Unit 3 – Mediterranean Society: The Greek and Roman Phase
... Any Spartan man could abduct a wife, which led to a system of polyandry (many husbands, one wife or vice versa) in Sparta. Spartan women had many rights that other Greek women did not have. Namely, they could own and control their own property. They could also take another husband if their f ...
... Any Spartan man could abduct a wife, which led to a system of polyandry (many husbands, one wife or vice versa) in Sparta. Spartan women had many rights that other Greek women did not have. Namely, they could own and control their own property. They could also take another husband if their f ...
Chapter 6 Review
... Jesus was born about 4 B.C. in Bethlehem near Jerusalem. Growing up in a small town of Nazareth, Jesus worshiped god and followed Jewish law. Large crowds gathered to hear Jesus teachings especially when word spread that he had performed miracles of healing. The Message Jesus believed in one god and ...
... Jesus was born about 4 B.C. in Bethlehem near Jerusalem. Growing up in a small town of Nazareth, Jesus worshiped god and followed Jewish law. Large crowds gathered to hear Jesus teachings especially when word spread that he had performed miracles of healing. The Message Jesus believed in one god and ...
The Roman Republic
... •Rome claim a balanced government •Consuls (leaders) were limited in power •Limited terms •Senate represented Aristocrats of society •Senators were in office for life (continuity) •Major influence •Centuriate / Tribune Assemblies •Tribal Assembly represented the Plebeians and made laws for the commo ...
... •Rome claim a balanced government •Consuls (leaders) were limited in power •Limited terms •Senate represented Aristocrats of society •Senators were in office for life (continuity) •Major influence •Centuriate / Tribune Assemblies •Tribal Assembly represented the Plebeians and made laws for the commo ...
Page C (Section II): From Republic to Empire
... While he was gone, Pompey ordered him to disband his army and come home. Caesar refused – he knew he’d have no power without his army. He eventually came back to Italy – Pompey and his supporters went to Greece – where Caesar’s army found them and defeated them. The Roman senate was so happy with Ju ...
... While he was gone, Pompey ordered him to disband his army and come home. Caesar refused – he knew he’d have no power without his army. He eventually came back to Italy – Pompey and his supporters went to Greece – where Caesar’s army found them and defeated them. The Roman senate was so happy with Ju ...
Abstract
... monuments, moreover, the most prominent symbol attached to centurions is their whip (vitis), with which they flogged transgressors. I argue that an analysis of the representations of centurions’ disciplinary role are crucial to understanding more broadly how ideologies of military discipline and aut ...
... monuments, moreover, the most prominent symbol attached to centurions is their whip (vitis), with which they flogged transgressors. I argue that an analysis of the representations of centurions’ disciplinary role are crucial to understanding more broadly how ideologies of military discipline and aut ...
PowerPoint 1
... 50 years later Rome went to war again and this time Rome destroyed the Carthage in 146 B.C.E. and claimed it as a Roman province called Africa 4. Why was Julius Caesar so important? In 47 B.C.E. he seized power in Rome and was made dictator. A short time later, in 44 B.C.E. he was given the title di ...
... 50 years later Rome went to war again and this time Rome destroyed the Carthage in 146 B.C.E. and claimed it as a Roman province called Africa 4. Why was Julius Caesar so important? In 47 B.C.E. he seized power in Rome and was made dictator. A short time later, in 44 B.C.E. he was given the title di ...
Who did what in the Roman Republic - World History CP2
... “Who Did What in the Roman Republic?” By Vickie Chao Democracy, by definition, means rule by people. Both the word and the concept itself came from Greece a long time ago. When the Romans revolted and expelled the Etruscan king, Tarquin the Proud, in approximately 510 B.C. they vowed never to be gov ...
... “Who Did What in the Roman Republic?” By Vickie Chao Democracy, by definition, means rule by people. Both the word and the concept itself came from Greece a long time ago. When the Romans revolted and expelled the Etruscan king, Tarquin the Proud, in approximately 510 B.C. they vowed never to be gov ...
107 BCE: Rome - Marius is appointed to consulship and rules the
... 98 BCE: Rome - Lucretius, author of On the Nature of Things, is the most renowned of the Roman Epicureans. Epicureanism is one of the most notable influences the Greek world bestows on Roman civilization. Lucretius' poetry explains the Epicurean beliefs of obtaining the "good life" through peace of ...
... 98 BCE: Rome - Lucretius, author of On the Nature of Things, is the most renowned of the Roman Epicureans. Epicureanism is one of the most notable influences the Greek world bestows on Roman civilization. Lucretius' poetry explains the Epicurean beliefs of obtaining the "good life" through peace of ...
brochure - University of Michigan
... journey is from the desert to the sea. The main chronological focus is on the last centuries BC and early centuries AD. In place of the traditional interpretative paradigm of Romanisation, I use the concept of identity as a tool for exploring inter- and intracommunal differences in the patterns of a ...
... journey is from the desert to the sea. The main chronological focus is on the last centuries BC and early centuries AD. In place of the traditional interpretative paradigm of Romanisation, I use the concept of identity as a tool for exploring inter- and intracommunal differences in the patterns of a ...
Lecture 2.1 Rome
... did the Romans manage to conquer and maintain such a huge empire? What was the social and political structure of the Roman Republic and Empire? ...
... did the Romans manage to conquer and maintain such a huge empire? What was the social and political structure of the Roman Republic and Empire? ...
Pax Romana 27 B.C.E.– 500
... – Hadrian built an enormous wall to mark the boundaries of Rome in Britain – Soldiers important for Romanization • But army increasingly “barbarized” – Fewer from Italy ...
... – Hadrian built an enormous wall to mark the boundaries of Rome in Britain – Soldiers important for Romanization • But army increasingly “barbarized” – Fewer from Italy ...
Roman Republic - Mr. Weiss
... The first plebeian consul was appointed in 366 B.C., the first plebian dictator 356 B.C., the first plebeian censor 351 B.C., and the first plebeian praetor 337 B.C. Later in history, plebeians' assembly consolidated legislative power from all other assemblies. The laws made by its 10 tribunes becam ...
... The first plebeian consul was appointed in 366 B.C., the first plebian dictator 356 B.C., the first plebeian censor 351 B.C., and the first plebeian praetor 337 B.C. Later in history, plebeians' assembly consolidated legislative power from all other assemblies. The laws made by its 10 tribunes becam ...
The Roman Republic
... A Republic is a democracy, but each person is responsible to someone else since they are picked by the people to represent them. ...
... A Republic is a democracy, but each person is responsible to someone else since they are picked by the people to represent them. ...
History 6
... - Strongly for the name of the language all Latin writers had been using only the word Englisc (English). - The word is derived from the name of Angles (O.E.Engles), but was used without distinction for the languages of all the invading tribes. - Similarly, its people have been called Angeluynn (An ...
... - Strongly for the name of the language all Latin writers had been using only the word Englisc (English). - The word is derived from the name of Angles (O.E.Engles), but was used without distinction for the languages of all the invading tribes. - Similarly, its people have been called Angeluynn (An ...
SESSIONS 5 and 6 - aicleincamanacor
... Being in the army did not only mean fighting, but colonizing, building roads, bridges and fortifications. The _________ founded the first settlements of future cities and supervised their development and security. ...
... Being in the army did not only mean fighting, but colonizing, building roads, bridges and fortifications. The _________ founded the first settlements of future cities and supervised their development and security. ...
Powerpoint link
... increased power of the Senate (patricians) – The senate now controlled the army and the foreign policy • The nobles gained even more power ...
... increased power of the Senate (patricians) – The senate now controlled the army and the foreign policy • The nobles gained even more power ...
Greece and Rome
... times before the sewers were introduced, Wikipedia states that humanity dealt with the problem of waste by picking out a spot of land, digging a hole, and then depositing their waste into that hole. When they had more to dispose of, they found another area of land, dug another hole, and deposited it ...
... times before the sewers were introduced, Wikipedia states that humanity dealt with the problem of waste by picking out a spot of land, digging a hole, and then depositing their waste into that hole. When they had more to dispose of, they found another area of land, dug another hole, and deposited it ...
The Roman World - HCC Learning Web
... Lex Hortensia, in which plebiscites were now binding on all Romans. Although the conflict was over, it meant the wealthy plebes deserted the poorer plebes and allied with the patricians. Conquest of Italy Rome was not only dealing with internal power struggles during these centuries. It was also bus ...
... Lex Hortensia, in which plebiscites were now binding on all Romans. Although the conflict was over, it meant the wealthy plebes deserted the poorer plebes and allied with the patricians. Conquest of Italy Rome was not only dealing with internal power struggles during these centuries. It was also bus ...
Roman Invasion - the Education Forum
... They believed it was their duty to this and make the world “civilised” like them Read the quote on the next slide to see what they thought about this! ...
... They believed it was their duty to this and make the world “civilised” like them Read the quote on the next slide to see what they thought about this! ...
How the Romans Saw the Christians
... notoriously depraved CHRISTIANS (as they were popularly called). Their originator, CHRIST, had been executed in Tiberius' reign by the Procurator of Judaea, PONTIUS PILATUS (governor from 26 to 36 A.D.). But in spite of this temporary setback, the deadly superstition had broken out again, not just i ...
... notoriously depraved CHRISTIANS (as they were popularly called). Their originator, CHRIST, had been executed in Tiberius' reign by the Procurator of Judaea, PONTIUS PILATUS (governor from 26 to 36 A.D.). But in spite of this temporary setback, the deadly superstition had broken out again, not just i ...