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Latium

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For the football club, see S.S. Lazio
Regione Lazio
220px
Geography of Italy>Zone Central Italy/-->
Capital Rome
President Piero Marrazzo
(The Union)
Provinces of Italy>Provinces Frosinone
Latina
Rieti
Rome
Viterbo
Municipalities 377
Area km²
Ranked 9th (5.7 %)
Population (2003 est.)
 - Total
 - Ranked
 - Density

5,145,805
3rd (9.0 %)
299/km²
Map highlighting the location of Lazio in Italy
Latium (Lazio in Italian) is a region of central Italy, bordered by Tuscany, Umbria, Abruzzo, Marche, Molise, Campania and the Tyrrhenian Sea. It comprises 5 provinces: Rome, Viterbo, Latina, Frosinone, and Rieti. The regional capital is Rome; the current President of the Region is Piero Marrazzo (center-left, elected 2005).

Etymology

The name of the region also survives in the tribal designation of the ancient population of Latins, from whom the Romans originated. In Roman mythology, the shadowy king Latinus allegedly gave his name to the region. Modern linguists postulate origins in a Proto-Indo-European language (PIE) root *stela- (to spread, extend), expressing the idea of "flat land" (in contrast to the local Sabine high country). But the name may originate from an earlier, non Indo-European one. See the [Online Etymological Dictionary]. Since Latium is respected more as a designation for ancient Rome, it is not used as a label on maps or globes.

History

The region which would become Latium was, in the centuries before the future Romans inhabited it, populated by several different peoples, some originally non-Indo-European. It was dominated by the Etrureans, both culturally and politically, but was a region with many local cultures, each city-state having its own, somewhat akin to Greece. Indeed, trade with Greeks and Phoenicians strongly influenced the Etrurian culture, which acquired its alphabet (later inherited by Rome), and some cultural traits, from those two sources.

At the same time that the latest Indo-European tribes were moving into Greece, closely related tribes invaded many other regions, including what would someday be Italy. Among these were the peoples we now call the Latins, who settled in (what we now call) Latium. Initially, they were seen as weak newcomers, a sort of instant underclass, by most of the people of the native city-states.

This subjected them to quite a bit of local imperialism and eventually they united against the Etruscans and Samnites, fighting a series of wars which ended with their main city, Rome, dominating the region. In 338 BCE, after the Social War in 90 BCE, Rome granted all all the people of the region, Roman citizenship.

Latium has great importance for history, art, architecture, archaeology, religion, and culture in general. The immense patrimony of the city of Rome forms only a part of the treasures spread over the hundreds of towns, villages, abbeys, churches, monuments, and other sites of the region.

Notable cities

External links

 


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