It was situated two miles north of ancient Rome on a hill (now Monte Antenne) commanding the confluence of the Aniene and the Tiber.
[a] In Rome's founding myths, its people, sometimes regarded as Sabines,[6] were among those who attended the festival of Neptune Equester organized by Romulus to supply wives for the Roman men.
As it was the home of Romulus's own wife Hersilia (later deified as "Hora"), she convinced her husband to make the locals Roman citizens, effectively granting it colony status.
[7] The settlement was subsequently of little importance,[1] although it was the site of the Samnites' surrender to Sulla in 82 BC during the civil war between the Cinna-Marius faction and Sulla, and of one of Alaric's encampments in the year before the Visigoth's sack of Rome in AD 410.
[1] In the 19th century, no ruins were known to have survived,[1] but an excavation undertaken during the construction of Italy's Forte Antenne discovered wells, several huts, a cistern, and traces of the defensive walls of the ancient town around 1880.