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Our aim is to exhibit the last act of this great historical drama, to relate the ancient history of the central peninsula projecting from the northern continent into the Mediterranean.  It is formed by the mountain-system of the Ape

The flat country on the north, extending between the Alps and the Ape

But, while the Grecian peninsula is turned towards the east, the Italian is turned towards the west.  As the coasts of Epirus and Acarnania had but a subordinate importance in the case of Hellas, so had the Apulian and Messapian coasts in that of Italy; and, while the regions on which the historical development of Greece has been mainly dependent - Attica and Macedonia - look to the east, Etruria, Latium, and Campania look to the west.  In this way the two peninsulas, so close neighbours and almost sisters, stand as it were averted from each other.  Although the naked eye can discern from Otranto the Acroceraunian mountains, the Italians and Hellenes came into earlier and closer contact on every other pathway rather than on the nearest across the Adriatic Sea, In their instance, as has happened so often, the historical vocation of the nations was prefigured in the relations of the ground which they occupied; the two great stocks, on which the civilization of the ancient world grew, threw their shadow as well as their seed, the one towards the east, the other towards the west.

We intend here to relate the history of Italy, not simply the history of the city of Rome.  Although, in the formal sense of political law, it was the civic community of Rome which gained the sovereignty first of Italy and then of the world, such a view ca