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Every schoolboy knows the legend of Tarpeia, who betrayed the Capitol to the Sabines. She demanded what they carried on their left arms: quod vulgo Sabini aureas armillas magni ponderis brachio laevo … habuerint (Livy, I, II). The enemy pressed in and treacherously fulfilled their ambiguous promise by throwing their shields on her instead of the golden ornaments and so killed her. In later years the antiquarian remembers the story when before the Mons Tarpeius in Rome. The historian justifiably disregards the tradition. The mythologist is interested in parallels from Greek or folk-lore. The archaeologist is only concerned when dealing with the denarii of L. Titurius Sabinus or of P. Petronius Turpilianus with the representation of Tarpeia dying under the shields.
At the date of these coins, first century A.D., the story, told most fully in Livy I, 11, Dionysius of Halicarnassus II, 38, and Plutarch, Romulus, 17, was naturally well known. Its oldest form is more important than its alteration to serve Roman patriotism or the desire for a romantic novel. According to Dionysius, who enters most carefully into the question of sources, it was already noted by Q. Fabius Pictor and L. Cincius Alimentus, and was therefore current in the last half of the third century B.C.
1 RE IV A, 2332–42 (Mielentz).
2 RE IV A, 2340 f., Grueber, , BMC Coins Rom. Rep. III Pl. 37, 4–5Google Scholar, Baumeister, , Denkm. III p. 1822 fig. 1916Google Scholar; Grueber, loc. cit. pl. 66, 11, Mattingly, , BMC Coins Rom. Emp. I pl. 1, 16Google Scholar, Sallet-Regling, von, Ant. Münzen, 78.Google Scholar
3 Some examples: Bronze statuettes: Giglioli, , L'Arte Etrusca pl. 367, 1 and 3.Google Scholar mirrors: id. pl. 296, 1–2 pl. 299, 1–2 pl. 301, 2. red-figure vases: id. pl. 275, 1–2 (=Beazley, , Etr. Vase Paint. pl. 9Google Scholar, 2 pl. 27, 9).
4 Giglioli, loc. cit. pl. 376, 3.
5 Id. pl. 275, 1, Beazley, loc. cit. pl. 9, 2.
6 E.g. Mon. Inst. VI/VII, 61/2, Brunn, , Kleine Schriften I, 260–261.Google Scholar Giglioli, loc. cit., pl. 282, 1.
7 Baumeister, , Denkm. I p. 453 f.Google Scholar fig. 500 f., Wien. Vorl. Bl. 1889 pl. 12, Bulle, , Sch. Mensch 2628 fig. 193, 632 fig. 195Google Scholar, Robert, , Hermeneutik 107 fig. 88Google Scholar, MuZ fig. 628, Swindler, , Anc. Paint. fig. 372Google Scholar, Löwy, Polygnot fig. 30, Giglioli, loc. cit. pl. 285.
8 Hoppin, B.F. 438.Google Scholar Leroux pl. 45. Bieber, , Den Km. 108 f. fig. 107 f.Google ScholarHistory 259 fig. 351. Trendall, , Paest. Pott. pl. 7.Google Scholar
8a Older literature in Otto, , Handbuch der Archäologie, II, 1, 392, pl. 56Google Scholar (Kaschnitz-Weinberg).
9 FR pl. 175, Beazley, , Etr. Vase Paint. pl. 9, 1Google Scholar, Buschor, , Kriegertum der Parthenonzeit, 42 fig. 33.Google Scholar
10 Walters, , BMC Bronzes pl. 31Google Scholar, Jdl XLV 72 fig. 8.
11 Giglioli, , L'Arte Etr. pl. 266, 348, 1.Google ScholarJdl XLV, 65 fig. 2, 67 fig. 3–5, 69 fig. 6, 73 fig. 11. Messerschmidt, , Nekropolen von Vulci (Jdl Erg. Heft. 12) 155Google Scholar fig. 96 pl. 35. De Ruyt. Charun figs. 3, 8 and 41.
12 Buschor, loc. cit. 44.
13 Archiv f. Religionswiss. VIII (1905) Beiheft (Usenerfestschr.) p. 1–22 (Wolters). On p. 6 fig. 2 there is no band on the man's ankle; it is the edge of his cloak.
14 AZ Anz. 1849, 100 no. 62. Rumpf, , Chalk. Vas. pl. 12.Google Scholar
15 ARV 21, 1.
16 Literature, ÖJh I, 42Google Scholar (Jüthner). Passow, , Studien zum Parthenon, 1 ff.Google Scholar
17 ARV 81, 3; 121, 7; 190, 5; 223, 5; 292, 202; 299, 8; 320, 49; 528, 50; 571, 36.
18 ARV 39, 58.
19 ARV 572, 13.
20 FR III p. 351.
21 Mon. Pitt. Ant. Ital. I, Clusium 1, pll. A, B, 1 p. 11 f. (Bianchi-Bandinelli).
22 Beazley, , Etr. Vase Paint. pl. 14, 1.Google Scholar
23 JdI XII, 57 (Gustav Körte) XIV, 43 (Petersen).
24 JdI XII, 70, XIV, 46. Messerschmidt, , Nekrop. von Vulci, 141Google Scholar fig. 45 pll. 14–24.
25 De Ruyt, Charun fig. 16. Beazley, , Etr. Vase Paint. P. 133, 1.Google Scholar
26 De Ruyt, Charun figs. 2, 5. Jdl XLV 84 fig. 24. Weege, , Etr. Mal. 29 fig. 25. pl. 63Google Scholar; Giglioli, , L'Arte Etr. pl. 248Google Scholar; Swindler, Anc. Paint. fig. 417.
27 RE II 1189 (Domaszewski).
28 Friederichs-Wolters no. 1814; Baumeister, , Denkm. III p. 2050 fig. 2263Google Scholar; Lehner, , Röm. Skulpt. Bonn pl. 1Google Scholar; Lehner, , Führer pl. 23Google Scholar; Winter, , Kunstg. in Bild. 2405, 1Google Scholar; Germania Romana pl. 28, 5, 2III pl. 1, 2; Reinach, , Rèp. Rel. II 52, 3.Google Scholar
29 Berlin Antiquarium 6238, Führer Bronzen 93, WV. E pll. 9–10, Nachod, , Rennwagen 76, 90Google Scholar, Giglioli, loc. cit. pl. 294.