Ultimately, Romulus and Remus were born. Amulius, furious, wanted to sentence the newborns and Rhea Silvia to death. But he did not want to be directly responsible for the death of a god’s wife and children, so he imprisoned Rhea instead and ordered a servant to throw the two infants into the Tiber River, one of the longest rivers in Italy. When the servant forced to drown the infants was faced with the reality of actually committing the sin, the servant took pity on the children and placed them into a basket before setting them into the …show more content…
Diseases like the plague of Cyprian and even the Black Death struck Rome several times, leaving behind devastating results and significant decreases in population. Mass migrations were usually the deliverers of such maladies. These migrations also led to a division in the people of Rome. Barbarians—more specifically, the Visgoths—attacked the Empire when it was weakened by sickness and the disunion of the Roman peoples. The Visgoths sacked the city in 419 AD. Later, in 455 AD, Rome was sacked again, this time by the Vandals. Finally, in 476 AD, the Roman Empire collapsed and the last Emperor—Romulus Augustulus—was removed from the throne. The victors declared their leader the king of