242:. The major custom in this ceremony was a great banquet, which required all attending cities to bring food, especially meat. These offerings were then divided among the attendants and owning some of the food signified membership within the league. Pliny lists 30 tribes participating in the
141:, after the taking of Troy. It is probable that a barbarian element also from among the neighbouring peoples or a remnant of the ancient inhabitants of the place was mixed with the Greek. But all these people, having lost their tribal designations, came to be called by one common name,
193:. Most of these sources tend to vary regarding the political structure of the alliance as well as Alba Longa's hegemonic role. Many historians say it is uncertain if the Albans exerted any sort of dominance since most of the surviving sources are biased.
208:, who would be made to submit to Roman authority following the destruction of Alba Longa in the mid-7th century BC. Those colonists would be a part of 30 villages that would form the
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and ultimately devastated the city, sparing only the temples. Historians attribute our lack of archaeological evidence to
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Based on limited archaeological evidence, experts say the Alban tribe inhabited the long ridge between the modern-day
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which may have been related to the 30 Latin villages of the same time in ancient Latium.
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around 1152 BC. Literary sources suggest the city's name is derived from the white (
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for sacrificial rites. Every year in the spring, the tribes would congregate on
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state that Alba Longa headed a league of city-states in Latium, possibly called
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246:. This festival continued as an annual event through the imperial age of
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The prosperity of the Alban people declined in the seventh century BC.
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558:. Vol. 7. Cambridge, Great Britain: Cambridge University Press, 1989
545:. Vol. 7. Cambridge, Great Britain: Cambridge University Press, 1989
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assumed the command that had long been held by the Albans. Many from
250:. There is also evidence that leaders from the surrounding tribes of
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434:"Alba Longa." A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. 1873 ed.
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However, Pliny and others generally agree that the communities of
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was also known for its wine and good stone quarries.
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306:’s most elite patrician families (including the
378:, Roman military general, statesman, and writer
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80:, founded the Alban tribe when he settled in
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109:The Albans were a mixed nation composed of
177:. In particular, literary sources such as
169:At its height, the Albans and the city of
576:A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography
458:A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography
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173:exerted great power and influence over
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149:, who had been king of this country.
370:Prominent Romans of Alban ancestry
200:are the colonists sent out by the
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310:) trace their heritage back to
496:Ashby, Thomas. "Alba Longa."
302:following the war and some of
68:According to Roman mythology,
1:
556:The Cambridge Ancient History
543:The Cambridge Ancient History
512:The History of Rome, Volume 1
478:The Natural History of Pliny
443:Dionysius of Halicarnassus,
318:Roman gentes of Alban origin
423:Oxford Classical Dictionary
125:, and, last of all, of the
32:. Some of Rome's prominent
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517:Dionysius of Halicarnassus
129:who came into Italy with
103:Dionysus of Halicarnassus
24:from the ancient city of
60:were of Alban descent.
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554:Walbank, F. W., ed.
97:saw when arriving in
36:families such as the
500:27.53 (1899): 37-44.
498:Journal of Philology
480:. Vol 3. London,
254:met at a spring in
474:Henry Thomas Riley
282:waged war against
184:Historia Naturalis
520:Roman Antiquities
509:Barthold Niebuhr
445:Roman Antiquities
216:Religious customs
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421:"Alba Longa."
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334:Gegania gens
324:Cloelia gens
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230:Mons Albanus
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578:. 1873 ed.
425:. 2003 ed.
364:Tullia gens
155:Lake Albano
599:Alba Longa
588:Categories
482:H. G. Bohn
460:. 1873 ed.
389:References
339:Julia gens
312:Alba Longa
296:Alba Longa
284:Alba Longa
268:Alba Longa
256:Alba Longa
234:Monte Cavo
226:Alba Longa
202:Alban king
171:Alba Longa
159:Monte Cavo
111:Pelasgians
82:Alba Longa
74:Trojan War
26:Alba Longa
447:, II, 2.2
258:known as
139:Aphrodite
117:, of the
115:Arcadians
72:, son of
34:patrician
522:III.34,
274:Downfall
145:, after
135:Anchises
70:Ascanius
54:Curiatii
46:Quinctii
42:Servilii
541:, ed.
484:: 1855.
476:, ed.
411:1:28–30
147:Latinus
127:Trojans
64:Origins
58:Cloelii
50:Geganii
382:Cicero
264:Latium
252:Latium
222:Latium
175:Latium
143:Latins
131:Aeneas
119:Epeans
99:Latium
95:Aeneas
78:Aeneas
22:Latins
18:Albans
308:Julii
113:, of
76:hero
38:Julii
20:were
524:Livy
401:Livy
304:Rome
300:Rome
292:Rome
248:Rome
196:The
157:and
137:and
123:Elis
87:alba
56:and
30:Rome
16:The
529:I.3
181:’s
92:sow
590::
563:^
489:^
472:,
409:,
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52:,
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232:(
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