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                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:H.hostilius_2</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="H"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="hostilius-bio-2" n="hostilius_2"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Hosti'lius</surname></persName></head><p>2. <hi rend="smallcaps">TULLUS</hi>
      <hi rend="smallcaps">HOSTILIUS</hi>, grandson of the preceding, was the third king of Rome.
      Thirty-two vears--from about <date when-custom="-670">B. C. 670</date> to 638--were assigned by the
      annalists to his reign. According to the legends, his history ran as follows :-Hostilius
      departed from the peaceful ways of Numa, and aspired to the martial renown of Romulus. He made
      Alba acknowledge Rome's supremacy in the war wherein the three Roman brothers, the Horatii,
      fought with the three Alban brothers, the Curiatii, at the Fossa Cluilia. Next he warred with
      Fidenae and with Veii, and being straitly pressed by their joint hosts, he vowed temples to
      Pallor and Pavor--Paleness and Panic. And after the fight was won, he tore asunder with
      chariots Mettius Fufetius, the king or dictator of Alba, because he had desired to betray
      Rome; and he utterly destroyed Alba, sparing only the temples of the gods, and bringing the
      Alban people to Rome, where he gave them the Caelian hill to dwell on. Then he turned himself
      to war with the Sabines, who, he said, had wronged the Roman merchants at the temple of
      Feronia, at the foot of Mount Soracte; and being again straitened in fight in a wood called
      the Wicked Wood, he vowed a yearly festival to Saturn and Ops, and to double the number of the
      Salii, or priests of Mamers. And when, by their help, he had vanquished the Sabines, he
      performed his vow, and its records were the feasts Saturnalia and Opalia. But while Hostilius
      thus warred with the nations northward and eastward of the city, he leagued himself with the
      Latins and with the Hernicans, so that while he was besieging Veii, the men of Tusculum and of
      Anagnia encamped on the Esquiline hill, and kept guard over Rome, where the city was most
      open. Yet, in his old days, Hostilius grew weary of warring; and when a pestilence struck him
      and his people, and a shower of burning stones fell from heaven on Mount Alba, and a voice as
      of the Alban gods came forth from the solitary temple of Jupiter on its summit, he remembered
      the peaceful and happy days of Numa, and sought to win the favour of the gods, as Numa had
      done, by prayer and divination. But the gods heeded neither his prayers nor his charms, and
      when he would inquire of Jupiter Elicius, Jupiter was wroth, and smote Hostilius and his <pb n="531"/> whole house with fire. Later times placed his sepulchre on the Velian hill. (Varr.
       <hi rend="ital">frugm.</hi> p. 241. Bipont. ed.)</p><p>That the story of Tullus Hostilius in Dionysius and Livy is the prose form of an heroic
      legend there seems little reason to doubt. The incidents of the Alban war, the meeting of the
      armies on the boundary line of Rome and Alba, the combat of the triad of brethren, the
      destruction of the city, the wrath of the gods, and the extinction of the Hostilian house, are
      genuine poetical features. Perhaps the only historical fact embodied in them is the ruin of
      Alba itself; and even this is misrepresented, since, had a Roman king destroyed it, the
      territory and city would have become Roman, whereas Alba remained a member of the Latin league
      until the dissolution of that confederacy in <date when-custom="-338">B. C. 338</date>. Yet, on the
      other hand, with Hostilius begins a new era in the early history of Rome, the ytho-historical,
      with higher pretensions and perhaps nearer approaches to fact and personality. As Romulus was
      the founder and eponymus of the Ramnes or first tribe, and Tatius of the Titienses or second,
      so Hostilius, a Latin of Medullia, was probably the founder of the third patrician tribe, the
      Luceres, which, whatever Etruscan admixture it may have had, was certainly in its main element
      Latin. Hostilius assigned lands, added to a national priesthood, and to the patriciate,
      instituted new religious festivals, and, according to one account at least, increased the
      number of the equites, all of which are tokens of permanent additions to the populus or
      burgherdom, and characteristics of a founder of the nation. Consistent with these glimpses of
      historical existence are his building the Hostilia curia, and his enclosure of the comitium.
      He was not therefore, like Romulus, merely an eponymus, nor, like Numa, merely an abstraction
      of one element, the religious phase of the commonwealth, but a hero-king, whose personality is
      dimly visible through the fragments of dismembered record and among the luminous clouds of
      poetic colouring. (<bibl n="Dionys. A. R. 3.1">Dionys. A. R. 3.1</bibl>-<bibl n="Dionys. A. R. 3.36">36</bibl>; <bibl n="Liv. 1.22">Liv. 1.22</bibl>_<bibl n="Liv. 1.32">32</bibl> ; Cic. <hi rend="ital">de Rep.</hi> 2.17; Niebuhr, <hi rend="ital">Hist. of
       Rome,</hi> vol. i. pp. 296-298, 346-352; Arnold, <hi rend="ital">Hist. of Rume,</hi> vol. i.
      pp. 15-19.)</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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