down of the duration of the monarchy at 240 years in
all, which was undoubtedly based on a calculation
of the length of generations,(16) and even the commencement
of an official record of these assumed facts—probably
took place already in this epoch. The outlines
of the narrative, and in particular its quasi-chronology,
make their appearance in the later tradition so unalterably
fixed, that for that very reason the fixing of them
must be placed not in, but previous to, the literary
epoch of Rome. If a bronze casting of the twins
Romulus and Remus sucking the teats of the she-wolf
was already placed beside the sacred fig-tree in 458,
the Romans who subdued Latium and Samnium must have
heard the history of the origin of their ancestral
city in a form not greatly differing from what we
read in Livy. Even the Aborigines—i.
e. “those from the very beginning”—that
simple rudimental form of historical speculation as
to the Latin race—are met with about 465
in the Sicilian author Callias. It is of the
very nature of a chronicle that it should attach prehistoric
speculation to history and endeavour to go back, if
not to the origin of heaven and earth, at least to
the origin of the community; and there is express
testimony that the table of the pontifices specified
the year of the foundation of Rome. Accordingly
it may be assumed that, when the pontifical college
in the first half of the fifth century proceeded to
substitute for the former scanty records—ordinarily,
doubtless, confined to the names of the magistrates—the
scheme of a formal yearly chronicle, it also added
what was wanting at the beginning, the history of the
kings of Rome and of their fall, and, by placing the
institution of the republic on the day of the consecration
of the Capitoline temple, the 13th of Sept. 245, furnished
a semblance of connection between the dateless and
the annalistic narrative. That in this earliest
record of the origin of Rome the hand of Hellenism
was at work, can scarcely be doubted. The speculations
as to the primitive and subsequent population, as
to the priority of pastoral life over agriculture,
and the transformation of the man Romulus into the
god Quirinus,(17) have quite a Greek aspect, and even
the obscuring of the genuinely national forms of the
pious Numa and the wise Egeria by the admixture of
alien elements of Pythagorean primitive wisdom appears
by no means to be one of the most recent ingredients
in the Roman prehistoric annals.
The pedigrees of the noble clans were completed in
a manner analogous to these -origines- of the community,
and were, in the favourite style of heraldry, universally
traced back to illustrious ancestors. The Aemilii,
for instance, Calpurnii, Pinarii, and Pomponii professed
to be descended from the four sons of Numa, Mamercus,
Calpus, Pinus, and Pompo; and the Aemilii, yet further,
from Mamercus, the son of Pythagoras, who was named
the “winning speaker” (—aimulos—)
But, notwithstanding the Hellenic reminiscences that
are everywhere apparent, these prehistoric annals
of the community and of the leading houses may be
designated at least relatively as national, partly
because they originated in Rome, partly because they
tended primarily to form links of connection not between
Rome and Greece, but between Rome and Latium.