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Historical story of female wolf statue

The inhabitants of Rome regard fierce wolves as the symbol of this civilized city. There is a magical legend. In the 8th century BC, after Troy was captured by the Greeks, the Trojan prince Enea crossed the ocean and fled to Italy, where he has lived ever since. Unexpectedly, there was civil strife in his descendants. Amulius usurped the throne of his brother Nong Domil, drove Nong Domil away, killed his nephew, and forced his niece Sylvia to become a priestess. Priestesses are not allowed to get married. But Sylvia secretly married the myth of Mars and gave birth to twins. When Amulius knew this, he killed Sylvia, put the child in the laundry list and threw it into the Tiber River.

Fortunately, the water level of the river dropped, the laundry list ran aground on the shallows, and the two babies were not drowned. The baby's crying attracted a female wolf. Instead of eating the children, the mother wolf took them back to the cave and nursed them carefully with her own milk. Later, a shepherd found these babies, took them home and named them romulo and Lemos. When they grew up, romulo and Lemos practiced martial arts and killed them. Return the throne to his grandfather Domil. Later, they came to the place where they were rescued by the Tiber River earlier and built a new city named after romulo. Rome evolved from the voice of romulo. Legend has it that the date of naming was April 2 1 year BC, and the ancient Romans took this day as the founding anniversary.