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Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar

... One of the reasons the Senate was concerned by Caesar’s accumulation of power was Rome’s long history as a republic. *In the Republic, the senate was a partially elected body of officials who represented the citizens. They lost power when Caesar became dictator. ...
Campaigns of - Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Μείζονος Ελληνισμού
Campaigns of - Εγκυκλοπαίδεια Μείζονος Ελληνισμού

... The campaigns of P. Servilius Vatia Isauricus (cons. 79 BC) probably date from the end of 79 BC to early 74 BC. They took place in the Roman province of Cilicia. Two objectives are discernible. Vatia fought the pirates of the coast before penetrating inland to conquer territory which some scholars b ...
Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge
Humanities 3 IV. Skepticism and Self-Knowledge

... • Other Romans cling to the ideal of the republic, and see only one way to preserve it: kill Caesar • The drama of the play centers on the psychology of Brutus, a noble of unimpeachable character • Brutus’ choice can be seen as a judgment on the legitimacy of the act, yet it is an act that will dest ...
The Emperors of the Flavian Dynasty
The Emperors of the Flavian Dynasty

Ivan IV, and Moscow as the Third Rome
Ivan IV, and Moscow as the Third Rome

... Third Rome. Ivan IV had Byzantine blood in him as he continued the legacy of Moscow as the Third Rome. Ivan IV, the Terrible. The grandson of Ivan III and Sophia was Ivan IV, the Terrible. For our purposes, we should understand that Ivan IV had Byzantine blood in him as he continued the legacy of Mo ...
Ancient Rome - HRSBSTAFF Home Page
Ancient Rome - HRSBSTAFF Home Page

... • Etruscan culture became distinct around 1000 BCE. • Contributed to the rise of Rome and Roman culture. ...
1AT THE BASE OF ROME`S PECULIUM ECONOMY
1AT THE BASE OF ROME`S PECULIUM ECONOMY

... the owner’s liability for a debt in lieu of payment for freedom in Digest 15 1 11 1 (Ulpian). A slave might borrow money on the loan market to purchase freedom: “A slave whom I thought to be mine borrowed money from Titius and gave it to me in return for freedom.”32 Once payment had been made the ma ...
Pompey`s Eastern Command
Pompey`s Eastern Command

Rome`s Greatest Emperor
Rome`s Greatest Emperor

... taxes of the vanquished enriched only the senators, not the people or the state. Even the legions had more loyalty to their generals than to Rome itself. This empire needed an emperor. In the chaos of Caesar’s death, one would arise and he would be remembered as Rome’s greatest emperor: Augustus. Au ...
Chapter Nine: Publicans and Patriarchs: The Rise of Roman Family
Chapter Nine: Publicans and Patriarchs: The Rise of Roman Family

... much higher in the sky, than in Massilia. Within about fifty years this discovery hinted to both Greek and Punic mathematicians that the earth was curved and maybe even round. ...
4.sergius paulus inscription
4.sergius paulus inscription

... On the apostle Paul’s first missionary journey, around A.D. XX, he comes to know the Roman proconsul who lived on Cyprus. Luke writes, “6 When they had gone through the whole island as far as Paphos, they found a magician, a Jewish false prophet whose name was Bar-jesus, 7 who was with the proconsul ...
Comparisons with imperial Rome in early twentieth
Comparisons with imperial Rome in early twentieth

Type and Technique of the Illustrative Story in Seneca`s Moral Essays
Type and Technique of the Illustrative Story in Seneca`s Moral Essays

... of his vooabulary; we realize how vivid a pioture of the everyday life of his time he is giving us, we note how he oomplains that the mimes, whose very essenoe lay in the acourate delineation of soenes from ordinary life, are hardly true enough to nature, and we should feel it an unfortunate weaknes ...
MARIUS
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... The oldest extant scroll of Dany’el / Daniel was copied around 125 BCE, four-hundred thirty years after the book of prophecy was initially penned. It remains the only bilingual text demonstrating Divine inspiration found among the Dead Sea Scrolls. It was written in Hebrew and Aramaic. It opens in ...
The roman times
The roman times

... All the News Romans Need to Know Rome, Italy ...
File - Mrs. LeGrow`s 3rd Grade Class
File - Mrs. LeGrow`s 3rd Grade Class

... each other. They fell in love and got into fights. But there was one main way in which the gods were not like human beings: the gods were immortal. Human beings might live for many years. Some might even live to be one hundred. Eventually, though, they would die. The gods, on the other hand, lived f ...
English abstract
English abstract

... Shahar Ronen Abstract While Lucius Cornelius Sulla may not be as famous as Julius Caesar, he did help to pave the latter’s path to the dictatorship, crossing the proverbial Rubicon almost forty years before the Conqueror of Gaul: in 88 BC Sulla became the first Roman to have conquered Rome, an actio ...
PDF - Royal Fireworks Press
PDF - Royal Fireworks Press

... defeated with unprecedented and unparalleled generosity during a period of several centuries. The result was that now—in the last years of the third century B.C.—those former foes considered themselves Romans or so allied with Rome that they stood by Rome even in its darkest hour after the defeat at ...
6.2 Roman Empire
6.2 Roman Empire

... family of the Ptolemies. This family from Macedon had ruled Egypt for several hundred years after the death of Alexander the Great. Though they had ruled Egypt for a long time, none of the family had ever bothered to learn Egyptian—until Cleopatra. Plutarch wrote that she learned so many languages s ...
The Roman Empire
The Roman Empire

Roman Research Paper-Gaius and Tiberius - 2010
Roman Research Paper-Gaius and Tiberius - 2010

... When Gaius went to Africa at the beginning of 122 B.C. to organize his new colony on the site of Carthage, the opposition rallied against him because of fear Gaius had too much power. Returning from Africa, Gaius rashly insisted on introducing his citizenship bill because he knew that he was losing ...
part one caius octavius (thurinus) 63–44 bc
part one caius octavius (thurinus) 63–44 bc

... emperor, the man who finally replaced a Republic which had lasted for almost half a millennium with a veiled monarchy. The system he created gave the empire some 250 years of stability, when it was both larger and more prosperous than at any other time. In the third century AD it faced decades of cr ...
--House of Cæsar-- D-1 APPENDIX D THE HOUSE OF CÆSAR
--House of Cæsar-- D-1 APPENDIX D THE HOUSE OF CÆSAR

Rise of the Roman Republic Student Text
Rise of the Roman Republic Student Text

... Rome was now a republic, but the patricians held all the power. They made sure that only they could be part of the government. Only they could become senators or consuls. Plebeians had to obey their decisions. Because laws were not written down, patricians often changed or interpreted the laws to be ...
< 1 ... 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 ... 265 >

Culture of ancient Rome



""Roman society"" redirects here. For the learned society, see: Society for the Promotion of Roman StudiesThe culture of ancient Rome existed throughout the almost 1200-year history of the civilization of Ancient Rome. The term refers to the culture of the Roman Republic, later the Roman Empire, which at its peak covered an area from Lowland Scotland and Morocco to the Euphrates.Life in ancient Rome revolved around the city of Rome, its famed seven hills, and its monumental architecture such as the Flavian Amphitheatre (now called the Colosseum), the Forum of Trajan, and the Pantheon. The city also had several theaters, gymnasia, and many taverns, baths, and brothels. Throughout the territory under ancient Rome's control, residential architecture ranged from very modest houses to country villas, and in the capital city of Rome, there were imperial residences on the elegant Palatine Hill, from which the word palace is derived. The vast majority of the population lived in the city center, packed into insulae (apartment blocks).The city of Rome was the largest megalopolis of that time, with a population that may well have exceeded one million people, with a high end estimate of 3.6 million and a low end estimate of 450,000. Historical estimates indicate that around 30% of the population under the city's jurisdiction lived in innumerable urban centers, with population of at least 10,000 and several military settlements, a very high rate of urbanization by pre-industrial standards. The most urbanized part of the Empire was Italy, which had an estimated rate of urbanization of 32%, the same rate of urbanization of England in 1800. Most Roman towns and cities had a forum, temples and the same type of buildings, on a smaller scale, as found in Rome. The large urban population required an endless supply of food which was a complex logistical task, including acquiring, transporting, storing and distribution of food for Rome and other urban centers. Italian farms supplied vegetables and fruits, but fish and meat were luxuries. Aqueducts were built to bring water to urban centers and wine and oil were imported from Hispania, Gaul and Africa.There was a very large amount of commerce between the provinces of the Roman Empire, since its transportation technology was very efficient. The average costs of transport and the technology were comparable with 18th-century Europe. The later city of Rome did not fill the space within its ancient Aurelian walls until after 1870.Eighty percent of the population under the jurisdiction of ancient Rome lived in the countryside in settlements with less than 10 thousand inhabitants. Landlords generally resided in cities and their estates were left in the care of farm managers. The plight of rural slaves was generally worse than their counterparts working in urban aristocratic households. To stimulate a higher labor productivity most landlords freed a large number of slaves and many received wages. Some records indicate that ""as many as 42 people lived in one small farm hut in Egypt, while six families owned a single olive tree."" Such a rural environment continued to induce migration of population to urban centers until the early 2nd century when the urban population stopped growing and started to decline.Starting in the middle of the 2nd century BC, private Greek culture was increasingly in ascendancy, in spite of tirades against the ""softening"" effects of Hellenized culture from the conservative moralists. By the time of Augustus, cultured Greek household slaves taught the Roman young (sometimes even the girls); chefs, decorators, secretaries, doctors, and hairdressers all came from the Greek East. Greek sculptures adorned Hellenistic landscape gardening on the Palatine or in the villas, or were imitated in Roman sculpture yards by Greek slaves. The Roman cuisine preserved in the cookery books ascribed to Apicius is essentially Greek. Roman writers disdained Latin for a cultured Greek style. Only in law and governance was the Italic nature of Rome's accretive culture supreme.Against this human background, both the urban and rural setting, one of history's most influential civilizations took shape, leaving behind a cultural legacy that survives in part today.
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