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    <title>Romulus and Remus on Ancient Rome</title>
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      <title>Romulus, Remus, and the She-Wolf: How Rome Invented Its Own Origin</title>
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      <description>&lt;p&gt;At Millesgården, the sculptor Carl Milles&amp;rsquo;s studio and museum on the island of Lidingö outside Stockholm, a copy of the Capitoline Wolf stands in the open air, green with patina, the two infants nursing beneath the she-wolf&amp;rsquo;s belly on a red granite plinth. Ivy climbs the wall behind it. A stone face — a garden ornament — watches from the wall above. The composition is so familiar as to have become almost invisible through repetition: the wolf alert, ears pricked, facing left with a wariness that has not relaxed in two thousand years of bronze casting; the twins below, pudgy and insistent, entirely unconcerned with the predator feeding them. The image is Rome&amp;rsquo;s founding symbol, its most exported icon, the picture that appeared on Roman coins in the second century BC and on Italian government documents in the twenty-first century AD. It has been in continuous circulation as a symbol of Roman identity for over two millennia, which is not an achievement many images can claim.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
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