![]()  | 
    A Brief 
        History of Rome  | 
    
Always been fascinated by the classical Greek 
  and Roman mythologies and history, 
  I thought it might be nice to spice up the site with a taste of "culchuh..."
The accounts of the regal 
  period have come down overlaid with such a mass of myth and 
  legend that few can be verified; Roman historians of later times, lacking authentic 
  records, 
  relied on fabrications of a patriotic nature. Following this period, when a 
  republic was 
  established, Rome became a world power and emerged as an empire with extensive 
  boundaries.
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The Legendary Period of the Kings (753-510 
  BC) Rome was said to have 
  been founded by Latin colonists from Alba Longa, a nearby city in 
  ancient Latium. The legendary date of the founding was 753 BC; it was 
  ascribed to Romulus and Remus, the twin sons of Rhea Silvia, a vestal 
  virgin and the daughter of Numitor, king of Alba Longa. Later legend 
  carried the ancestry of the Romans back to the Trojans and their leader 
  Aeneas, whose son Ascanius, or Iulus, was the founder and the first king 
  of Alba Longa. The tales concerning Romulus's rule, notably the rape of 
  the Sabine women and the war with the Sabines under the leader Titus 
  Tatius, point to an early infiltration of Sabine peoples or to a union 
  of Latin and Sabine elements at the beginning. The three tribes, the R
  amnes, Tities, and Luceres, that appear in the legend of Romulus as the 
  parts of the new commonwealth suggest that Rome arose from the 
  amalgamation of three stocks, thought to be Latin, Sabine, and Etruscan. 
The seven kings of the regal period and the 
  dates traditionally assigned 
  to their reigns are as follows: Romulus, from 753 to 715 BC; Numa 
  Pompilius, from 715 to 676 or 672 BC, to whom was attributed the 
  introduction of many religious customs; Tullus Hostilius, from 673 to 
  641 BC, a warlike king, who destroyed Alba Longa and fought against the 
  Sabines; Ancus Marcius, from 641 to 616 BC, said to have built the port 
  of Ostia and to have captured many Latin towns, transferring their 
  inhabitants to Rome; Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, from 616 to 578 BC, 
  celebrated both for his military exploits against neighboring peoples 
  and for his construction of public buildings at Rome; Servius Tullius, 
  from 578 to 534 BC, famed for his new constitution and for the 
  enlargement of the boundaries of the city; and Lucius Tarquinius 
  Superbus, from 534 to 510 BC, the seventh and last king, whose 
  tyrannical rule was overthrown when his son ravished Lucretia, the wife 
  of a kinsman. Tarquinius was banished, and attempts by Etruscan or Latin 
  cities to reinstate him on the throne at Rome were unavailing. 
Although the names, dates, and events of 
  the regal period are considered 
  as belonging to the realm of fiction and myth rather than to that of 
  factual history, certain facts seem well attested: the existence of an 
  early rule by kings; the growth of the city and its struggles with 
  neighboring peoples; the conquest of Rome by Etruria and the 
  establishment of a dynasty of Etruscan princes, symbolized by the rule 
  of the Tarquins; the overthrow of this alien control; and the abolition 
  of the kingship. The existence of certain social and political 
  conditions may also be accepted, such as the division of the 
  inhabitants, exclusive of slaves, from the beginning into two orders: 
  the patricians, who alone possessed political rights and constituted the 
  populus, or people; and their dependents, known as clients or the plebs, 
  who had originally no political existence. The rex, or king, chosen by 
  the Senate (senatus), or Council of Elders, from the ranks of the 
  patricians, held office for life, called out the populus for war, and 
  led the army in person; he was preceded by officers, known as lictors, 
  who bore the fasces, the symbols of power and punishment, and was the 
  supreme judge in all civil and criminal suits. The senatus gave its 
  advice only when the king chose to consult it, but the elders (patres) 
  possessed great moral authority, inasmuch as their tenure was for life. 
  Originally only patricians could bear arms in defense of the state. At 
  some stage in the regal period an important military reform occurred, 
  usually designated as the Servian reform of the constitution, because it 
  was ascribed to Servius Tullius. As the plebs could by this time acquire 
  property and wealth, it was decided that all property holders, both 
  patrician and plebeian, must serve in the army, and each took a rank in 
  accordance with his wealth. This arrangement, although initially 
  military, paved the way for the great political struggle between the 
  patricians and the plebs in the early centuries of the Republic. 
The Republic
On the overthrow of Tarquinius Superbus a republic was established.
Conquest of Italy (510-264 BC)
In place of the king, two chief executives 
  were chosen annually by the 
  whole body of citizens. These were known as praetors, or leaders, but 
  later received the title of consuls. The participation of a colleague in 
  the exercise of supreme power and the limitation of the tenure to one 
  year prevented the chief magistrate from becoming autocratic. The 
  character of the Senate was altered by the enrollment of plebeian 
  members, known as conscripti, and hence the official designation of the 
  senators thereafter was patres conscripti (conscript fathers). As yet, 
  only patricians were eligible for the magistracies, and the discontent 
  of the plebs led to a violent struggle between the two orders and the 
  gradual removal of the social and political disabilities under which the 
  plebs had labored. 
In 494 BC a secession of plebeian soldiers 
  led to the institution of the 
  tribuni plebis, who were elected annually as protectors of the plebs; 
  they had the power to veto the acts of patrician magistrates, and thus 
  served as the leaders of the plebs in the struggles with the patricians. 
  The appointment of the decemvirate, a commission of ten men, in 451 BC 
  resulted in the drawing up of a famous code of laws. In 445 BC, under 
  the Canuleian law, marriages between patricians and members of the plebs 
  were declared legally valid. By the Licinian-Sextian laws, passed in 367 
  BC, it was provided that one of the two consuls should thenceforth be 
  plebeian. The other magistracies were gradually opened to the plebs: in 
  356 BC the dictatorship, an extraordinary magistracy, the incumbent of 
  which was appointed in times of great danger; in 350 BC, the censorship; 
  in 337 BC, the praetorship; and in 300 BC, the pontifical and augural 
  colleges. 
These political changes gave rise to a new 
  aristocracy, composed of 
  patrician and wealthy plebeian families, and admission to the Senate 
  became almost the hereditary privilege of these families. The Senate, 
  which had originally possessed little administrative power, became a 
  powerful governing body, dealing with matters of war and peace, foreign 
  alliances, the founding of colonies, and the handling of the state 
  finances. The rise of this new nobilitas brought to an end the struggles 
  between the two orders, but the position of the poorer plebeian families 
  was not improved, and the marked contrast between the conditions of the 
  rich and the poor led to struggles in the later Republic between the 
  aristocratic party and the popular party. 
The external history of Rome during this 
  period was chiefly military. 
  Rome had acquired the leadership of Latium before the close of the regal 
  period. Assisted by their allies, the Romans fought wars against the 
  Etruscans, the Volscians, and the Aequians. The military policy of Rome 
  became more aggressive in the 60 years between 449 and 390 BC. The 
  defeat of the Romans at Allia and the capture and burning of Rome by the 
  Gauls under the leadership of the chieftain Brennus in 390 BC were great 
  disasters, but their effect was temporary. The capture of the Etruscan 
  city of Veii in 396 BC by the soldier and statesman Marcus Furius 
  Camillus spelled the beginning of the end for Etruscan independence. 
  Other Etruscan cities hastened to make peace, and by the middle of the 
  4th century BC all southern Etruria was kept in check by Roman garrisons 
  and denationalized by an influx of Roman colonists. Victories over the 
  Volscians, the Latins, and the Hernicans gave the Romans control of 
  central Italy and brought them into conflict with the Samnites of 
  southern Italy, who were defeated in a series of three wars, extending 
  from 343 to 290 BC. A revolt of the Latins and Volscians was put down, 
  and in 338 BC the Latin League, a long-established confederation of the 
  cities of Latium, was dissolved. A powerful coalition was at this time 
  formed against Rome, consisting of Etruscans, Umbrians, and Gauls in the 
  north, and of Lucanians, Bruttians, and Samnites in the south; this 
  coalition endangered the power of Rome, but the northern confederacy was 
  defeated in 283 BC and the southern states soon after. The Greek colony 
  of Tarentum (now Taranto), incurring the hostility of Rome, invited 
  Pyrrhus, king of Epirus, to cross over from Greece and aid the Greek 
  cities of southern Italy against Rome. His campaigns in Italy and on the 
  island of Sicily from 280 to 276 BC were unsuccessful and he returned to 
  Greece. During the next ten years the Romans completed their subjugation 
  of southern Italy and thus gained control of the entire peninsula as far 
  north as the Arno and Rubicon rivers. 
A World Power (264-133 BC)
In 264 BC, 11 years after the victory over 
  Pyrrhus, Rome engaged with 
  Carthage in a struggle for the control of the Mediterranean Sea. 
  Carthage at this time was the foremost maritime power in the world, 
  ruling as absolutely in the central and western Mediterranean as did 
  Rome on the Italian Peninsula. 
Punic Wars
The First Punic War (see Punic Wars) was 
  waged mainly for the possession 
  of Sicily and was marked by the emergence of Rome as a great naval 
  power. Having gained the support of Hiero II, king of Syracuse, the 
  Romans took Agrigentum (now Agrigento), and at Mylae in 260 BC, with 
  their first naval armament under the consul Gaius Duilius, they defeated 
  a great Carthaginian fleet. The transfer of the war to Africa resulted 
  in the defeat and capture of the Roman general Marcus Atilius Regulus. 
  After several naval disasters, the Romans won a great naval victory in 
  242 BC off the Aegates Islands, west of Sicily. The war ended in the 
  following year with the cession to the Romans of the Carthaginian part 
  of Sicily, which was made into a Roman province; this was Rome's first 
  foreign possession. Sardinia and Corsica were taken from Carthage and 
  annexed as provinces soon after. Finding Rome an equal match at sea, 
  Carthage prepared for a resumption of hostilities by acquiring a 
  foothold in Spain. Under the leadership of the great general Hamilcar, 
  who conceived the project of making Spain a military base, Carthage 
  occupied the peninsula as far as the Tagus River; Hamilcar's son-in-law 
  Hasdrubal continued the work of subjugation until his death in 221 BC; 
  and finally Hamilcar's son Hannibal extended the conquests of Carthage 
  up to the Iberus (now Ebro) River. The Second Punic War began in 218 BC. 
  Hannibal crossed the Alps with an enormous force, descending on Italy 
  from the north, and defeated the Romans in a series of battles; he then 
  continued to ravage most of southern Italy for years. He was recalled to 
  Africa to face Scipio Africanus, who had invaded Carthage. Scipio 
  decisively defeated Hannibal at Zama in 202 BC, and Carthage was 
  compelled to give up its navy, cede Spain and its Mediterranean islands, 
  and pay a huge indemnity. Rome was thus left in complete control of the 
  western Mediterranean. The Romans now became more harsh in their 
  treatment of the Italian communities under their domination, and the 
  Greek cities of southern Italy, which had sided with Hannibal, were made 
  colonies. Meanwhile Rome was extending its power northward. During 
  201-196 BC the Celts of the Po Valley were subjugated, and their 
  territory was Latinized, but they themselves were declared incapable of 
  acquiring Roman citizenship. The interior of Corsica and Sardinia was 
  subdued, and Spain, where the wars were troublesome, was held by 
  military occupation, a practice that gave rise to the first Roman 
  standing armies. 
Macedonian Wars
Fifty years after becoming the foremost power 
  of the west by defeating 
  the Carthaginians at Zama, Rome had also become the mightiest state in 
  the east, first by conquering Hannibal's ally Philip V, king of 
  Macedonia; Philip's ambition to dominate the Aegean Sea drew Rome into 
  the Second Macedonian War (200-197 BC), which ended with his defeat. 
  Next came the liberation of Greece, which, with the alliance that 
  followed, enabled Rome to proceed against Antiochus III, king of Syria, 
  who was defeated by the Romans at Magnesia in 190 BC and obliged to 
  surrender his possessions in Europe and Asia Minor. Western Greece, 
  however, continued to give trouble, and Philip's son and successor, 
  Perseus (212?-166? BC), fought the Romans in the Third (and final) 
  Macedonian War, which terminated in the utter rout of his armies and his 
  capture at Pydna in 168 BC by the general Lucius Aemilius Paullus 
  (229?-160? BC). Macedonia was made a Roman province in 146 BC, and in 
  that year a revolt of the Achaean League in Greece resulted in the 
  capture and destruction of Corinth. 
Also in 146 BC came the end of the Third 
  Punic War, which had begun 
  three years earlier. Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Africanus Minor 
  captured and destroyed Carthage, thus bringing to an end the 
  Carthaginian empire, whose territory became the Roman province of 
  Africa. A series of Spanish campaigns ended with the capture of Numantia 
  in 133 BC. In the same year Attalus III of Pergamum died and bequeathed 
  his client kingdom to its protector, Rome; shortly after, this territory 
  was formed into the province of Asia. 
Thus in 131 years Rome had developed from 
  a land power controlling only 
  the Italian peninsula to a world empire. From Syria to Spain the 
  Mediterranean was now dominated by Rome, but Roman authority was better 
  established in the west than in the east. During this period the Romans 
  made great cultural advances. Brought into contact with the Greeks, 
  first in southern Italy and Sicily, and later through Roman expansion to 
  the east, they adopted much from the older civilization in art, 
  literature, philosophy, and religion. Roman literature began in 240 BC 
  with the translation and adaptation of Greek epic and dramatic poetry, 
  and the various Greek schools of philosophy were formally introduced 
  into Rome in 155 BC. 
Internal Conflict (133-27 BC)
With the establishment of external supremacy, 
  Rome's internal troubles 
  began. Several extremely wealthy plebeian families combined with the old 
  patrician families to exclude all but themselves from the higher 
  magistracies and the Senate; they were called Optimates. This 
  aristocratic ruling class had become selfish, arrogant, and addicted to 
  luxury, losing the high standards of morality and integrity of their 
  forebears. The gradual extinction of the peasant farmers, caused by the 
  growth of large estates, a system of slave labor, and the devastation of 
  the country by war, led to the development of a city rabble incapable of 
  elevated political sentiment. Conflicts between the aristocratic party 
  and the popular party were inevitable. The attempts of the people's tr
  ibunes Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and his brother Gaius Sempronius 
  Gracchus to alleviate the economic distress and help the poorer citizens 
  by agrarian and corn laws resulted in riots in which both brothers met 
  their deaths, Tiberius in 133 BC and Gaius in 121 BC. 
The expansion of Rome's territory continued. 
  In Africa the overthrow, in 
  106 BC, of Jugurtha, king of Numidia, by the consul Gaius Marius with 
  the assistance of Lucius Cornelius Sulla increased the military renown 
  of the Republic, as did the defeat of the Cimbri and the Teutones in 
  southern Gaul and northern Italy by Marius after his return from Africa. 
The Italian communities, the allies of Rome, 
  had felt their burdens 
  increase as their privileges waned, and they demanded their share of the 
  conquests they had helped to achieve. The tribune Marcus Livius Drusus 
  attempted to conciliate the poor citizens by agrarian and corn laws and 
  to satisfy the Italian armies by promise of Roman citizenship. He was 
  assassinated in 91 BC. The following year the Italian armies rose in 
  revolt, their purpose being to erect a new Italian state governed on the 
  lines of the Roman constitution. This war, which lasted from 90 to 88 
  BC, is known as the Social War, or the Marsian War, from the important 
  part played in it by the Marsians. The Italians were finally defeated 
  but were granted full citizenship by the Romans. 
The internal troubles continued; a conflict 
  broke out between Marius, 
  the spokesman and idol of the popular party, and Sulla, the leader of 
  the aristocracy. A war with Mithridates VI, king of Pontus, threw the 
  two leaders into rivalry as to which should command the expeditionary 
  force. With the legions he had commanded in the Social War, Sulla 
  marched on Rome from the south, for the first time bringing Roman 
  legions into the city. The subsequent flight of Marius and the execution 
  of the tribune Publius Sulpicius Rufus (circa 124-88 BC) left Sulla free 
  to impose arbitrary measures, and, after the consular elections had 
  confirmed him in his command, he set out against Mithridates in 87 BC. 
  In Sulla's absence Lucius Cornelius Cinna, a leader of the popular party 
  and a bitter opponent of Sulla, attempted to carry out the reforms 
  originally proposed by Sulpicius, but he was driven from Rome. He 
  rallied the legions in Campania around him and, joined by the veteran 
  Marius, who had returned from Africa, entered Rome and was recognized as 
  consul, as was Marius, the latter serving for the seventh time. Shortly 
  thereafter, following a brutally vindictive massacre of senators and 
  patricians, Marius died; Cinna remained in power until Sulla, returning 
  from Asia with 40,000 troops in 83 BC, defeated the popular party. As a 
  result of the example set by Sulla, the Republican constitution was 
  thenceforth at the mercy of the strongest leader supported by the 
  strongest troops. After suppressing his enemies by proscription, drawing 
  up and posting in the Forum a list of important men declared to be 
  public enemies and outlaws, Sulla ruled as dictator until his retirement 
  to private life in 79 BC. In addition to proscription, Sulla employed 
  confiscation of lands as a method of suppressing his political enemies. 
  Confiscated lands were either given to the veterans of his legions, who 
  neglected them, or abandoned to become wasteland; Rome's former rich 
  agricultural economy began to decline, and thenceforth more and more of 
  the city's food was imported, Africa becoming the major source of Rome's 
  grain supply. 
The Rise of Caesar
In 67 BC the statesman and general Pompey 
  the Great, who had fought the 
  Marian party in Africa, Sicily, and Spain, cleared the Mediterranean of 
  pirates and was then put in charge of the war against Mithridates. 
  Meanwhile his rival Gaius Julius Caesar rose to prominence, and his 
  political ability had full scope during the absence of Pompey. As leader 
  of the popular party Caesar strengthened his hold on the people by 
  avenging the injured names of Marius and Cinna, pleading for clemency to 
  the children of the proscribed, and bringing to justice Sulla's corrupt 
  followers. 
In Marcus Licinius Crassus, a man of great 
  wealth, Caesar found a 
  tractable auxiliary. Catiline's conspiracy in 63 BC (see Catiline), 
  exposed and defeated by the famous orator and statesman Marcus Tullius 
  Cicero during his consulship, involved Caesar in the ill will in which 
  the middle classes held popular adventurers. Pompey returned from the 
  east and asked the Senate for the ratification of his measures in Asia 
  and the bestowal of land on his legionaries. His demands met with 
  determined opposition, until Caesar, posing as his friend, formed with 
  him and Crassus the coalition known as the first triumvirate. 
The triumvirate in 59 BC fulfilled its compact. 
  Caesar obtained the 
  consulship and the satisfaction of Pompey's demands, conciliated the 
  equestrians, many of whom were wealthy members of the mercantile class, 
  at the expense of the Senate, and had enacted an agrarian law enabling 
  him to reward the troops. His crowning success, however, was his 
  obtaining for five years the military command of Cisalpine Gaul, 
  Illyricum, and late of Transalpine Gaul, where he could gain glory by 
  military conquests, and from which he could watch every political move 
  in Italy. 
The triumvirs renewed their alliance, and 
  Caesar procured his command in 
  Gaul for five years more. Pompey and Crassus were elected consuls for 
  the year 55 BC, and in the following year Pompey received as his 
  province the two Spains, with Africa, while Crassus received Syria. The 
  death of Crassus in 53 BC brought Pompey into direct conflict with 
  Caesar. Rome, in the absence of efficient government, was in turmoil 
  until the Senate induced Pompey to remain in Italy, entrusting his 
  provinces to legates; it elected him sole consul for the year 52 BC and 
  made him its champion against Caesar. 
The Senate, wishing to terminate Caesar's 
  military command and defeat 
  his second stand for the consulship in 49 BC, demanded either Caesar's 
  disbanding of his legions, and his presence in Rome at the time of the 
  election, or his continued command and his renunciation of claims to the 
  consulship. Negotiations failed to solve the deadlock, and in 49 BC 
  Caesar with his legions boldly crossed the Rubicon River, the southern 
  boundary of his province, and advanced on the city, thereby beginning 
  the civil war that continued for five years. Pompey and the leading 
  members of the aristocracy withdrew to Greece, allowing Caesar to enter 
  Rome in triumph. Caesar's victory, unlike those of the other generals 
  who had marched on Rome, was not followed by a reign of terror; neither 
  proscriptions nor confiscations took place. A policy of economic and 
  administrative reforms was put into effect, in an attempt to overcome 
  corruption and restore prosperity to Rome. Continuing the war against 
  Pompey, Caesar hurried to Spain, where he was victorious over the 
  powerful armies of Pompey's legates. Returning to Rome, having meanwhile 
  been appointed dictator in his absence, he almost immediately renounced 
  that post and was elected consul. Early in 48 BC he crossed into Greece 
  and dealt Pompey a crushing blow at Pharsalus. Pompey was killed soon 
  after in Egypt, but the Pompeian cause struggled on until 45 BC, when it 
  collapsed at Munda in Spain, and Caesar was made dictator for life. 
Caesar's assassination by Republican nobles 
  on March 15, 44 BC, was 
  followed by Cicero's attempt to restore the old Republican constitution, 
  but Mark Antony, who had been appointed consul with Caesar, now, at the 
  head of 17 legions, combined forces with Marcus Aemilius Lepidus and 
  Caesar's grandnephew, the youthful Octavian, later Emperor Augustus, to 
  form the second triumvirate. The triumvirs began operations by 
  proscribing and assassinating their opponents, including Cicero. A stand 
  made at Philippi by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius, two of 
  Caesar's assassins, was crushed by Octavian and Antony, and subsequently 
  the triumvirs divided the control of the empire, Octavian taking Italy 
  and the west, Antony the east, and Lepidus Africa. Antony, going to the 
  east, was captivated by the charms of Cleopatra, queen of Egypt and 
  formerly mistress of Caesar, and with her planned an eastern empire. 
  Lepidus, summoned to Sicily by Octavian to assist in the war against 
  Sextus Pompeius, son of Pompey the Great, attempted to seize Sicily for 
  himself and was deprived of his province and his position in the 
  triumvirate. The death of Sextus Pompeius, after the destruction of his 
  fleet in the Mediterranean, left Octavian, who had been sagaciously 
  strengthening his position in the west, with only Antony as rival. After 
  the Battle of Actium in 31 BC and the subsequent suicide of both Antony 
  and Cleopatra, the victorious Octavian became, in 29 BC, master of the 
  east also and the undisputed ruler of the entire Roman Empire. 
In spite of the series of disastrous civil 
  wars, during the last years 
  of the Republic a remarkable development of literary activity took 
  place. This period, known as the Ciceronian period, extended from about 
  70 to 43 BC and forms the first part of the so-called Golden Age of 
  Rome's literary development; the remainder of the Golden Age, extending 
  from 43 BC to AD 14, is known as the Augustan period. Caesar and Cicero 
  brought Latin prose to its peak of achievement, and Marcus Terentius 
  Varro was the greatest scholar of the age. The poetry of the period is 
  best represented by the work of Gaius Valerius Catullus and Lucretius. 
The Empire Octavian received the title of 
  Augustus in 27 BC and began 
  the new regime by an apparent restoration of the Republic, with himself 
  as princeps, or chief citizen. 
Augustus and the Julio-Claudian Emperors (27 BC-AD 68)
The Republican constitution was retained, 
  although until 23 BC as 
  princeps Augustus held the real authority, which thereafter was vested 
  in the tribunician power and the military imperium, or final authority 
  of command. The Senate retained control of Rome, Italy, and the older, 
  more peaceful provinces; the frontier provinces, where legions were 
  necessarily quartered, were governed by legates appointed and controlled 
  by Augustus alone. The corruption and extortion that had existed in 
  Roman provincial administration during the last century of the Republic 
  was no longer tolerated, and the provinces benefited greatly. Augustus 
  introduced numerous social reforms, especially those calculated to 
  restore the ancient morality of the Roman people and the integrity of 
  marriage; he attempted to combat the licentiousness of the times and 
  sought to restore the ancient religious festivals. He adorned the city 
  with temples, basilicas, and porticoes, transforming it from a city of 
  brick to a city of marble. To the Romans an era of peace and prosperity 
  seemed to have dawned, and the Augustan period represents the 
  culmination of the Golden Age of Latin literature, distinguished in 
  poetry by the achievements of Virgil, Horace, and Ovid, and in prose by 
Livy's monumental History of Rome.
With the establishment of the imperial system 
  the history of Rome became 
  largely identified with the reigns of individual emperors. The emperor 
  Tiberius, who succeeded his stepfather Augustus in AD 14 and ruled until 
  the year 37, was a capable administrator but the object of general 
  dislike and suspicion. He relied on military power and in Rome had his 
  Praetorian Guard, the only organized troops allowed legally in Rome, 
  within ready call. He was followed by the insane and tyrannical 
  Caligula, who reigned from 37 to 41; Claudius, whose rule (41-54) was 
  distinguished by the conquest of Britain, and who continued the public 
  works and administrative reforms instituted under Caesar and Augustus; 
  and Nero, whose rule was at first moderate, as a result of the wise gui
  dance and counsel of the philosopher Lucius Annaeus Seneca and of Sextus 
  Afranius Burrus (died 62), prefect of the Praetorian Guard. Nero's 
  overthrow, which was caused by his later excesses, and his subsequent 
  suicide in 68 marked the end of the line of Julio-Claudian emperors. 
The Flavians and the Antonines (69-192) The 
  brief reigns in 68-69 of 
  Galba, Otho, and Vitellius were followed by that of Vespasian, who ruled 
  from 69 to 79. He and his sons, the emperors Titus and Domitian, are 
  known as the Flavians. They revived the simpler court of the early 
  imperial days and tried to restore the authority of the Senate and 
  promote the welfare of the people. During the reign of Titus (79-81) 
  occurred the famous eruption of Vesuvius that devastated an area south 
  of Naples, destroying the towns of Herculaneum and Pompeii. Domitian, in 
  whose reign (81-96) lived the best writers of the Silver Age of Latin 
  literature, became a cruel and suspicious tyrant in the later years of 
  his rule, and the period of terror associated with his name ended with h
  is murder. 
The brief reign (96-98) of Marcus Cocceius 
  Nerva initiated a new era, 
  known as that of the five good emperors, the others being Trajan, 
  Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, and Marcus Aurelius. Each emperor was chosen 
  and then legally adopted by his predecessor, being selected for his 
  ability and his integrity. Trajan, emperor from 98 to 117, expanded the 
  borders of the empire by the campaigns against the Dacians and the 
  Parthians, and was noted for his excellent administration. Under him the 
  empire reached its greatest extent. The satirist Juvenal, the orator and 
  letter writer Pliny the Younger, and the historian Cornelius Tacitus all 
  flourished during Trajan's reign. The 21 years of Hadrian's rule 
  (117-38) were a period of peace and prosperity; giving up some of the 
  Roman territories in the east, Hadrian consolidated the empire and 
  stabilized its boundaries. The reign of his successor, Antoninus Pius 
  (reigned 138-61), was likewise orderly and peaceful. That of the next 
  emperor, the Stoic philosopher Marcus Aurelius (reigned 161-80), who was 
  coruler with Lucius Aurelius Verus (130-69) until the latter's death, 
  was troubled by incursions by various migrating tribes into different 
  parts of the empire. Marcus Aurelius was succeeded by his profligate son 
  Lucius Aelius Aurelius Commodus, who was considered one of the most 
  sanguinary and licentious tyrants of history and was murdered in 192. 
Decline and Fall (193-476) The brief reigns 
  of Publius Helvius Pertinax 
  (126-93) and Didus Severus Julianus were followed by that of Lucius 
  Septimius Severus, who ruled from 193 to 211; his short-lived dynasty 
  included the emperors Caracalla, who reigned from 211 to 217; 
  Heliogabalus, from 218 to 222; and Alexander Severus (208-35), from 222 
  to 235. Septimius was an able ruler, but Caracalla was noted for his 
  brutality and Heliogabalus for his debauchery. Caracalla, who in 212 
  granted Roman citizenship to all freemen living in the Roman Empire, is 
  said to have so decreed in order to impose on them the taxes to which 
  only citizens were liable. Alexander Severus was noted for his wisdom 
  and justice. 
After the death of Alexander Severus, a period 
  ensued during which great 
  confusion prevailed in Rome and throughout Italy. Of his 12 successors 
  who ruled in the next 33 years, nearly all came to a violent death, 
  usually at the hands of the soldiers who had established them on the 
  throne. A temporary revival of peace and prosperity was brought about by 
  the Illyrian emperors, natives of the area now known as Dalmatia, 
  namely, Claudius II, surnamed Gothicus, who in a short reign (268-70) 
  drove back the Goths; and Aurelian, who, ruling from 270 to 275, was 
  victorious over both the Goths and the Germans and defeated and captured 
  Zenobia, queen of Palmyra, who had occupied Egypt and Asia Minor. For a 
  brief period the unity of the empire was restored. Aurelian was followed 
  by a rapid succession of historically unimportant emperors, of whom six 
  ruled in the 9-year period before the accession of Diocletian, also an 
  Illyrian, who ruled from 284 to 305. An able administrator, Diocletian 
  introduced many social, economic, and political reforms. He removed the 
  political and economic privileges that Rome and Italy had enjoyed at the 
  expense of the provinces. He sought to regulate rampant inflation by 
  controlling the prices of provisions and many other necessities of life, 
  and also the maximum wages for workers. To provide a more efficient 
  administration, uniform throughout the empire, he initiated a new system 
  of government by selecting a capable colleague, Maximian, who, like 
  Diocletian, took the title of Augustus. He further reinforced this dual 
  control by associating with him and Maximian two able generals, Galerius 
  (242?-311) and Constantius, whom he proclaimed as Caesars, below the two 
  Augusti in rank but with the right of succession to their posts. 
  Diocletian himself had control of Thrace, Egypt, and Asia; to Maximian 
  he gave Italy and Africa, to Constantius Gaul, Spain, and Britain, and 
  to Galerius the Danubian provinces. This system created a stronger 
  administrative machinery but increased the size of the already huge 
  governmental bureaucracy, with the four imperial courts and their 
  officials proving a great financial burden on the resources of the 
  empire. 
Diocletian and Maximian abdicated in 305, 
  leaving the new Augusti and 
  Caesars involved in a conflict that resulted in civil wars, not ended 
  until the accession of Constantine the Great in 312. Constantine the 
  Great, who had previously become Caesar of the army in Britain, overcame 
  all rivals and reunited the Western Empire under his rule. In 314 the 
  defeat of Licinius (270?-325), emperor in the East, made Constantine the 
  Great sole ruler of the Roman world. Christianity, which had risen 
  during the reign of Augustus and spread during that of Tiberius and of 
  later emperors, had triumphed over Diocletian's attempts to crush it by 
  persecution, and the politic Constantine the Great, adopting it as his 
  own religion, made it also the official religion of the Roman Empire, an 
  event of far-reaching significance. The other important event of 
  Constantine the Great's reign was the establishment of a new seat of 
  government at Byzantium, which was refounded as Nova Roma and 
  subsequently called Constantinople (now Istanbul). The death of 
  Constantine the Great in 337 was the signal for civil war among the 
  rival Caesars, which continued until Constantine the Great's only 
  surviving son, Constantius II, succeeded in 353 in reuniting the empire 
  under his rule. He was followed by Julian, known as the Apostate because 
  of his renunciation of Christianity, who ruled from 361 to 363, and by 
  Jovian (331?-64?), who ruled in 363-64. Thereafter the empire was again 
  split in two. Theodosius I, the Great, was Eastern emperor on the death 
  of the Western emperor Valentinian II in 392. Three years later, when 
  Theodosius died, the empire was divided between his two sons, Arcadius 
  (337?-408), emperor of the East, and Honorius (384-423), emperor of the 
  West. During the last 80 years of the Western Roman Empire the 
  provinces, drained by taxes levied for the support of the army and the 
  bureaucracy, were visited by internal war and by barbarian invasions. At 
  first the policy of conciliating the invader with military commands and 
  administrative offices succeeded. Gradually, however, the barbarians 
  established in the east began to aim at conquest in the west, and Alaric 
  I, king of the Visigoths, first occupied Illyricum, whence he ravaged 
  Greece. In 410 he captured and sacked Rome, but died soon after. His 
  successor, Ataulf (reigned 410-15), drew off the Visigoths to Gaul, and 
  in 419 a succeeding king, Wallia, received formal permission from 
  Honorius to settle in southwestern Gaul, where at Toulouse he founded 
  the Visigothic dynasty. Spain, already divided between the Vandals, the 
  Suebi, and the Alans, was in like manner formally made over to those 
  invaders by Honorius, whose authority at his death in 423 was nominal in 
  the western part of the continent. His successor, Valentinian III, 
  witnessed the conquest of Africa by the Vandals under their king 
  Gaiseric and the seizure of Gaul and Italy by the Huns under their 
  famous leader Attila. The Vandals, having taken Carthage, were 
  recognized by Valentinian in their new African kingdom in 440, and the 
  Huns, the rulers of central and northern Europe, confronted the emperors 
  of east and west alike as an independent power. Attila marched first on 
  Gaul, but the Visigoths, being Christian and already half-Romanized, 
  opposed him out of loyalty to the Romans; commanded by Flavius Aëtius, 
  
  they signally defeated the Huns at Chalons in 451. The following year 
  Attila invaded Lombardy but was unable to advance further, and he died 
  in 453. Two years later Valentinian, the last representative of the 
  house of Theodosius in the west, was murdered. The 20 years after the 
  death of Valentinian saw the accession and the overthrow of nine Roman 
  emperors, but the real power was General Ricimer (died 472), the Suebe, 
  called The Kingmaker. The last Western Roman emperor, Romulus 
  Augustulus, was overthrown by the mercenary Herulian leader Odoacer 
  (circa 435-93), who was proclaimed king of Italy by his troops. The 
  history of Rome would subsequently merge with that of the papacy, the 
  Holy Roman Empire, the Papal States, and Italy. For the history of the 
  Eastern Empire from the time of Theodosius the Great, (see Byzantine 
  Empire).