Tullus Hostilius (; r. 672–640 BC) was the Roman mythology third king of Rome. He succeeded Numa Pompilius and was succeeded by Ancus Marcius. Unlike his predecessor, Tullus was known as a warlike king who, according to the Roman historian Livy, believed the more peaceful nature of his predecessor had weakened Rome. It has been attested that he sought out war and was described in Roman sources as even more warlike than the legendary founder Romulus. Accounts of the death of Tullus Hostilius vary. In the mythological version of events Livy describes, he had angered Jupiter who then killed him with a bolt of lightning.; Plin. HN 1.54.140; Plut. Numa 22.7; Eutrop. 1.4; cf. Dion. Hal. 3.35.1-6; Sen. De Clem. 1.7.1 Non-mythological sources on the other hand describe that he died of plaguePenella, Robert J. (1990/05). "Vires/Robur/Opes and Ferocia in Livy's Account of Romulus and Tullus Hostillus". The Classical Quarterly. 40 (1): 207–213. after a rule of 32 years.Livy, History of Rome,
Tullus Hostilius was the grandson of Hostus Hostilius, who had fought alongside Romulus and died during the Sabines invasion of Rome.Livy, Ab urbe condita, According to Plutarch, when Numa Pompilius died after a reign of forty-three years, his Pontifex maximus Numa Marcius contended with Tullus Hostilius for the throne, but being defeated, he starved himself to death. Marcius's son, also named Numa Marcius, would serve as praefectus urbi under Tullus, and would be the father of Ancus Marcius, Tullus's successor.
The principal feature of Tullus' reign was the defeat of Alba Longa. After Alba Longa was beaten (by the Horatii of three Roman champions over three Albans), Alba Longa became Rome's vassal state.
During his reign, Hostilius created the college of the Fetiales that concluded all treaties in the name of Rome.
The first event is the destruction of Alba Longa. The historical record shows that the Alban Hills were the site of a large settlement and that this settlement fell under Roman power during the regal period. Details are uncertain about when and by whom Alba Longa was destroyed. It was almost certainly subjugated at a later date than that given by Livy and it may have been destroyed by the Latins and not by the Romans (which some scholars suggest may have been considered impious, given Alba Longa's status as a traditional ancestral city).
The Alban dictator Mettius Fufetius betrayed Rome during the war with the Etruscans, where Rome requested Alban military assistance, which Mettius agreed to, but also had a secret agreement with the Etruscans to desert Rome in the heat of battle, leaving Tullus alone to fight the battle. Mettius also betrayed the Etruscans by not joining in the battle at all. Tullus won the battle despite the betrayal. Mettius was taken prisoner by Tullus.
Roman tradition holds that Tullus ordered Alba Longa to be destroyed and forced the migration of the Alban citizenry to Rome, where they were integrated and became Roman citizens. According to Livy, Tullus ordered Mettius Fufetius to be executed by being torn apart between two chariots, a method described as unprecedented and never repeated in Roman practice. According to Livy, this was the first and last time the Romans used this method of execution.
Hostilius was probably a historical figure, however, in the strict sense that a man bearing the name Tullus Hostilius likely reigned as king in Rome. The most compelling evidence is his name: "Tullus" is an unusual praenomen in Roman culture, and his gentile name was too unimportant in later times to have been inserted for the purpose of glorifying one of the great houses of the Roman Republic.
Dominique Briquel proposes that Livy was historicizing an ancient pattern of Indo-European legend, in which a single violent figure is followed by a single peacemaker, in this case Ancus Marcius. More mythological examples of this legend involve Jupiter and Mars, Odin and Týr, and Indra and Mitra.
There are two stories concerning the death of Tullus Hostilius and his family. The first is that his house was hit by lightning and burned to the ground with no survivors. The second is that Ancus Marcius and some of his followers went to Tullus Hostilius's home with swords hidden under their robes. Once inside the home, the party killed Tullus, his family, and their servants and razed the property to ensure there would be no heir to the throne.
Tullus Hostilius was played by Robert Keith in the 1961 film Duel of Champions, which centered around the Horatii.
Tullus is briefly mentioned twice in the Aeneid. Once, Anchises named him when he list the descendance Romulus where he is said to rouse untriumphit men to major succes. Again, in the description of Aeneas' shield. He is described as hauling away the remains of the liar Mettius through the brush.
He is a character in Philip José Farmer's novel To Your Scattered Bodies Go, the first of the Riverworld series. After the Resurrection, he has teamed up with Hermann Göring to run a slave state.
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