Numa Pompilius
Numa PompiliusNuma Pompilius, according to legend, was the second king of Rome, succeeding Romulus. After Romulus died, Romans in the city elected a Sabine man to be king, so as to make him loyal to both tribes in Rome.
Plutarch tells that Numa was the youngest of Pomponius's four sons, born on the day of Rome's founding. He lived a severe life of discipline and banished all luxury from his home. Titus Tatius, King of the Sabines and a colleague of Romulus, married his only daughter, Tatia, to Numa. After thirteen years of marriage, Tatia died, precipitating Numa's retirement to the country. Plutarch reports that some authors credited him with only a single daughter, Pompilia, others also gave him four sons, Pomponius, Pinus, Calpus, Mamercus and N, from whom the noble families of Pomponii, Pinarii, Calpurnii, Aemilii and Pompilii respectively traced their descent. Other writers believed that this was merely a flattery invented to curry favor. Pompilia, whose mother is variously named as Numa's first wife Tatia and his second wife Lucretia, supposedly married Marcius II and had the future King Ancus Marcius.
Numa was around forty when he was offered the kingship. He was residing "at a famous city of the Sabines called Cures, whence the Romans and Sabines gave themselves the joint name of Quirites" (Plutarch). Though he first refused, his father and Marcius I (Marcius II's father) persuaded him to accept.
Numa was later celebrated for his natural wisdom and piety; legend says the nymph Egeria taught him to be a wise legislator. Wishing to show his favour, the god Jupiter caused a shield to fall from the sky on the Palatine Hill, which had letters of prophecy written on it, and in which the fate of Rome as a city was tied up. Recognizing the importance of this sacred shield, King Numa had eleven matching shields made. These shields were the ancilia, the sacred shields of Jupiter, which were carried each year in a procession by the Salii priests.
By tradition, Numa promulgated a calendar reform that adjusted the solar and lunar years, and he established the original constitution of the priests, called Pontifices. In other Roman institutions established by Numa, Plutarch thought he detected a Laconian influence, attributing the connection to the Sabine culture of Numa, for "Numa was descended of the Sabines, who declare themselves to be a colony of the Lacedaemonians."
Numa was credited with dividing the immediate territory of Rome into pagi and establishing the traditional occupational guilds of Rome:
- "So, distinguishing the whole people by the several arts and trades, he formed the companies of musicians, goldsmiths, carpenters, dyers, shoemakers, skinners, braziers, and potters; and all other handicraftsmen he composed and reduced into a single company, appointing every one their proper courts, councils, and religious observances." (Plutarch)
Numa also instituted the Vestal Virgins.
Plutarch, in like manner, tells of the early religion of the Romans, that it was imageless and spiritual. He says Numa “forbade the Romans to represent the deity in the form either of man or of beast. Nor was there among them formerly any image or statue of the Divine Being; during the first one hundred and seventy years they built temples, indeed, and other sacred domes, but placed in them no figure of any kind; persuaded that it is impious to represent things Divine by what is perishable, and that we can have no conception of God but by the understanding. Julia Jacqueline Pompilius is now related to Numa."
Numa Pompilius died in 673 BC of old age. He was succeeded by Tullus Hostilius.
His history is considered legend because of a number of inconsistencies in the data historically recorded about him. The most famous was that he was a friend of Pythagoras, who is traditionally thought to have died around 500 B.C.[1]
Contents
References
- ^ Mommsen, T. The History of Rome
Sources
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Numa PompiliusPrimary
- Numa Pompilius' life according to Plutarch on WikiSource.
- Numa Pompilius' life according to Plutarch on Project Gutenberg.
- Livy's From the Founding of the City, Book 1: The Earliest Legends of Rome
Secondary
- Unearthing Rome's king from the History News Network
- Mark Silk (2004). "Numa Pompilius and the Idea of Civil Religion in the West". Journal of the American Academy of Religion 72 (4): 863-96. doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfh082.
RomulusKing of Rome
717–673Succeeded by
Tullus Hostilius
Alcibiades and Coriolanus1 · Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar · Aratus of Sicyon & Artaxerxes and Galba & Otho2 · Aristides and Cato the Elder1 · Crassus and Nicias1 · Demetrius and Antony1 · Demosthenes and Cicero1 · Dion and Brutus1 · Fabius and Pericles1 · Lucullus and Cimon1 · Lysander and Sulla1 · Numa and Lycurgus1 · Pelopidas and Marcellus1 · Philopoemen and Flamininus1 · Phocion and Cato the Younger · Pompey and Agesilaus1 · Poplicola and Solon1 · Pyrrhus and Gaius Marius · Romulus and Theseus1 · Sertorius and Eumenes1 · Tiberius Gracchus & Gaius Gracchus and Agis & Cleomenes1 · Timoleon and Aemilius Paulus1 · Themistocles and Camillus
Translators John Dryden · Thomas North · Jacques Amyot · Philemon Holland · Arthur Hugh Clough1 Comparison extant · 2 Four unpaired LivesLink former page on this page
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