{"submission_id":"1927491","keywords":[{"keyword_id":"28594","keyword_name":"kings","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"32"},{"keyword_id":"1516","keyword_name":"murder","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"1116"},{"keyword_id":"112","keyword_name":"rape","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"18625"},{"keyword_id":"18882","keyword_name":"rome","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"82"},{"keyword_id":"969","keyword_name":"violence","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"2633"},{"keyword_id":"164","keyword_name":"wolf","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"125920"},{"keyword_id":"962","keyword_name":"wolves","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"3482"},{"keyword_id":"219549","keyword_name":"zootopia","contributed":"f","submissions_count":"5858"}],"hidden":"f","scraps":"f","favorite":"f","favorites_count":"1","create_datetime":"2019-07-12 17:44:30.877835+02","create_datetime_usertime":"12 Jul 2019 17:44 CEST","last_file_update_datetime":"2019-07-12 17:37:55.801188+02","last_file_update_datetime_usertime":"12 Jul 2019 17:37 CEST","username":"dan6691","user_id":"561434","user_icon_file_name":"159991_dan6691_astro_icon.jpg","user_icon_url_large":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/usericons/large/159/159991_dan6691_astro_icon.jpg","user_icon_url_medium":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/usericons/medium/159/159991_dan6691_astro_icon.jpg","user_icon_url_small":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/usericons/small/159/159991_dan6691_astro_icon.jpg","file_name":"2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_full":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/full/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_screen":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/screen/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_preview":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/preview/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","files":[{"file_id":"2775407","file_name":"2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_full":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/full/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_screen":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/screen/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","file_url_preview":"https://nl.ib.metapix.net/files/preview/2775/2775407_dan6691_history_of_zoo.rtf","mimetype":"text/rtf","submission_id":"1927491","user_id":"561434","submission_file_order":"0","full_size_x":null,"full_size_y":null,"screen_size_x":null,"screen_size_y":null,"preview_size_x":null,"preview_size_y":null,"initial_file_md5":"56c2d4384eeb1c518de65639cdd93202","full_file_md5":"56c2d4384eeb1c518de65639cdd93202","large_file_md5":"","small_file_md5":"","thumbnail_md5":"","deleted":"f","create_datetime":"2019-07-12 17:37:55.801188+02","create_datetime_usertime":"12 Jul 2019 17:37 CEST"}],"pools":[],"description":"There is murder between the founders of Lupinian Rome and six kings who rule.","description_bbcode_parsed":"<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'>There is murder between the founders of Lupinian Rome and six kings who rule.</span>","writing":"\n[b][center]A simplistic review of Zootopian History with Focus on the Lupinian Roman Empire as written by Doctor Emeritus Lulow Mandemus. Dean of the University of Zootopia.[/center]\n[/b]\n[b][center]Written by Dan 1966 as a prelude to “Lupis Gloria Romani” by Ademi and Dan 1966[/center][/b]\n\nPart 3: Brother murders Brother and the six Kings of Lupin Rome.\n\nWhat happened between the two brothers who were the founders of Rome has been a debate for centuries. Some say the story is an allegorical myth created towards the tail end of the empire to explain how Rome’s down turn could be blamed on sibling rivalry...”We didn’t cause this, those two morons did!” It is true that Romulus and Remus’s stars had turned sour by the time the empire split in two. Fact or fiction however, the story of the end between the two brothers confirms the old line that….”There can be only one.”\n\nAs the Roman settlement began to grow larger and faster, both Romulus and Remus declared there should be a king-ship to govern over the population. Naturally the brothers each claimed they should be the first king…\n\nRomulus declared that because he was the strongest, the most aggressive and the most able to command armies and defend the settlement; naturally he should be king.\n\nRemus declared that kingship resided much in being good with mind and words as with physical prowess. Thus he should be king.\n\nThe brothers decided to settle issue with a simple cub’s game. They agreed that a bag of river rocks from the Tyber should be gathered up and each would draw a stone from it. The one who drew a red river stone would be king of Rome. And so it was that a bag of rocks was gathered and the brothers retired to a distant hill with a neutral witness, a fox named Genifax, to oversee that the game was played fairly.\n\nNow wolf lore says that this mound or mount is currently the highest point in Tundra Town. This of course can not be proven. But the brothers ascended the mound with their witness and together reached their paws into the bag….\n\nBoth of them drew out red colored river stones….\n\nAt first the brothers chuckled at the good fortune in jest. They dropped the rocks back into the bag, the bag was shaken and once again they dipped their paws into the bag...\n\nBoth of them drew out red colored river stones….\n\nThis was strange? The brothers ordered the bag dumped out. They and Genifax examined each stone, found nothing unusual, replaced the stones in the bag, shook the bag up, reached their paws once more into the bag….  \n\nAnd both of them drew out red colored river stones….\n\nRomulus, being the quick tempered hot head he was, suddenly accused his brother of praying to the fox god to help him steal the throne.\n\nRemus like wise accused his brother of conspiring with the weasel god to steal the throne.\n\nRomulus slapped Remus in the snoot.\n\nRemus punched Romulus in the maw.\n\nThen an all out brawl ensued between the brothers and poor Genifax was knocked out trying to stop the fighting.\n\nAt some point...Romulus drew a dagger and stabbed his brother in the chest, killing him instantly.\n\nNeeding to hide his terrible deed...Romulus quickly slit the throat of poor Genifax and cut off his beautiful fox tail. Coming into the settlement covered in blood and holding up the severed fox tail; Romulus declared that his brother had been possessed by a demon placed inside him by the treachery of Genifax and Romulus was forced to slay his only brother. In retribution, the twenty fox families who lived in the settlement were brutally murdered and their tails tied to the first standards of the founding Legionaries (The Legions). For the rest of the days of empire, foxes would be hunted down and butchered for their tails because of this deception. Sadly in our time there remains a deep enmity between foxes and wolves over what may just be a fable to cover the criminal act of sibling-cyde.\n\nBut Romulus’s ruse worked, making him the first king of what became Lupinian Rome, named by Romulus himself.\n\n[b]The Six Kings and their stamps on Lupinian Rome.[/b]\n\n30 years into the 900 year existence of Rome...the growing city state was governed by six kings; Romulus being the first. He took Caria, the female wolf who’s appeal to her own kin of the Ituskins gave the young city state it’s most rapid population expansion as his mate and queen. From them would come Mulis Tracitus Romulia, Rome’s third king.\n\nEach of the six kings would put their own stamps of influence into the Roman state that would shape and develop its’ character, its’ rise and its’ eventual fall in the years to come. The six kings reigned a total of 97 years.\n\n[b]Romulus[/b]\n\nRomulus’s important contribution was the creation and foundation of the legionares military system and with it the first moves towards empire as Romulus led the fledgling legions in expanding the frontiers beyond Rome’s walls in what was described as pure defensive warfare. Romulus also established the requirements of citizenship even though he continued to attract a diverse mix of predator species like Tigers, Lions, Coyotes and Nubian wolves who became an elite commando force later in the early Republic.\n\n[b]Vibius Electus[/b]\n\n     One of Romulus’s first legionare commanders and so endeared to the King that he adoringly called him “Father”. Vibius became “King pro temp” when Romulus became ill from mange and died in Vibius’s arms. Vibius solemnly promised to educate Romulus’s son Mulis to prepare him for the kingship and when the young wolf reached adulthood...Vibius stepped aside.\n\n      Two important marks of Vibius’s reign was the creation of the People’s Assembly” or the Senate and the institutions of representative Democracy and voting. The Senate’s size fluctuated with another of Vibius’s inovations, the every two year Census...the counting of the population. \n\n[b]Mulis Tracitus Romulia[/b]\n\n      The son of Romulus, Mulis instituted the laws which governed who and who could not be a citizen of Rome and what procedures and steps would be required for citizenry. Wolves were automatically citizens of Rome be they natural born or not. Predators were welcome and were given some basic rights but had to meet requirements to petition for citizenship and upon granting of such, attained the full rights to be called a Roman citizen.\n\n     Pray mammals on the other hand along with the wrongly despised foxes, could never become citizens. Pray animals were considered food stuffs, enemies of the state or slaves to be dealt with as seen fit. Even if a pray animal did anything noble in support of or in defense of the Roman state...their lot in life was the same. They were worked to death, beaten to death or put to death and then eaten. Every Roman from birth would be taught that pray animals were worth about a tenth of a tenth of a pile of dung...unless they were nicely prepared to be on a dinner plate.\n\n[b]Primus Romulus Ligur[/b]\n\nAfter the death of Mulis, his son Primus became king. Primus’s memorable marker was sending emissaries throughout the known world to attract skilled crafts-mammals, laborers, scholars and ecomnomadi (economic specialists) to not only change the physical condition of the Roman city state but make it economically viable. Wood and thatch over time gave way to brick, masonry and mortar. An economic system of currency was created and trade and import established. It was also here that the most cruel part of Rome’s trading and inports was created...that of the pray slave and food trade which by the end of the Roman period would see millions of pray mammals slaughtered almost to extinction across the empire.\n\n[b]Kaeso (Ky-Ay-Sow)[/b]\n\nKaeso was the second King not of royal blood and sadly he would become the first and certainly not the last Roman leader to die by murder. His contribution to the city state was the reformation and codification of law into a more solid and coherent form binding rich citizen down to the poorest, except for pray who were vermin and deserved no protection. Kaeso would also continue the “defensive” wars of expansion giving Rome a nearly 100 mile defensive zone beyond the city walls. What Kaeso did not know was that his sister Vesnia was plotting to put her own son Quintus on the throne and by year 94 of the reign of the Kings...she did so by brutal murder.\n\n[b]Quintus Trebatus Cholrus\n“Quintus the ripper”[/b]\n\nQuintus Trebatus Cholrus was a tyrant who stole from the national treasury, killed his opponents, placed his family in positions where he could control power and abused his authority. What brought him to his end was a violent crime committed by his eldest son Oppius upon a well loved and respected female wolf named Papinia who was considered a model of female lupine industriousness, chastity and virtue. One night...Oppius followed Papinia to her home where he beat her, raped her and told her that if she dared to speak of the deed….he would kill her.\n\nThe next morning...the battered Papinia climbed atop the hall of justice near the royal palace and cried out what had been done to her by Oppius. Not wanting to live with the shame of her rape or having to bear his off spring...she flung herself to the ground before the horrified masses.\n\nRome…..exploded in violence. Led by a Lieutenant of the 3rd Legionares, Brutus Gracilis...the Wolves of Rome stormed the palace, tore Oppius to shreds and burned “Quintus the Ripper” to death impailed on a cooking spit. Brutus then proclaimed that Rome would never again allow a King to reign over the free people. The monarchical system was dead to be replaced by a yearly elected “bi-consolaria (Two wolves chosen by vote to govern for one year equally) a system that would survive until the rise of Lupine Rome’s first Cesaria Maximi (Cesar over all) in the 400th year of Rome’s 900 year existence.\n\n[b]Next: Wars, wars, wars and wars….From defense to devastate. Lupinian Rome under the Counselors. [/b]","writing_bbcode_parsed":"<span style='word-wrap: break-word;'><br /><strong><div class='align_center'>A simplistic review of Zootopian History with Focus on the Lupinian Roman Empire as written by Doctor Emeritus Lulow Mandemus. Dean of the University of Zootopia.</div><br /></strong><br /><strong><div class='align_center'>Written by Dan 1966 as a prelude to &ldquo;Lupis Gloria Romani&rdquo; by Ademi and Dan 1966</div></strong><br /><br />Part 3: Brother murders Brother and the six Kings of Lupin Rome.<br /><br />What happened between the two brothers who were the founders of Rome has been a debate for centuries. Some say the story is an allegorical myth created towards the tail end of the empire to explain how Rome&rsquo;s down turn could be blamed on sibling rivalry...&rdquo;We didn&rsquo;t cause this, those two morons did!&rdquo; It is true that Romulus and Remus&rsquo;s stars had turned sour by the time the empire split in two. Fact or fiction however, the story of the end between the two brothers confirms the old line that&hellip;.&rdquo;There can be only one.&rdquo;<br /><br />As the Roman settlement began to grow larger and faster, both Romulus and Remus declared there should be a king-ship to govern over the population. Naturally the brothers each claimed they should be the first king&hellip;<br /><br />Romulus declared that because he was the strongest, the most aggressive and the most able to command armies and defend the settlement; naturally he should be king.<br /><br />Remus declared that kingship resided much in being good with mind and words as with physical prowess. Thus he should be king.<br /><br />The brothers decided to settle issue with a simple cub&rsquo;s game. They agreed that a bag of river rocks from the Tyber should be gathered up and each would draw a stone from it. The one who drew a red river stone would be king of Rome. And so it was that a bag of rocks was gathered and the brothers retired to a distant hill with a neutral witness, a fox named Genifax, to oversee that the game was played fairly.<br /><br />Now wolf lore says that this mound or mount is currently the highest point in Tundra Town. This of course can not be proven. But the brothers ascended the mound with their witness and together reached their paws into the bag&hellip;.<br /><br />Both of them drew out red colored river stones&hellip;.<br /><br />At first the brothers chuckled at the good fortune in jest. They dropped the rocks back into the bag, the bag was shaken and once again they dipped their paws into the bag...<br /><br />Both of them drew out red colored river stones&hellip;.<br /><br />This was strange? The brothers ordered the bag dumped out. They and Genifax examined each stone, found nothing unusual, replaced the stones in the bag, shook the bag up, reached their paws once more into the bag&hellip;.&nbsp;&nbsp;<br /><br />And both of them drew out red colored river stones&hellip;.<br /><br />Romulus, being the quick tempered hot head he was, suddenly accused his brother of praying to the fox god to help him steal the throne.<br /><br />Remus like wise accused his brother of conspiring with the weasel god to steal the throne.<br /><br />Romulus slapped Remus in the snoot.<br /><br />Remus punched Romulus in the maw.<br /><br />Then an all out brawl ensued between the brothers and poor Genifax was knocked out trying to stop the fighting.<br /><br />At some point...Romulus drew a dagger and stabbed his brother in the chest, killing him instantly.<br /><br />Needing to hide his terrible deed...Romulus quickly slit the throat of poor Genifax and cut off his beautiful fox tail. Coming into the settlement covered in blood and holding up the severed fox tail; Romulus declared that his brother had been possessed by a demon placed inside him by the treachery of Genifax and Romulus was forced to slay his only brother. In retribution, the twenty fox families who lived in the settlement were brutally murdered and their tails tied to the first standards of the founding Legionaries (The Legions). For the rest of the days of empire, foxes would be hunted down and butchered for their tails because of this deception. Sadly in our time there remains a deep enmity between foxes and wolves over what may just be a fable to cover the criminal act of sibling-cyde.<br /><br />But Romulus&rsquo;s ruse worked, making him the first king of what became Lupinian Rome, named by Romulus himself.<br /><br /><strong>The Six Kings and their stamps on Lupinian Rome.</strong><br /><br />30 years into the 900 year existence of Rome...the growing city state was governed by six kings; Romulus being the first. He took Caria, the female wolf who&rsquo;s appeal to her own kin of the Ituskins gave the young city state it&rsquo;s most rapid population expansion as his mate and queen. From them would come Mulis Tracitus Romulia, Rome&rsquo;s third king.<br /><br />Each of the six kings would put their own stamps of influence into the Roman state that would shape and develop its&rsquo; character, its&rsquo; rise and its&rsquo; eventual fall in the years to come. The six kings reigned a total of 97 years.<br /><br /><strong>Romulus</strong><br /><br />Romulus&rsquo;s important contribution was the creation and foundation of the legionares military system and with it the first moves towards empire as Romulus led the fledgling legions in expanding the frontiers beyond Rome&rsquo;s walls in what was described as pure defensive warfare. Romulus also established the requirements of citizenship even though he continued to attract a diverse mix of predator species like Tigers, Lions, Coyotes and Nubian wolves who became an elite commando force later in the early Republic.<br /><br /><strong>Vibius Electus</strong><br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One of Romulus&rsquo;s first legionare commanders and so endeared to the King that he adoringly called him &ldquo;Father&rdquo;. Vibius became &ldquo;King pro temp&rdquo; when Romulus became ill from mange and died in Vibius&rsquo;s arms. Vibius solemnly promised to educate Romulus&rsquo;s son Mulis to prepare him for the kingship and when the young wolf reached adulthood...Vibius stepped aside.<br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two important marks of Vibius&rsquo;s reign was the creation of the People&rsquo;s Assembly&rdquo; or the Senate and the institutions of representative Democracy and voting. The Senate&rsquo;s size fluctuated with another of Vibius&rsquo;s inovations, the every two year Census...the counting of the population. <br /><br /><strong>Mulis Tracitus Romulia</strong><br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The son of Romulus, Mulis instituted the laws which governed who and who could not be a citizen of Rome and what procedures and steps would be required for citizenry. Wolves were automatically citizens of Rome be they natural born or not. Predators were welcome and were given some basic rights but had to meet requirements to petition for citizenship and upon granting of such, attained the full rights to be called a Roman citizen.<br /><br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Pray mammals on the other hand along with the wrongly despised foxes, could never become citizens. Pray animals were considered food stuffs, enemies of the state or slaves to be dealt with as seen fit. Even if a pray animal did anything noble in support of or in defense of the Roman state...their lot in life was the same. They were worked to death, beaten to death or put to death and then eaten. Every Roman from birth would be taught that pray animals were worth about a tenth of a tenth of a pile of dung...unless they were nicely prepared to be on a dinner plate.<br /><br /><strong>Primus Romulus Ligur</strong><br /><br />After the death of Mulis, his son Primus became king. Primus&rsquo;s memorable marker was sending emissaries throughout the known world to attract skilled crafts-mammals, laborers, scholars and ecomnomadi (economic specialists) to not only change the physical condition of the Roman city state but make it economically viable. Wood and thatch over time gave way to brick, masonry and mortar. An economic system of currency was created and trade and import established. It was also here that the most cruel part of Rome&rsquo;s trading and inports was created...that of the pray slave and food trade which by the end of the Roman period would see millions of pray mammals slaughtered almost to extinction across the empire.<br /><br /><strong>Kaeso (Ky-Ay-Sow)</strong><br /><br />Kaeso was the second King not of royal blood and sadly he would become the first and certainly not the last Roman leader to die by murder. His contribution to the city state was the reformation and codification of law into a more solid and coherent form binding rich citizen down to the poorest, except for pray who were vermin and deserved no protection. Kaeso would also continue the &ldquo;defensive&rdquo; wars of expansion giving Rome a nearly 100 mile defensive zone beyond the city walls. What Kaeso did not know was that his sister Vesnia was plotting to put her own son Quintus on the throne and by year 94 of the reign of the Kings...she did so by brutal murder.<br /><br /><strong>Quintus Trebatus Cholrus<br />&ldquo;Quintus the ripper&rdquo;</strong><br /><br />Quintus Trebatus Cholrus was a tyrant who stole from the national treasury, killed his opponents, placed his family in positions where he could control power and abused his authority. What brought him to his end was a violent crime committed by his eldest son Oppius upon a well loved and respected female wolf named Papinia who was considered a model of female lupine industriousness, chastity and virtue. One night...Oppius followed Papinia to her home where he beat her, raped her and told her that if she dared to speak of the deed&hellip;.he would kill her.<br /><br />The next morning...the battered Papinia climbed atop the hall of justice near the royal palace and cried out what had been done to her by Oppius. Not wanting to live with the shame of her rape or having to bear his off spring...she flung herself to the ground before the horrified masses.<br /><br />Rome&hellip;..exploded in violence. Led by a Lieutenant of the 3rd Legionares, Brutus Gracilis...the Wolves of Rome stormed the palace, tore Oppius to shreds and burned &ldquo;Quintus the Ripper&rdquo; to death impailed on a cooking spit. Brutus then proclaimed that Rome would never again allow a King to reign over the free people. The monarchical system was dead to be replaced by a yearly elected &ldquo;bi-consolaria (Two wolves chosen by vote to govern for one year equally) a system that would survive until the rise of Lupine Rome&rsquo;s first Cesaria Maximi (Cesar over all) in the 400th year of Rome&rsquo;s 900 year existence.<br /><br /><strong>Next: Wars, wars, wars and wars&hellip;.From defense to devastate. Lupinian Rome under the Counselors. </strong></span>","pools_count":0,"title":"Zootopia: The history of Lupinian Rome part 3","deleted":"f","public":"t","mimetype":"text/rtf","pagecount":"1","rating_id":"0","rating_name":"General","ratings":[],"submission_type_id":"12","type_name":"Writing - Document","guest_block":"f","friends_only":"f","comments_count":"0","views":"47","sales_description":null,"forsale":"f","digitalsales":"f","printsales":"f","digital_price":""}