The
fasces lictoriae ("bundles of the
lictors[?]") (in Italian,
fascio littorio) was, in ancient
Rome, a symbol of power and strength. It was carried before a magistrate, in a number corresponding to his range, in public ceremonies and inspections. The rods were used to whip delinquents on the spot. If it included an axe, it represented the power to
decapitate[?]. It was carried by heroic soldiers (they had to have been injured in battle) during the
triumphs (public celebrations held in Rome after a military conquest).
It is a sort of cylinder, made of wood branches tied together around an axe. The symbolism of the fasces is that of strength through unity.
In the 1920s it became the symbol of Italian Fascism.
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