s extended the area on the Palatine available for the Imperial building complex. Rome has its origins on the Palatine. Excavations show that people have lived in the area since the 10th century BC. Excavations performed on the hill in 1907 and again in 1948 unearthed a collection of huts believed to have been used for funerary purposes between the 9th and 7th century BC approximating the time period when the city of Rome was founded. Pallantium was an ancient city near the
Tiber river on the Italian peninsula.
Roman mythology, as recounted in
Virgil's
Aeneid for example, states that the city was founded by
Evander of Pallene and other ancient Greeks sometime previous to the
Trojan War. In addition,
Dionysius of Halicarnassus writes that Romans say that the city was founded by Greeks from
Pallantium of
Arcadia, about sixty years before the Trojan war and the leader was Evander. The myth of the city's origin was significant in ancient Roman mythology because Pallantium became one of the cities that was merged later into
ancient Rome, thereby tying Rome's origins to the ancient Greek heroes. Other cities in the area were founded by various
Italic tribes. Virgil states that Evander named the city in honor of his ancestor, Pallas, although
Pausanias as well as Dionysius of Halicarnassus say that Evander's birth city was Pallantium, and thus he named the new city after the one in Arcadia. Dionysius of Halicarnassus also mention that some writers, including
Polybius of Megalopolis, say that the town was named after Pallas, who was the son of
Heracles and Lavinia, the daughter of Evander, and when he died his grandfather raised a tomb to him on the hill and called the place Pallantium, after him. According to
Livy, after the immigration of the
Sabines and the
Albans to Rome, the original Romans lived on the Palatine. The Palatine Hill was also the site of the ancient festival of the
Lupercalia. Many affluent Romans of the
Republican period ( – 44 BC) had their residences there. From the start of the
Empire (27 BC)
Augustus built his
palace there and the hill gradually became the exclusive domain of emperors; the ruins of the palaces of at least
Augustus (27 BC – 14 AD),
Tiberius (14–37 AD) and
Domitian (81–96 AD) can still be seen. Augustus also built a
temple to Apollo here. The
Great Fire of Rome in AD 64 destroyed Nero's palace, the
Domus Transitoria, but he replaced it by AD 69 with the even larger
Domus Aurea, over which was eventually built Domitian's Palace. From the 16th century, the hill was owned by the
Farnese family and was occupied by the
Farnese Gardens, still partially preserved above the remains of the Domus Tiberiana. At the top of the hill, between the Domus Flavia and the Domus Augustana, the Villa Mattei was built in the 16th century, then purchased around 1830 by the Scot Charles Mills who turned it into an elaborate neo-Gothic villa. At the end of the 19th century the villa was converted into a convent. This was partially demolished from 1928 to allow excavations and in the surviving part of the building the Palatine Museum has been installed. ==Monuments==