The Latins belong to a group of…
1053 BCE to 910 BCE
The Latins belong to a group of Indo-European tribes, conventionally known as the Italic tribes, which populate central and southern Italy during the Italian Iron Age (from about 900 BCE onward).
The most common hypothesis is that the Italic peoples migrated into the Italian peninsula some time during the Italian Bronze Age, 1800 to 900 BCE.
The most likely route for the Italic migration was from the Balkan Peninsula along the Adriatic coast.
However, a more precise dating of these migrations, or even whether they occurred during the Bronze Age at all, is not possible from the available archaeological and linguistic evidence.
The archaeological evidence shows a remarkable uniformity of culture in the peninsula during the period 1800—1200 BCE—the so-called "Apennines culture".
Pottery with much the same incised geometric designs is found throughout Italy, and the design of weapons and tools was similarly homogenous.
During this period, it appears that Italy was a heavily wooded land with a sparse population, concentrated in the mountainous center of the peninsula.
Most people were pastoralists practicing transhumance and inhabiting, at most, small villages.
Inhumation was the universal method of burial.
In the latter period of the Bronze Age (1200-900 BCE), the appearance of cremation burials and the appearance of distinct regional variations in culture disrupted this pattern.
Some historians have ascribed these changes to the arrival of the Italic peoples, but the distribution of the novel cremation culture (the Villanovan culture) avoids the central region dominated by the Italic tribes.
Latins from about 1000 BCE inhabit the small part of the Italian peninsula known to the later Romans as Old Latium (Latium Vetus), that is, the region between the river Tiber and the promontory of Monte Circeo (about sixty miles or one hundred kilometers southeast of Rome).
It was called "old" to distinguish it from the expanded region, denoted Latium by later Romans, that included the region to the South of Old Latium, between Monte Circeo and the river Garigliano—the so-called Latium adiectum ("attached Latium").
There is no archaeological evidence at present that Old Latium hosted permanent settlements during the Bronze Age.
Very small amounts of Apennines-culture pottery sherds have been found in Latium, most likely belonging to transient pastoralists engaged in transhumance.
It thus appears that the Latins occupied Latium Vetus from around 1000 BCE.
Initially, the Latin immigrants into Latium are probably concentrated in the low hills that extend from the central Apennines range into the coastal plain (much of which would have been marshy and malarial).
For example, the Alban Hills, a plateau containing a number of extinct volcanoes and two substantial lakes—lacus Nemorensis (Lake Nemi) and lacus Tusculensis (Lake Albano)—provide a defensible, well-watered base.
Permanent settlements appear on Rome’s hills—the Palatine, certainly, and possibly the Capitoline and the Quirinal—at a very early stage.