus finally died out, and Etruria flourished with the creation of the Dodecapolis League between the twelve largest Etruscan city-states, led by Veii at first, though later Clusium would take over that role.
Though the Senate had selected him for his actions against tyranny, Tiberius proved to be a staunch monarchist as well. The praetors during his early reign were under his control, and he took more powers upon himself. This came to a height when he moved to dismiss Titus Junius Brutus from the praetorship in 289 AUC. His father had used this power often, however Titus refused to go. A constitutional crisis had broken out in Rome. The Senate stood behind Titus, but the King pressed the issue. In response, the Senate refused to consider any laws, and was followed by the assemblies. King Tiberius saw the danger of creating laws without Senatorial approval, and so government stalled in Rome. For two years this situation persisted, for despite some Senators wishing to dethrone Tiberius, the praetor had to initiate such proceedings, and without a clear situation on who was praetor, this could not happen. In 291 AUC, it was decided that this situation was untenable and was leaving Rome in danger. To resolve the constitutional problems, it was decided to create a commission called the Decemvirate. This commission would consist of ten men, nine patricians and one plebian, who would draw up a constitution for Rome without intervention by Senatorial or Monarchist factions. The Decemvirate would hold power in Rome during the time that the constitution would be written, excepting the plebian member who would not have any role outside of the writing of the document. After one year, though, the Senate and the King agreed to take over the governing role. The Decemvirate took five years in writing what became known as the Lex Decim Tablarum¸ the Law of the Ten Tables, which clarified Roman law, a confusing mass of traditions and acts that dated back to Romulus.
King Tiberius did not approve of much of the Tables, as he felt they took too much power from where it rightfully belonged, the King, who would rule benevolently. It is believed that he was planning to refuse authorization to the Tables. In 296, he is believed to have been murdered by Appius Pontius Rufus, the sole plebian decimvir. Appius denied involvement, and was accepted in a court. After approving the Tables, the Senate selected a new King, Gaius Junius Brutus, the son of Titus Junius Brutus, and husband of Junia Minor, the only surviving daughter of King Tiberius.
Gaius Junius Brutus followed his uncle as King of Rome. Nearly all of the constitutional debates that dated back to Collatinus had finally been resolved, and with Rome’s interior problems resolved, they could look outward. However, conflicts with the Latin peoples, organized into an anti-Roman league, slowed the military glories that characterized the beginning of his reign. Near the middle of his reign, however, an attempt by the Latin cities to organize against Rome was crushed, and the Latin league became more and more an extension of Roman power.
The praetorship truly became a powerful office in the days of King Brutus. It absorbed the role of governing the city of Rome during his reign. However, since the patricians, many of whom also formed the Senate, elected the praetor, the plebs began to fear more laws similar to those passed in the reign of King Lucius Junius Brutus would go through. They petitioned directly to the King, however, Gaius had no love for those who had killed his beloved uncle. Thus began the second attempt at the secessio plebis. Brutus was unwilling to take the harsh measures used by his grandfather in suppressing the plebs, and because the King had complete say over the military, the city began to collapse without its farmers and lesser workers. The King himself met with representatives of the plebs, and agreed to create a new office, the quaestor. The quaestor would be a plebian citizen, and would hold an equal power with the praetor. On matters of law, the praetor and quaestor would have to agree to pass the issue. As part of the compromise, an eleventh table was to be drawn up, which would seal the powers of the quaestor in stone. However, while the Senate reluctantly agreed to the institution of the quaestor, they refused to this last demand.
Gaius Junius Brutus perished soon after the resolution of the conflict.
Tiberius Junius Hostilius followed him as King of Rome. The husband of Junia Maior, daughter of Gaius Junius Brutus, he ruled in a different style to past Kings. His first act was to massively expand the Senate to more families. This gave his supporters a majority in that important body, and made Tiberius a powerful king. The praetors, while not puppets as they had been in the past, were almost always his allies. As king, he gained the name Hostilius for his warlike behaviors that reminded many of the past King Hostilius, and conquered several formerly allied states directly into the Kingdom of Rome. When he sacked the allied city of Aritium in 347 AUC, bringing its inhabitants into slavery and building a new city called Hostilia in it’s place. Meeting in the Curia Hostilia, the Senate in 348 AUC issued the Declaration of Republic, abolishing the monarchy for good, and ordering the expulsion of the Royal Family. Thus began the King’s Civil War.
Tiberius moved his forces from Hostilia to Rome as soon as he could, taking a route around the Tiber as to catch the city by surprise. However, outside the city the Battle of the Vatican occurred, blocking Tiberius’ access to Rome for the time being. Tiberius instead focused on sapping the city’s resources. As the Romans walled themselves in, Tiberius captured all the towns that were loyal to the Republican cause. By 351, Rome was surrounded, and the farms within the city were not sufficient to keep the city fed. Tiberius’ troops stood out for the siege, which amazingly lasted for two long years. In 353, the city, reduced to nearly an eighth of its population and in a state of near collapse, finally surrendered. The King had won the civil war, but at heavy cost- the destruction had left the Latin league outside of Roman authority, and Rome was still too weak to conquer it again.
Tiberius immediately began to strengthen the state. He kept the Senate, but reduced it in power, having changes made directly to the Ten Tables. Now, the Senate could only consider praetorial candidates offered by the monarch, and the balance shifted even more to the allies of the monarchy rather than the patricians. Meanwhile, the plebeians protested through their quaestor that the war had caused too much damage to them, when the patricians caused it. Tiberius agreed, and put heavy taxes on those who nobles who survived the war and supported the Republic. Rome was all but a royal dictatorship.
What happened next is unsure. The most official sources say that he died, and his daughter managed to force the Senate to crown her a Queen of Rome. But this is heavily disputed and seen as unlikely
Tiberia Junia Quinta is a mysterious personage, attested mostly through kingship lists and a few doubtful sources, thanks to the chaos caused by the Gallic invasion. Some have argued that she was actually a he, Tiberius Junius Quintus, the fifth son rather than fifth daughter of King Tiberius Junius Hostilius, whose name was later changed to the female to insult him. Others have argued that Quinta was a historical person, perhaps one with influence over her father, but her “reign” was really a continuation of Tiberius Junius Hostilius’. It is known that around the beginning of her reign, the Gauls entered the Po Valley, which consisted of Etruscan cities allied with the Dodecapolis. These fierce warriors defeated the Etruscan armies in order to force heavy tribute from the Dodecapolis. Many Etruscan cities in the Po Valley would not be rebuilt for over a century, and many show traces of Gaulish residence in this period. The Gauls continued their march south. In 363 AUC, the armies of Gaul crushed the Roman army, according to some sources killing the Queen in the process. Rome was utterly crushed, many of its records were burned, and the Tomb of the Kings burned. Thus, the Junian dynasty was ended, and the Senate hastily convened to elect a new King. Never again would royal power reach the levels it once did.
A History of the Kings of Rome
PART I:
From the Founding of the City
To The Gaulish Sack
Non-Dynastic
Romulus 1-37 AUC
Pompilian Dynasty
Numa Pompilius 38-79 AUC
Non-Dynastic
Tullus Hostilius 80-111 AUC
Pompilian Dynasty
Ancus Marcius 111-136 AUC
Tarquinian Dynasty
L. Tarquinius Priscus 137-174 AUC
Ser. Tellus 175-218 AUC
L. Tarquinius Superbus 219-242 AUC
L. Tarquinius Collatinus 243-269 AUC
Junian Dynasty
L. Junius Brutus 270-274 AUC
Ti. Junius Brutus 275-296 AUC
C. Junius Brutus 296-331 AUC
Ti. Junius Hostilius 331-360 AUC
Tiberia Junia Quinta 360-363 AUC
Introduction
Hail to my fellow citizens of Rome!
I have learned to my dismay that many Romans are ignorant of our glorious history. We know of warlike Romulus and Tullus, of religious Numa and Ancus, and even something of the Tarquins, but beyond that is a great hole in the History of Rome. Therefore I have endeavored to create a history of the Kingdom of Rome that shall solve these problems. Beginning with Collatinus, I plan to take the history of Rome to the present day. This is compounded by several difficulties. Following the sacking of Rome, many changes were made to the official record to profane the memory of the Junian Dynasty. As the massive official record is often the only source we have to go by, I have attempted to be impartial, but it is rather difficult. Nevertheless, I feel that I have created an accurate history, one that shall be open to the people. This is the first part of that, detailing the last of the Tarquins and the Junians.
Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus, sometimes referred to as Lucius III, was the Eighth King of Rome. A member of a lesser branch of the Royal House of Tarquin, he seemed unlikely to gain the throne. However, in 243 AUC the wife of Collatinus, Lucretia, was assaulted and sexually exploited by Sextus Tarquinius, the son of the current King, L. Tarquinius Superbus. After a confession and suicide, the enraged prince, along with one L. Junius Brutus, swore an oath to expel Sextus and his family from Roman territory. An army was raised in Rome, which marched on the royal camp in Ardea, where they had been stationed putting down a revolt. Through the planning of Brutus more than anything else, the King was forced to flee, eventually ending up in the city of his father, Tarquinii. The Senate proclaimed Collatinus King of Rome unanimously, but to prevent future tyranny, a new office was legislated, the praetor. The first to hold this office was Brutus, however the office was to be limited to one year, but renewable. In fact, Brutus would hold the Praetorship for his entire reign. In addition, many of the duties of religion the King once held were transferred to the Pontifex Maximus, and the Senate was given greater rights of assembly.
However, the trials of the Kingdom were not over. Superbus declared the selection of Collatinus invalid, and the Kings of Tarquinii and Veii supported him in this. However, Lars Porsena, the King of Clusium, refused to give aid to the revolt, as he failed to see any difference between the harsh Superbus and Collatinus. Despite this, the minor Etruscan cities led an army against Rome. The battle resulted in complete failure and a slaughter at the Vatican Hill, however, later expeditions failed to take revenge for the attack. Roman assassins broke into the camp, and while they did not get to the King of Veii or Tarquinii, they managed to kill many major commanders of the Etruscans.
The throne secure, Collatinus allowed little power to the Praetors to rule Rome during the day-to-day matters of the Kingdom, preferring to take an active role in governing. Ever faithful to his late wife, he had no children.
In 280 AUC, Lucius Junius Brutus, now much older than the man who had aided Collatinus in his revolt and still Praetor despite protests, seized upon the readmission of Arruns Tarquinius in 269 AUC to Rome as a justification to dethrone Collatinus on the same grounds as Superbus was dethroned. The Senate was convinced to accept this for the public good in a stirring speech by Brutus. Collatinus was found dead in mysterious circumstances soon after.
Lucius Junius Brutus was the ninth King of Rome. He undid many of the reforms of Collatinus that related to the plebeians, and in fact made their position worse in some ways than under the early Tarquins. This was too much for the plebeians to bear, and they declared secession, and intended to build a new city called Collatinium after the late King who had supported them.
Before the suppression of the plebs is given in detail, it is interesting to look at a supposed decline in Brutus. At the overthrow of L. Tarquinius Superbus he seemed a patriot, and yet a look at his history seems to show a constant demand for power. Early in the reign of Collatinus, he is known to have made suggestions that Collatinus himself should be exiled, as he bore the hated name of Tarquin. This suggestion shows little more than a demand for power, as Brutus was related just as closely to the tyrannical king. And looking even earlier in Brutus’ life, we see evidence that he wished to be King, though many of these stories are likely apocryphal.
The actions of the plebs were met with anger by Brutus, who led the Roman army to slaughter and burn the city of Collatinium. Despite the effectiveness of these moves, even the patricians were shocked by these actions. To keep power in his hands, Brutus often switched out praetors even before the end of their terms, and made sure that they were in the hands of his friends. This backfired near the end of his fourth year, when the man Publius Valerius Publicola was appointed praetor. He immediately instituted processes of dethroning for Brutus, for overuse of force in cutting down the seceding plebs. The king was shocked, and ordered the army to march on the Curia Hostilia to prevent the Senate from taking action. However, the army mutinied behind Publicola, and forced Brutus to stand down in 274 AUC. The Senate elected Tiberius Junius Brutus, a general in the Roman Army who helped lead the mutiny, king of Rome in that year.
Tiberius Junius Brutus was a general in the Roman Army when he was selected as King of Rome. As such, he was very warlike. He campaigned against the other Italic tribes, greatly expanding the sphere of the Roman state. Traditionally, his reign is used as the date when Rome finally subsumed nearly all of the land between the Tiber and Neapolis, excepting Samnium and several regions loyal to the Etruscans. Veii finally made a peace agreement when the remnants of the descendants of L. Tarquinius Superbus finally died out, and Etruria flourished with the creation of the Dodecapolis League between the twelve largest Etruscan city-states, led by Veii at first, though later Clusium would take over that role.
Though the Senate had selected him for his actions against tyranny, Tiberius proved to be a staunch monarchist as well. The praetors during his early reign were under his control, and he took more powers upon himself. This came to a height when he moved to dismiss Titus Junius Brutus from the praetorship in 289 AUC. His father had used this power often, however Titus refused to go. A constitutional crisis had broken out in Rome. The Senate stood behind Titus, but the King pressed the issue. In response, the Senate refused to consider any laws, and was followed by the assemblies. King Tiberius saw the danger of creating laws without Senatorial approval, and so government stalled in Rome. For two years this situation persisted, for despite some Senators wishing to dethrone Tiberius, the praetor had to initiate such proceedings, and without a clear situation on who was praetor, this could not happen. In 291 AUC, it was decided that this situation was untenable and was leaving Rome in danger. To resolve the constitutional problems, it was decided to create a commission called the Decemvirate. This commission would consist of ten men, nine patricians and one plebian, who would draw up a constitution for Rome without intervention by Senatorial or Monarchist factions. The Decemvirate would hold power in Rome during the time that the constitution would be written, excepting the plebian member who would not have any role outside of the writing of the document. After one year, though, the Senate and the King agreed to take over the governing role. The Decemvirate took five years in writing what became known as the Lex Decim Tablarum¸ the Law of the Ten Tables, which clarified Roman law, a confusing mass of traditions and acts that dated back to Romulus.
King Tiberius did not approve of much of the Tables, as he felt they took too much power from where it rightfully belonged, the King, who would rule benevolently. It is believed that he was planning to refuse authorization to the Tables. In 296, he is believed to have been murdered by Appius Pontius Rufus, the sole plebian decimvir. Appius denied involvement, and was accepted in a court. After approving the Tables, the Senate selected a new King, Gaius Junius Brutus, the son of Titus Junius Brutus, and husband of Junia Minor, the only surviving daughter of King Tiberius.
Gaius Junius Brutus followed his uncle as King of Rome. Nearly all of the constitutional debates that dated back to Collatinus had finally been resolved, and with Rome’s interior problems resolved, they could look outward. However, conflicts with the Latin peoples, organized into an anti-Roman league, slowed the military glories that characterized the beginning of his reign. Near the middle of his reign, however, an attempt by the Latin cities to organize against Rome was crushed, and the Latin league became more and more an extension of Roman power.
The praetorship truly became a powerful office in the days of King Brutus. It absorbed the role of governing the city of Rome during his reign. However, since the patricians, many of whom also formed the Senate, elected the praetor, the plebs began to fear more laws similar to those passed in the reign of King Lucius Junius Brutus would go through. They petitioned directly to the King, however, Gaius had no love for those who had killed his beloved uncle. Thus began the second attempt at the secessio plebis. Brutus was unwilling to take the harsh measures used by his grandfather in suppressing the plebs, and because the King had complete say over the military, the city began to collapse without its farmers and lesser workers. The King himself met with representatives of the plebs, and agreed to create a new office, the quaestor. The quaestor would be a plebian citizen, and would hold an equal power with the praetor. On matters of law, the praetor and quaestor would have to agree to pass the issue. As part of the compromise, an eleventh table was to be drawn up, which would seal the powers of the quaestor in stone. However, while the Senate reluctantly agreed to the institution of the quaestor, they refused to this last demand.
Gaius Junius Brutus perished soon after the resolution of the conflict.
Tiberius Junius Hostilius followed him as King of Rome. The husband of Junia Maior, daughter of Gaius Junius Brutus, he ruled in a different style to past Kings. His first act was to massively expand the Senate to more families. This gave his supporters a majority in that important body, and made Tiberius a powerful king. The praetors, while not puppets as they had been in the past, were almost always his allies. As king, he gained the name Hostilius for his warlike behaviors that reminded many of the past King Hostilius, and conquered several formerly allied states directly into the Kingdom of Rome. When he sacked the allied city of Aritium in 347 AUC, bringing its inhabitants into slavery and building a new city called Hostilia in it’s place. Meeting in the Curia Hostilia, the Senate in 348 AUC issued the Declaration of Republic, abolishing the monarchy for good, and ordering the expulsion of the Royal Family. Thus began the King’s Civil War.
Tiberius moved his forces from Hostilia to Rome as soon as he could, taking a route around the Tiber as to catch the city by surprise. However, outside the city the Battle of the Vatican occurred, blocking Tiberius’ access to Rome for the time being. Tiberius instead focused on sapping the city’s resources. As the Romans walled themselves in, Tiberius captured all the towns that were loyal to the Republican cause. By 351, Rome was surrounded, and the farms within the city were not sufficient to keep the city fed. Tiberius’ troops stood out for the siege, which amazingly lasted for two long years. In 353, the city, reduced to nearly an eighth of its population and in a state of near collapse, finally surrendered. The King had won the civil war, but at heavy cost- the destruction had left the Latin league outside of Roman authority, and Rome was still too weak to conquer it again.
Tiberius immediately began to strengthen the state. He kept the Senate, but reduced it in power, having changes made directly to the Ten Tables. Now, the Senate could only consider praetorial candidates offered by the monarch, and the balance shifted even more to the allies of the monarchy rather than the patricians. Meanwhile, the plebeians protested through their quaestor that the war had caused too much damage to them, when the patricians caused it. Tiberius agreed, and put heavy taxes on those who nobles who survived the war and supported the Republic. Rome was all but a royal dictatorship.
What happened next is unsure. The most official sources say that he died, and his daughter managed to force the Senate to crown her a Queen of Rome. But this is heavily disputed and seen as unlikely
Tiberia Junia Quinta is a mysterious personage, attested mostly through kingship lists and a few doubtful sources, thanks to the chaos caused by the Gallic invasion. Some have argued that she was actually a he, Tiberius Junius Quintus, the fifth son rather than fifth daughter of King Tiberius Junius Hostilius, whose name was later changed to the female to insult him. Others have argued that Quinta was a historical person, perhaps one with influence over her father, but her “reign” was really a continuation of Tiberius Junius Hostilius’. It is known that around the beginning of her reign, the Gauls entered the Po Valley, which consisted of Etruscan cities allied with the Dodecapolis. These fierce warriors defeated the Etruscan armies in order to force heavy tribute from the Dodecapolis. Many Etruscan cities in the Po Valley would not be rebuilt for over a century, and many show traces of Gaulish residence in this period. The Gauls continued their march south. In 363 AUC, the armies of Gaul crushed the Roman army, according to some sources killing the Queen in the process. Rome was utterly crushed, many of its records were burned, and the Tomb of the Kings burned. Thus, the Junian dynasty was ended, and the Senate hastily convened to elect a new King. Never again would royal power reach the levels it once did.