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Fidenae () was an ancient town of , situated about 8 km north of on the . Its inhabitants were known as Fidenates. As the Tiber was the border between and , the left-bank settlement of Fidenae would represented an extension of Etruscan presence into Latium, or a Latin border town. The site of the arx of the ancient town was probably on the hill on which lies the contemporary , though no traces of early buildings or defences are to be seen; pre-Roman tombs are in the cliffs to the north. The later village lay at the foot of the hill on the eastern edge of the high-road, and its , with a dedicatory inscription to by the Senatus Fidenatium, was excavated in 1889. Remains of other buildings may also be seen.


History

Conflicts with the Roman kingdom
Considered an Etruscan,, Ab urbe condita, 1:15 but also a Latin settlement of foundation—archeological findings proved a origin—it was at the frontier of Roman territory and occasionally changed hands between Rome and .

In the 8th century BC during the reign of first king, , the Fidenates and the Veientes were defeated in a war with Rome, according to legend., Ab urbe condita, 1:14–15 It may be that a colony was established there after the defeat as afterwards describes Fidenae as a Roman colony., Ab urbe condita, 1:27

Fidenae and Veii were defeated by Rome in the mid 7th century BC during the reign of Rome's third king , and again by Rome's fifth king Tarquinius Priscus in the early 6th century BC.


Conflicts with the Roman Republic
In the early , Fidenae made a decision that was to cost them much of their land in favor of the new , formed from defectors. Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, last king of Rome, having been expelled from it, at first looked for intervention from the Etruscans. of , dissatisfied with Superbus' conduct and ethics, made peace with the new republic.

The Tarquins then subverted . Sextus Tarquinius, whose rape of had triggered the overthrow of the monarchy (if he was not assassinated at ), convinced the Sabines to go to war against Rome, arguing that previous treaties had been annulled by the expulsion of the kings. The Tarquins were now interested in Latin intervention. After some minor conflicts in which Rome was victorious, the Sabines took a vote and resolved on an invasion of the city of Rome (with perhaps the previous example in memory). The Tarquins brought in Fidenae and , formerly Roman allies.

The total defeat of the Sabines in 505/504 BC was followed by the siege of Fidenae. The city was taken only a few days later: the Romans assembled their prisoners and executing the senior officers before them (whipped by the rods and beheaded by the axe of the , a standard punishment for treason), let the rest go with a stern warning. A garrison was placed in Fidenae, and its members were given much of its land. The Claudii are not mentioned in connection with the battle, but they had been given land north of the , some of which was at Fidenae. They could only collect on that offer if Fidenae was defeated, the implication being that they were being invited to participate in the campaign; they may even have been the garrison.

Fidenae appears to have fallen permanently under Roman domination after its capture in 435 BC by the Romans, and is spoken of by classical authors as a place almost deserted in their time. It seems, however, to have had some importance as a post station.


Stadium disaster
In 27 AD, an apparently cheaply built wooden constructed by an entrepreneur named Atilius collapsed in Fidenae, resulting in what was said to be the worst in history, with at least 20,000 killed and many more injured out of the total audience of 50,000. Tacitus estimated 50,000 dead or wounded, including also those not part of the crowd but nearby the amphitheater at the time of collapse. Suetonius estimated 20,000 dead.

The emperor had banned gladiatorial games, and when the prohibition was lifted, the public had flocked to the earliest events, so a large crowd was present when the stadium collapsed. At the time of the incident, Tiberius was in , where he had a secure getaway, but he rushed to Fidenae to assist the victims of this incident.

(2026). 9780785822561, Castle Books.

The responded to the tragedy by banning people with a fortune of less than 400,000 from hosting gladiator shows, and also requiring that all amphitheatres built in the future be erected on a sound foundation, inspected and certified for soundness. The government also "banished" Atilius.. Tacitus is unclear about what exactly the banishment of Atilius entailed – he might have been banished from some territory, or merely been banned from erecting new gladiator games, or some other form of banishment.

A digital reconstruction found the reported casualties to be consistent with a wooden structure similar in size to the still-standing stone structure of .


See also
  • Roman–Etruscan Wars


Further reading
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