In its earliest phase, Rome was a cluster of hilltop villages. Their inhabitants needed a central place to meet and transact business, and to bury their dead, and chose the marshy area enclosed between four of the hills. As Rome expanded, this area was drained and paved in the seventh century BCE and started to acquire its first monuments, temples, and public buildings. Thus it became the Forum, the city’s center of commercial, civic, political, and religious life.