Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Tarpeia

Reverse of a denarius (89 BCE) depicting the torture of Tarpeia
Reverse of a denarius (19-18 BCE) of Augustus showing Tarpeia crushed by the soldiers' shields

In Roman legend, Tarpeia (/tɑːrˈpə/; mid-8th century BCE), daughter of the Roman commander Spurius Tarpeius, was a Vestal Virgin who betrayed the city of Rome to the Sabines at the time of their women's abduction for what she thought would be a reward of jewelry. She was instead crushed to death by Sabine shields and her body cast from the southern cliff of Rome's Capitoline Hill, thereafter called after her the Tarpeian Rock (Rupes Tarpeia).[1]

  1. ^ Sanders, H. (1904). Roman historical sources and institutions. Macmillan. pp. 1–47.

Previous Page Next Page






Тарпея BE Тарпея Bulgarian Tarpeia (filla de Tarpei) Catalan Tarpeia CO Tarpeia German Tarpeya Spanish Tarpeia EU تارپیا FA Tarpeia Finnish Tarpeia French

Responsive image

Responsive image