The 'Lacus Curtius' is a mysterious hole in the ground in the
Roman Forum, now small, more or less filled in and paved over with ancient stone, but once said to have been a widening chasm. Its nature and significance in Rome's early history is unknown, and this was already the case by the late Republican period. However the name of the place seems to be connected with the
Curtia Gens, a very old Roman Family with Sabine origins.
It was, however, regarded with some veneration by the ancient Romans, and the story most often repeated is that told by
Livy (vii.6):
Rome, facing a peril which an
oracle had stated would be overcome only when the City threw into the chasm what she held to be most dear, was saved by a young horseman named
Marcus Curtius (a member of the
Curtia Gens), who understood that it was the life of a brave Roman youth that the Romans held most dear, and who therefore plunged into it in full armour on his horse, whereupon the earth closed over him and Rome was saved.
Alternatively, Titus Livius tells that the Lacus Curtius was named after
Mettius Curtius, a
Sabine horseman who rode into or fell into it while fighting against
Romulus, during the war begun after the
Rape of the Sabine Women.
Still another version, told by historian
Marcus Terentius Varro had it that
Gaius Curtius Philon, a
consul of
445 BC, consecrated the site after a lightning strike opened it.
Related links
★
Curtia Gens
External links
★
★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>/Lacus_Curtius.html Article by Samuel Ball Platner, with photographs
★
Lacus Curtius article on livius.org