![Name: Class Period: ______ Date: ______ Guided Notes Roman](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/014870808_1-6c5f2ebb18f695bbe9198a017facf3a1-300x300.png)
Name: Class Period: ______ Date: ______ Guided Notes Roman
... This was seen as an act of treason, punishable by death, and the _________________________ ___________________________________________. Notes: ...
... This was seen as an act of treason, punishable by death, and the _________________________ ___________________________________________. Notes: ...
The Punic Wars
... Carthage recovered economically, led by Hannibal , Rome demanded that he surrender as a war criminal, fled to Greece and Turkey where the Romans were expanding in pursuit Haniibal took poison to avoid capture Numidia pressed Carthage into attacking, bringing Rome into the 3rd Punic war, Rome attacke ...
... Carthage recovered economically, led by Hannibal , Rome demanded that he surrender as a war criminal, fled to Greece and Turkey where the Romans were expanding in pursuit Haniibal took poison to avoid capture Numidia pressed Carthage into attacking, bringing Rome into the 3rd Punic war, Rome attacke ...
The Roman Republic Worksheet
... Aedile ‐ An Aedile was a city official who was responsible for the maintenance of public buildings as well as public festivals. Many politicians who wanted to be elected to a higher office, like consul, would become aedile so they could hold big public festivals and gain popularity with the peopl ...
... Aedile ‐ An Aedile was a city official who was responsible for the maintenance of public buildings as well as public festivals. Many politicians who wanted to be elected to a higher office, like consul, would become aedile so they could hold big public festivals and gain popularity with the peopl ...
Tacitus on the End of the Roman Republic
... faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping the title of triumvir, and giving out that he was a Consul, and was satisfied with a tribune's authority for the protection of the people, Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of r ...
... faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping the title of triumvir, and giving out that he was a Consul, and was satisfied with a tribune's authority for the protection of the people, Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of r ...
Grup Scolar de telecomunicatii si lucrari publice Hunedoara
... Considered as the greatest Roman civil settlement on the Dobrogea territory and built at the same time with the commemorative Monument, the fortress was inhabited by the veterans’ families, who participated at the Traian’s dacian wars and were colonized here. The town obtained the title of « municip ...
... Considered as the greatest Roman civil settlement on the Dobrogea territory and built at the same time with the commemorative Monument, the fortress was inhabited by the veterans’ families, who participated at the Traian’s dacian wars and were colonized here. The town obtained the title of « municip ...
History
... The Rubicon was a river which marked the boundary between Italy and Gaul. When Caesar crossed it in 49, he broke Roman law by bringing his army into Italy and he precipitated a civil war. His declaration as he crossed the Rubicon, iacta alea est (the die has been cast) reflects the fact that this de ...
... The Rubicon was a river which marked the boundary between Italy and Gaul. When Caesar crossed it in 49, he broke Roman law by bringing his army into Italy and he precipitated a civil war. His declaration as he crossed the Rubicon, iacta alea est (the die has been cast) reflects the fact that this de ...
Who Did What in the Roman Republic
... vowed never to be governed by emperors again. Thus, they borrowed the Greek idea of democracy and created the Roman Republic. In the Roman Republic, power was in the hands of two consuls. Once a year, the Romans gathered together and elected two capable men to be their consuls. The election was open ...
... vowed never to be governed by emperors again. Thus, they borrowed the Greek idea of democracy and created the Roman Republic. In the Roman Republic, power was in the hands of two consuls. Once a year, the Romans gathered together and elected two capable men to be their consuls. The election was open ...
Unit 8 - Rome Powerpoint
... However, many of them did not make it over the Alps, and Hannibal could not bring siege weapons over the mountains. So when he got to Rome, he could not take it. Rome sent an army to attack Carthage while Hannibal was attacking Rome. This forced Hannibal to march all the way back to Carthage. By the ...
... However, many of them did not make it over the Alps, and Hannibal could not bring siege weapons over the mountains. So when he got to Rome, he could not take it. Rome sent an army to attack Carthage while Hannibal was attacking Rome. This forced Hannibal to march all the way back to Carthage. By the ...
Aim: How did geography shape the development of Rome?
... Essential Question: Answer the following questions based on the “Romulus and Remus” slides. ...
... Essential Question: Answer the following questions based on the “Romulus and Remus” slides. ...
Directions: For each of the questions, select the
... because they all only had spoken language. b. Most people were encouraged to use Sanskrit to communicate ideas, allowing those ideas about medicine and science to spread. c. Most people in India rejected the language brought to their society by the Aryans. d. All of the above 25. How did religion he ...
... because they all only had spoken language. b. Most people were encouraged to use Sanskrit to communicate ideas, allowing those ideas about medicine and science to spread. c. Most people in India rejected the language brought to their society by the Aryans. d. All of the above 25. How did religion he ...
Document
... – Cicero's own take on the Catilinarian conspiracy • Catiline's conspiracy, one of the best documented events from the late Republic, gives us the rare opportunity to analyze not just one literary version of these events, but to think critically about the divergences between Sallust's and Cicero's a ...
... – Cicero's own take on the Catilinarian conspiracy • Catiline's conspiracy, one of the best documented events from the late Republic, gives us the rare opportunity to analyze not just one literary version of these events, but to think critically about the divergences between Sallust's and Cicero's a ...
document
... bathhouse. Children were not allowed in. The bathhouse cost very little to get in, so people used them often. The men and the women both used the bathhouse, but at different times during the day. Each group had a scheduled time, although the women's scheduled time was shorter. The bathhouse was not ...
... bathhouse. Children were not allowed in. The bathhouse cost very little to get in, so people used them often. The men and the women both used the bathhouse, but at different times during the day. Each group had a scheduled time, although the women's scheduled time was shorter. The bathhouse was not ...
The Roman Republic
... men of Athens. Instead of voting about what to do themselves, the Romans voted to choose leaders, who decided for them, the way the United States President and Congress do today. But the only people who could be elected to the Roman Senate were the rich people! In the Republic there were different p ...
... men of Athens. Instead of voting about what to do themselves, the Romans voted to choose leaders, who decided for them, the way the United States President and Congress do today. But the only people who could be elected to the Roman Senate were the rich people! In the Republic there were different p ...
6_Etruscan and Roman Art_Part3
... (27 BCE - 96 CE) - The emperor Vespasian began the construction of the Flavian Amphitheater in 70 CE and emperor Titus completed it in 80 CE. - Become known as the “Colosseum” because a giant statue of the emperor Nero (54 - 68 CE) called the Colossus stood next to the amphitheater. - The floor was ...
... (27 BCE - 96 CE) - The emperor Vespasian began the construction of the Flavian Amphitheater in 70 CE and emperor Titus completed it in 80 CE. - Become known as the “Colosseum” because a giant statue of the emperor Nero (54 - 68 CE) called the Colossus stood next to the amphitheater. - The floor was ...
The Legacy of the Roman Empire
... the Roman Empire? (Augustus) What effect did the growing empire have on Rome? (It became powerful and wealthy.) What was Pax Romana? (The first 200 years of the empire, in which the empire grew, but there were no major wars.) 2. Show students a map of the Roman Empire at this Web site: http://www.bb ...
... the Roman Empire? (Augustus) What effect did the growing empire have on Rome? (It became powerful and wealthy.) What was Pax Romana? (The first 200 years of the empire, in which the empire grew, but there were no major wars.) 2. Show students a map of the Roman Empire at this Web site: http://www.bb ...
Food and dining in the Roman Empire
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Pompeii_family_feast_painting_Naples.jpg?width=300)
Food and dining in the Roman Empire reflect both the variety of foodstuffs available through the expanded trade networks of the Roman Empire and the traditions of conviviality from ancient Rome's earliest times, inherited in part from the Greeks and Etruscans. In contrast to the Greek symposium, which was primarily a drinking party, the equivalent social institution of the Roman convivium was focused on food. Banqueting played a major role in Rome's communal religion. Maintaining the food supply to the city of Rome had become a major political issue in the late Republic, and continued to be one of the main ways the emperor expressed his relationship to the Roman people.