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Alba Silvius

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alba Silvius from Nuremberg chronicles

Alba Silvius (said to have reigned 1028–989 BC)[1] was in Roman mythology the fifth king of Alba Longa. He was the son of Latinus Silvius and the father of Atys.[2][3] He reigned thirty-nine years.[4]

Later tradition

[edit]

In Geoffrey of Monmouth's pseudo-historical Historia Regum Britanniae (c. 1136), British king Ebraucus sent his thirty daughters to Alba Silvius, where they were married among the Trojan nobility, as the Latin and Sabine women refused to associate with them. Alba Silvius assisted Ebraucus' twenty sons (except for Brutus Greenshield) in conquering Germany. Geoffrey gives the name of his son and successor as "Sylvius Epitus", instead of Atys.[5]

Family tree

[edit]
AnchisesVenusLatinusAmata
CreusaAeneasLavinia
IulusAscanius
Silvius
Aeneas Silvius
Latinus Silvius
Alba (Silvius)
Atys
Capys
Capetus
Tiberinus
Agrippa
Romulus Silvius
Aventinus
Proca
NumitorAmulius
Rhea SilviaMars
HersiliaRomulusRemus
Prima

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities 1.71
  2. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses xiv. 612.
  3. ^ Livy, i. 3
  4. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, i. 71
  5. ^ Geoffrey of Monmouth. "Book 2" . Historia Regum Britanniae. Chapter 8–9 – via Wikisource.
Legendary titles
Preceded by King of Alba Longa Succeeded by