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Graham R. Knotsea's avatar

Rome could survive anything except the loss of Romans.

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James's avatar

The text links themes like “salvation from waters” or “twins at odds” to broader Indo-European patterns. Does that universal perspective shed light on how civilizations worldwide interpret their own founding, or does it flatten distinct histories into one grand narrative?

The other thing I'd say is that Evola links Rome’s founding to transcendent archetypes—Mars as a divine father, the wolf and tree as cosmic symbols. If we accept myths as reflecting a culture’s “inner life,” do we also risk over-romanticising ancient societies by glossing over their more mundane realities? I'm thinking the day-to-day grind of normal citizens, the widespread nature of parasites and other grim realities of ancient life.

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