Roman myth told of the city being founded by two brothers, Romulus and Remus, who had been abandoned as children and reared by a she-wolf. The Roman people believed they were descendants of a Prince of Troy, Aeneas, who fled the sack of Troy to resettle in Latium (the district around Rome).
Romul
Romulus and Remus .
The mythical brothers who founded the city of Rome were Romulus and Remus. According to legend, they were the sons of the god Mars and the vestal virgin Rhea Silvia. Abandoned as infants and raised by a she-wolf, they eventually decided to establish a city together. However, a disagreement led Romulus to kill Remus, and he became the first ruler of Rome.
Romulus and Remus were only important to the Roman culture. They were the mythological founders of Rome. Their story served to give the Romans identity.
The plebians were the common people of ancient Rome, as opposed to the patricians who could trace their ancestors back to the founders of Rome, the one hundred Patriarchs.
Romulus and Aeneas were the two mythical founders of Rome.
Romus and Romulus, founders of Rome.
They were the mythical twin founders of Rome. See 'related links' for more information.
Romul
the founders of rome where the emporers but the first founder was Romulos
In the Aeneid, Vergil has the founders of Rome as the refugees from Troy. They are supposed to have been the conquerors of Latinum and founders of cities there, eventually Rome itself. However he foreshadows Romulus in the book where Aeneas is visiting his father in the underworld.
Lupercalia, or the Feast of the Wolf was held on or about the fourteenth of February in honour of the she-wolf who suckled Romulus & Remus (mythical founders of Rome) it was a Spring (or the returning of) ritual of fertility.
There was mainly one and that was wrestling...Olympus is a mythical location, do you mean Rome?
The traditional yet mythical date of the founding of ancient Rome was 753 BC
Romulus and Remus .
Romulans , name is derived from Romulus.
They were the legendary founders of Rome. See 'related questions'.