answersLogoWhite

0

Numa Pompilius succeded Romulus. He was a Sabine from the Sabine city of Cures. He created the priestoods and the institutions of Roman state religion.

User Avatar

Wiki User

12y ago

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about General History

Who was the soviet leader in Russia in 1960?

NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV was the soviet leader in the 1960's His sucessor was Brezhnev.


How were Mayan leaders chosen?

Before dying the sapa Inca chose his favorite -most capable son. It was not always the son of his main wife. There's a moment in the history of the incas when the sapa Inca died of chicken pox and and his favorite son did too! With no sucessor, there was a civil war among the supporters of two other sons.


If a king dies and two men claim to be his sucessor and the royal advisors propose a test and one refuses the one who refused was crowned the rightful king what is the situation and test?

I already know the answer but I'm the one who posted the question so I'm just gonna give a few hints that I couldn't fit in the riddle: it was a real event in history and the test was a genetics test.


How did powerful military leaders unify Japan?

Oda Nobugaga was a daimyo in the 1500s who was a fierce warrior that used guns to conquer nearly half of Japan before his death in 1582. Then, Toyotomi Hideyoshi took his place. He conquered the rest of Japan before he died in 1598. His sucessor, Tokugawa Ieyasu founded a dynasty that held power until 1868. He also founded the capital Edo, modern day Japan.


The princes in the tower why were they killed?

There is absolutely no evidence on how they met their end. It is certainly possible that they were indeed killed, since both of them were the sons, and the eldest the sucessor of King Henry IV. It was their guardian Richard of York who had usurped the throne as Richard III. Richard had to face the very real possibility that as long as they lived they would be a rallying point for any rebellion against him. Having them killed would solve that problem, of course. On the other hand, 50% of all children below the age of 14, royal or not, died prematurely from any of a great variety of childhood diseases, so dying of natural causes would certainly be possible as well. Finally, other stories tell of the princes being still alive long after they were supposed to have been killed. The bones of two children were found on the grounds of the Tower in the 17th century, but they haven't been DNA tested.