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                                         At 
                                        the heart of most cities lies another 
                                        city, otherwise known as the “old 
                                        city”. This is the “seed city”, 
                                        and Rome’s seed is Palatine. As 
                                        the unofficial archaeological centre of 
                                        Rome, Palatine contains relics of great 
                                        palaces and other structures from ancient 
                                        times, including the Palace of Septimus 
                                        Severus, the house of Augustus, the house 
                                        of Livia, and the Huts of Romulus. Early in the first millennium BC, before 
                                        Rome was great, the Tiber River divided 
                                        the Italic peoples from the Etruscans 
                                        in the north and west. Near by were the 
                                        borders between the Sabines and the Latins, 
                                        two civilizations that would pay for being 
                                        so close to the fledgling Roman Empire. 
                                        The hills of Rome, free from the malaria 
                                        that had been the bane of the low-lying 
                                        plains of Latium, were a healthful and 
                                        relatively safe place to live and a meeting 
                                        ground for Latins, Sabines, and Etruscans. 
                                        It was this fortified elevation of the 
                                        Palatine that made sure that Etruscans 
                                        amalgamated the tiny hamlets about the 
                                        Palatine into a city-state. Eventually 
                                        it would be swallowed up by the growing 
                                        Rome across the river. It was probably 
                                        Etruscan rule that civilized Rome.
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        
                                        Today 
                                        Palatine is considered nothing more than 
                                        a historic Roman hill covered with the 
                                        destroyed houses of the once powerful 
                                        ruing families. It is a rich source of 
                                        information about what Rome was like before 
                                        Agustus.
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