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Special history :  |
ANCIENT
ROMAN HOMES

Roman homes had courtyards in which there
were fountains. The faucets were decorated
with carvings of men and animals, and beautiful
patterns were made out of mosaic. Fountains
which captured the originality of the household
were created. Many of the designs used a motif
representing a god.

The
lower class Romans (plebeians) lived in
apartment houses, called flats, above or
behind their shops. Even fairly well-to-do
tradesmen might chose to live in an apartment-building
compound over their store, with maybe renters
on the upper stories. Their own apartments
might be quite roomy, sanitary and pleasant,
occasionally with running water. But others
were not that nice.
In
the apartment houses, or flats, an entire
family (grandparents, parents, children)
might all be crowded into one room, without
running water. They had to haul their water
in from public facilities. Fire was a very
real threat because people were cooking
meals in crowded quarters, and many of the
flats were made of wood. They didn't have
toilets. They had to use public latrines(toilets).

The
upper class Romans (patricians) lived very
differently. Their homes were single family
homes, which in ancient Rome meant the great
grandparents, grandparents, parents, and
kids of one family lived in a home together.
Homes were made, quite often, of brick with
red tile roofs, with rooms arranged around
a central courtyard. The windows and balconies
faced the courtyard, not the street, to
keep homes safe from burglars. There were
painting on the walls and beautiful mosaics
on the floor. There was very little furniture,
and no carpeting. Wealthy Romans might have
a house with a front door, bedrooms, an
office, a kitchen, a dining room, a garden,
a temple, an atrium, a toilet, and a private
bath.
Ancient
Rome 
The
very earliest settlements along the Tiber
River in the region that later became the
city of Rome were most probably ruled by
a chieftain or warlord with the support
of the heads of the leading families within
or near the settlement. Virgil and the other
epic writers tell us that the city of Rome
was founded by Romulus, and that early on
he murdered his brother Remus for ridiculing
his pomerium, or the sacred boundary of
the city he had founded. This city was named
Rome after its legendary founder, and we
have a suitably heroic beginning for a city
that would one day rule the entire Western
world. Writers of later eras, including
many Romans, would infer quite a bit from
the part of the story where Romulus murders
his brother, and say that as Rome was founded
in an act of bloodshed, so the shedding
of blood would become part of the Roman
legacy. Certainly this is true, but any
civilization that became dominant in that
era would necessarily had to have shed much
blood in the process of doing so. While
most historians consider the founding legends
of Rome and the person of Romulus to be
non - historical, They are fairly certain
that Rome was ruled by kings during her
early years. Kings Numa Pompilius and Ancus
Marcius are legendary figures shrouded in
mystery, while the sixth king, Servius Tullus,
emerges as a historical personality. Servius
Tullus was responsible for the several major
reforms in the military and political organization
of the Roman state, about which more will
be said later. The period of the kings also
includes the period during which Roman politics
was dominated by the Etruscan nobility.
Historians are fairly certain that three
of Rome's seven kings were Etruscan. None
of these early kings were absolute rulers;
they all required the support of the ruling
aristocracy. The important principle to
understand concerning this period is that
the ruling class consisted of the heads
of the most prominent families of the community.
These families were organized into gentes
or clans, and the clans were organized into
tribes. Power was derived from who you were,
to whom you were related, and what position
you held in your family, gens, and tribe.
It was an aristocracy based on kinship rather
than wealth. As we shall see, wealth later
became an important determinant of power
and the constant shifting balance of power
between the old Patrician aristocracy and
the later propertied classes grew to become
one of the major driving forces behind Republican
era politics. The Regal Period came to an
end, traditionally, in 509 B. C. when the
last Etruscan King, Tarquinius Superbus
(Tarquin the Proud) was overthrown by the
Romans who set up a republic to rule in
his place. According to epic legend, Tarquin
was overthrown because he had raped Lucretia,
a virtuous Roman matron and the daughter
of an important citizen. The more prosaic
explanation offered by many historians is
that the Roman aristocracy had been steadily
gaining power and the kings found their
position growing ever more threatened. A
strong personality like Servius Tullus might
be able to hold his own in the face of a
strong aristocracy, but his much weaker
successor was unable to stay the inevitable
fall from power. One must realize that Rome
was steadily growing larger from the early
years of its foundation through the period
of the kings (referred to as Monarchy or
Regal Period by historians), and throughout
the early years of the Republic. First,
settlements on the Palatine, Quirinal, and
other hills banded together under the leadership
of the settlement on the Palatine. These
settlements steadily grew and incorporated
other nearby villages until the City of
Rome encompassed settlements on the seven
hills and low lying marshy areas between
them. Later, by treaty of alliance or outright
aggression and assimilation, other cities
in the surrounding district of Latium came
under Roman control. These Latins were the
peoples most closely related to the Romans
Later still, this process accounted for
Rome gaining control of the non Latin towns
in Italy, the Italian allies or conquered
Italian towns. The fascinating history of
the conquest of Latium Central Italy, Samnium,
and Magna Graecia is dealt with elsewhere
in this series of articles. The important
thing to understand is that in order for
the small Latin town of Rome to succeed
in gaining power and ascendancy over her
neighbors in this fashion, she had to use
just the right mixture of aggression and
diplomacy. To accomplish this, Rome had
to make it attractive enough to the ruling
establishment in her new allied towns to
cause these individuals to cooperate with
the Roman plan. Rome implemented this in
two ways. In some cases, the Romans agreed
to let the local aristocracy continue in
power and offered their support in exchange
for a pledge of military assistance when
Rome needed it. In other cases, Rome offered
different classes of citizenship to the
people of the allied or conquered towns.
One class of citizenship offered full voting
privileges and an opportunity for the man
or his descendents to gain a magistracy
or membership in the Roman senate.Additionally,
one more force acted to shape Roman politics.
In many ancient city - states, especially
the Greeks from whom the Romans drew many
examples on which to base their own society,
a man's wealth determined his position in
the army and his responsibilities for defense
of the community. The horse of a mounted
infantryman and the equipment of the heavily
armoured hoplite warrior were expensive
to acquire and maintain. Therefore, only
the wealthiest citizens could afford the
equipment and provisions required by the
heaviest, most well armed troops. A hoplite's
equipment consisted of bronze helmet, cuirass,
greaves, sword, and one or more spears.
Men with lesser qualifications might equip
themselves with less armour or forego the
armour altogether, choosing the role of
skirmishers equipped with only a sling or
spear. This principle contributed to a reorganization
of the political structure around classes
of military service, which in turn were
tied to property qualifications.

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