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LUCIUS TARQUINIUS SUPERBUS

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 431 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LUCIUS TARQUINIUS SUPERBUS  , son of
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Lucius Tarquinius
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Priscus and son-in-law of Servius Tullius, the seventh and last legendary king of Rome (534—510 B.C.) . On his accession he proceeded at once to repeal the
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recent reforms in the constitution, and attempted to set up a pure despotism . Many senators were put to
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death, and their places remained unfilled; the
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lower classes were deprived of their arms and employed in erecting splendid monuments, while the army was recruited from the king's own retainers and from the forces of
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foreign allies . The completion of the fortress-temple on the Capitoline confirmed his authority over the city, and a fortunate
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marriage of his son to the daughter of Octavius Mamilius of
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Tusculum secured him powerful assistance in the field . His reign was characterized by bloodshed and violence; the outrage of his son Sextus upon
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Lucretia (q.v.) precipitated a revolt, which led to the expulsion of the entire
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family . All Tarquinius's efforts to force his way back to the
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throne were vain (see PORSENA), and he died in exile at Cumae . In the story certain Greek elements, probably later additions, may easily be distinguished . Tarquinius appears as a Greek " tyrant " of the ordinary kind, who surrounds himself with a bodyguard and erects magnificent buildings to keep the
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people employed; on the other hand, an older tradition represents him as more like
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Romulus . This twofold aspect of his character perhaps accounts for the making of two Tarquinii out of one (see TARQUINIUS PRlscus) . The stratagem by which Tarquinius obtained possession of the
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town of
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Gabii is a mere fiction, derived from Greek and
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Oriental
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sources . According to arrangement, his son Sextus requested the
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protection of the inhabitants against his
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father . Having obtained their confidence, he sent a messenger to Tarquinius to inquire the next step .

His father made no reply to the messenger, but walked up and down his

garden, striking off the heads of the tallest poppies . Sextus thereupon put to death all the chief men of the town, and thus obtained the mastery . The stratagem of Sextus is that practised by Zopyrus is the case of Babylon, while the
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episode of the
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poppy-heads is borrowed from the advice given by
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Thrasybulus to Periander (Herodotus iii . 154, V. q2) . On the other hand, the existence in the time of Dionysius of Halicarnassus of a treaty concluded between Tarquinius and the inhabitants of Gabii, shows that the town came under his dominion by formal agreement, not, as the tradition states, by treachery and violence . The
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embassy to Delphi (see BRUTUS, Lucius JUNIUS) cannot be
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historical, since at the time there was no communication between Rome and the mainland of
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Greece . The well-known story of Tarquinius's repeated refusal and final consent to
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purchase the Sibylline books has its origin in the fact that the
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building of the temple of
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Jupiter Capitolinus, in which they were kept, was ascribed to him . The traditional account of his expulsion can hardly be historical . A constitutional revolution, involving such far-reaching changes, is not likely to have been carried out in
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primitive times with so little disturbance by a
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simple
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resolution of the people, and it probably points to a rising of Romans and Sabines against the dominion of an
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Etruscan family (Tarquinii, Tarchna) at that time established at Rome . For a critical examination of the story see Schwegler, Romische Geschichte, bk. xviii . ;
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Sir G . Cornewall Lewis, Credibility of early
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Roman
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History, ch .

11; E . Pais,

Scoria di
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Roma, i . (1898) ; and, for the
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political character of his reign, RoME: Ancient History . Ancient authorities: Livy i . 21;
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Dion .
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Hal. v . 1-vi . 21 .

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