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Caesar: Hero or tyrant?
Caesar: Hero or tyrant?

... motivation to help himself, even if he did help the people in the process. For one thing, Caesar often put up a false front to help himself gain popularity and power, which is most definitely not heroic. A quote that gives a specific example comes from document packet page 11, document 6. “The crowd ...
civilizations_risepower
civilizations_risepower

... 1. After watching the video, ask students to describe how Rome was ruled under the Etruscans. (It was a monarchy, ruled by kings.) When the last Etruscan king was overthrown, what type of government was adopted? (a republic) Remind students the Roman Republic is different from the Roman Empire, in w ...
roman republic - my social studies class
roman republic - my social studies class

... By 340 BC the city-state of Rome was dominant in central Italy, but it was just one small state among many. In the following seventy years the Romans conquered nearly all of Italy, becoming one of the major military powers of the Mediterranean world. Diplomacy and Roads. The Roman conquest of Italy ...
History Of Civil Law In Rome
History Of Civil Law In Rome

... Roman institutions and the Roman laws are most valuable to us It would appear that about the year B.C. 753 the foundations of Rome were laid by an adventurer, who is known to us by the name of Romulus. The name may have been a fictitious one; but it is his true name to us, since we know of no other. ...
Notes for Collapse of the Rome Jenga Lec
Notes for Collapse of the Rome Jenga Lec

... Christians had been ____________ before but their religion provided them hope. Christians refused to sacrifice to the Emperor. Diocletian had to punish these rebellious subjects. He made a law that refusing to sacrifice to the emperor would be punished by ________. This caused churches to be destroy ...
Vocabulary Builder
Vocabulary Builder

... ______ 3. Aeneas was a legendary hero from Troy who fled to Italy and formed an ...
Ancient Rome - The Republic (Professor K. E. Carr)
Ancient Rome - The Republic (Professor K. E. Carr)

... But once the kings were out, the Roman aristocrats didn't want to give the poor men any power. They said no way! So the leaders of the poor men moved outside the city and went on strike. They refused to work any more unless they got some power. The Roman aristocrats had to give in, and they let the ...
document
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 ...
Ancient Rome 2012 Dalls
Ancient Rome 2012 Dalls

... HANNIBAL’S ROUTE OF INVASION ...
Rome Power Point
Rome Power Point

... HANNIBAL’S ROUTE OF INVASION ...
Ancient Roman Art History Powerpoint
Ancient Roman Art History Powerpoint

... mosaics and style of life was suspended in perfect condition. This includes the remains of the people caught in the pyroclastic blast. The preserved remains have provided a large insight into the daily life and art of Ancient Romans. ...
forum
forum

... In Rome's earliest days, the Forum area was a swamp used as a cemetery by the people of surrounding villages. The Etruscans turned these villages into the city of Rome and drained the marshes, probably during the 500's B.C. Residents built shops and temples around the edges of the Forum area. The Fo ...
Educator`s Resource Guide History`s Ancient Legacies II
Educator`s Resource Guide History`s Ancient Legacies II

... Rome's Greek ally at Saguntum in Spain. He crossed the Italian Alps in mid winter with elephants carrying his supplies and, with allies from Gaul in northern Italy, won victories at the Trebbia River and Lake Trasimene. His greatest victory (not covered in the film) was at Cannae in southeast Italy ...
WORLD - Mentor Public Schools
WORLD - Mentor Public Schools

... harsh penalties but guaranteed that all free citizens had a right  to protection under the law. ...
Roman Politics
Roman Politics

... were the Patricians and the Plebeians. The Patricians were the upper class and the Senate and the Plebeians were the middle class and the Assembly. They never got along when it came to making laws. Roman government officials held office for one year. The Romans had the Twelve Tables; they were stone ...
The Roman Empire
The Roman Empire

... • Two tribunes, Tiberius and Gaius, try to help poor, are murdered • Civil war—conflict between groups within same country begins ...
Augustus and the Family at the Birth qfthe Roman Empire. By Beth
Augustus and the Family at the Birth qfthe Roman Empire. By Beth

... last half of Augustus' reign (12 BC - AD 14) and shows how private family worship of household divinities, including the father's genius (protective spirit), was used as the model upon which to base the public cult of the imperial family. The overlap between public and private is further emphasized ...
No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... • Two tribunes, Tiberius and Gaius, try to help poor, are murdered • Civil war—conflict between groups within same country begins ...
III. The Triumph of Christianity
III. The Triumph of Christianity

... before???) – this angered a group of senators (they stood to lose lots) and both brothers were killed  discontent & unrest grew in Rome D. Sulla – won pwr by seizing Rome in 82 BC – he tried to restore Rome to the traditional Rep by restoring pwr to Senate & by taking away pwr of the pop assembly – ...
From the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire
From the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire

... from becoming too powerful, each consul could veto the decisions of the other. ...
PROPAGANDA AND SPIN: the introduction of coins
PROPAGANDA AND SPIN: the introduction of coins

... PROPAGANDA AND SPIN: the introduction of coins The emperor’s image portrayed was not an idealised one but a recognisable portrait of the person. This reflected the notion that the Emperor was the First Citizen of the Republic rather than a king. Since the expulsion of their king in c 508 BC by the ...
The Fall of Rome
The Fall of Rome

... THE FALL OF ROME Targets:  I can identify the many problems that threatened the Roman Empire, eventually leading one emperor to divide it in half  I can analyze Rome’s decline as a result of invasions, political (government) problems, and economic (money) problems  I can consider the Byzantine Em ...
Ancient Rome and Early Christianity
Ancient Rome and Early Christianity

... From 500 to 300 BCE, the Roman Republic faced threats from the other groups on the Italian Peninsula. One by one, the Romans were able to either conquer or force these groups to submit to Rome. The toughest challenge came from the Greeks that inhabited the southern part of the peninsula. “Pyrrhic Vi ...
Rosenstein-- New Approaches Roman Military HistoryPost.RTF
Rosenstein-- New Approaches Roman Military HistoryPost.RTF

... strategies, and tactics that bring them into conflict and that have long been thought to determine the outcomes of battles. This approach might be thought of as the “general’s-eye view” of war, a way of understanding battles heavily criticized by Keegan in The Face of Battle and quite contrary to hi ...
C6.1 - The Foundations of Rome - World History and Honors History 9
C6.1 - The Foundations of Rome - World History and Honors History 9

... controlled finances, handled foreign relations ...
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Roman historiography

Roman historiography is indebted to the Greeks, who invented the form. The Romans had great models to base their works upon, such as Herodotus (c. 484 – 425 BCE) and Thucydides (c. 460 – c. 395 BCE). Roman historiographical forms are different from the Greek ones however, and voice very Roman concerns. Unlike the Greeks, Roman historiography did not start out with an oral historical tradition. The Roman style of history was based on the way that the Annals of the Pontifex Maximus, or the Annales Maximi, were recorded. The Annales Maximi include a wide array of information, including religious documents, names of consuls, deaths of priests, and various disasters throughout history. Also part of the Annales Maximi are the White Tablets, or the “Tabulae Albatae,” which consist of information on the origin of the republic.
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