I agree, but you've got to remember that it's realism over wanking every day! Or...er...that's how it should be. I haven't always abided by that tenet.
The evidence that it was ruled by Alexander the Great. Really, it was a Hellenic kingdom, a mix between Persian and Greek. What more is there to say?
Alright, there is the fact that Mithridates was an autocrat, and kept his wives locked up, and executed his sons and family members for...
No, Dalmatica is the Pontifex Maximus's daughter and still a tad too young to attend a dinner party.
That's Balearica the Vestal and Balearica the upright and honest wife of Appius Claudius Pulcher, quintessential Roman matron; both are sisters of Nepos, and were disgusted with his seduction of...
FOR WANT OF THE HAMMER
SULLA IN SPAIN PART 1, 647 AVC
Geography, towns, and rivers of Hispania; for reference
On the 19th of November the veritable flotilla of Spurius Dellius arrived in Tarraco [50 kilometers south of Barcelona on the map], and the flurry of activity which would...
They would be neighbors but, as I said, not hostile neighbors. The Armenians had their plate full against the Parthians and Egyptians, and Sarmatian society didn't favor mountains at all.
They could be an intermediary...but I'm not sure what that changes. The Sarmatians were always an...
The Aeneid is set about 300 years before Rome's founding. There's nothing about the Founding of Rome in the Aeneid; it's simply about the flight of the Trojans from Ilium to Latium. In fact, the Romans thought that both the Aeneid and the Founding were true.
So the consensus is that Rome was formed of two or more villages that combined for mutual defense? Is it reasonable to have a Senate with one Latina and one Sabine king, and for the differences between the two groups and villages to erode enough so that any citizen can hold any free slot for...
Aha, hahaha, wow; caught a huge continuity error.
The Quaestor-elect of next year is now Publius Cornelius Sissina, the elder nephew of Caesar's old friend and brother of the rogue Lucius Cornelius Sissina.
Oh hell yeah, definitely. The Sarmatians terrorized the little Greek cities dotted around the Chersonesus and on the shores of the northern Black Sea before the arrival of Mithridates and his powerful, effective armies. If the Sarmatians are willing to settle down and Hellenize a bit, they can...
They couldn't absorb any Pontic territories; the main reason for the success of Lucullus, and later ultimately Pompey, against Pontus was that they invaded Armenia, which was supplying and aiding Pontus and Mithridates. Tigranes knew that without Pontus he was toast, and spent the years with a...
Armenia had already pissed of the Parthians directly, by taking so much fertile and gem-filled land off of them; the Romans they had pissed off indirectly by allying with and supporting Pontus, and by taking Syria--which was regarded as inside of Rome's sphere of influence. At this time...
@Grouchio
The Kings of Sparta were hereditary, however. Even in OTL the Kings of Rome were elected by the Senate; I imagine the same would be true of this ATL.
Also, the most minor change in the condition of Romulus and Remus would definitely butterfly away anything else; hell, even Numa...