n the same period the struggle for supremacy and existence developed between Rome and Carthage; struggle which lasted 120 years (264-146 BC) and that ended with the destruction of Carthage, in 146 BC, after the Three Punic Wars. The definitive expulsion of the Carthaginians from the island is due to the Romans, but Sicily and Tauromenium didn't ever become Latin. Tauromenium preserved its Greek speaking up to the birth of the vernacular in the Norman-Swabian period. A proof of that stays in the fact that the bishop Teofono Cerameo pronounced his homilies still in Greek. The Roman empire's history embraces five centuries, from 31 BC. to 476 AD. This historical phase is characterized by crisis and disorders, civic struggles, social transformations. Limiting the attention to Sicily, we notice that the inexorable decadence continued in all the fields and for a long time misgovernment reigned in the island. The rural ownership tended to disappear, cause it was ill-treated by the fiscal increases. The agrarian zones became prey for the italic speculators and the number of disinherited people increased. Such impoverishment exasperated the agriculturists. The revolts, which established an awakening of the island independence's feelings, were called the revolts of the slaves(135-132 and 104-101 BC). Born in Sicily and fed in Rome by the work of the people's tribune, the Tiberio and Caio Gracco brothers, revolts involved Tauromenium too. Dozens of thousands of farmers and slaves, leaded byEuno, rose up against the landowners and occupied Agrigento, Catania and Tauromenium. Rome sent the consul Fulvio Flacco with the order to tame rebels. He besieged Tauromenium and as he didn't succeed in occupying it, the consuls Lucio Pisone and Publio Rupilio came to his help. Rebels barricaded in the town and, though they had exhausted the provisions, resisted for a long time. For the betrayal of one slave only, named Sepadone, the Rupilio consul succeeded in entering the town.
uring the whole domination period different episodes marked how difficoult the integration with Rome was to the Tauromeniti. In the Taormina's forum a statue in memory of the magistrate Gaio Verre was built, when, in 73 BC, he was sent to Sicily to administer justice.
he Spanish dominion of Bourbons went on up to 1860. The ideas of the Risorgimento and the feelings of liberty and national unity had set on fire for some time by now also many Sicilian minds and hearts. Quite a lot of patriots had to run away from Taormina for the bourbon repression, leaded by a certain Giuseppe Maniscalco. In the Christmas night in 1856 a lot of conspirators were arrested by the police at the Rosa Calatabiano's House. The court of Messina condemned to 18 years of prison Luigi Pellegrino, to 16 years Vincenzo Vadala', to 14 years Carmelo Barca, to 2 years the abbot Don Salvatore Cacciola and other men. We have to remember also Don Agostino da Taormina, enlightened patriot. When, in spring 1860, Garibaldi disembarked at Marsala to free Sicily, many patriots fought with him to send away forever the Bourbons. A committee leaded by the captain Luciano Crisafulli was formed at Taormina. This skilled strategist succeeded in avoiding the fight, which could have been very bloody, with the bourbon contingent in retreat leaded by the general Clary. The Garibaldians arrived in Taormina the 3rd of August 1860, leaded by Nino Bixio, who slept at the baron Giovanni Platania's house. In autumn 1860, Sicily was annexed to Piedmont and, then, to the Italian Kingdom. Taormina stopped being the centre of the Sicilian political and military circumstances.