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Barbarians Invade Rome! Questions
Barbarians Invade Rome! Questions

... Europe, but even then there were other groups of people who were not part of the Roman Empire living in Europe too. Many of these groups, called tribes, lived in the far north. Others lived in various parts of Europe not occupied by the Roman Empire. The barbarian tribes, as many of them were known, ...
Roman Achievements
Roman Achievements

... Roman Calendar • The Romans began using a new solar calendar that was borrowed heavily from the Egyptian calendar and had been improved by the scholars of Alexandria. • This new calendar (called the “Julian calendar” after Julius Caesar) had 365 days and 1 extra day every fourth year. • July was na ...
Augustus Information Augustus was born Gaius Octavius on Sept
Augustus Information Augustus was born Gaius Octavius on Sept

... “Caligula,” meaning “little boot,” in reference to the miniature uniform in which his parents dressed him. After Germanicus died in 17 A.D., Caligula’s family fell from favor in the eyes of the emperor Tiberius and the powerful Praetorian guardsman Sejanus, who saw the elder sons of the popular gene ...
Daily Life in Ancient Rome
Daily Life in Ancient Rome

... Religion was very important to the Romans who adopted many Greek gods, as well as gods from other cultures to create their own group of Roman gods. Romans wanted to please their gods because they believed that the gods controlled their daily lives. At Rome’s many temples and shrines, people made off ...
Roman History - teacheroftruth.net
Roman History - teacheroftruth.net

... c. Spartacus decided to fight like the Romans d. *Spartacus was killed and they took 6,000 men and they crucified them along the Appian Way c. *Change in the Roman Army - 100 BC i. The expanding empire meant long campaigns overseas 1. *For property owners this was too long 2. *Only 130,000 men in th ...
ThE_RoMaNs_
ThE_RoMaNs_

... The First Punic War was fought against the people of Carthage. This war was fought from 264-241 BC. The Punic War was fought in order for whichever army one would gain control of Sicily. In order to get to Sicily to fight the Carthaginians, the Romans had to cross the straites of Messina on two leg ...
20130508152130
20130508152130

... (things taken from the enemy in war) ...
Rome 6.1 - mrs
Rome 6.1 - mrs

... When laws were unwritten, the patricians could interpret the law to suit themselves.  In 451 BC, a group of 10 officials began writing down Rome’s laws.  The laws were carved on 12 tablets (or tables) and hung in the Forum.  Established the idea that all free citizens, patricians, and plebeians, ...
Rome geog and govt
Rome geog and govt

... Pre-class • What does the phrase Semper Fidelis mean? Where have you heard it before? What language is it? • What does the phrase “Carpe Diem” mean? What language is it? ...
Greek City-States, Persia, Alexander the Great, Rome
Greek City-States, Persia, Alexander the Great, Rome

... • Served for 1 year • The Senate was the most powerful government body in the Roman Republic • Unlike the consuls, senators served for life ...
Lecture 2.1 Rome
Lecture 2.1 Rome

... http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Ancient_Roman_road_of_Tall_Aqibrin.jpg ...
QuizBackground Shake and JC 2016
QuizBackground Shake and JC 2016

Packet #5 The Roman Empire: Rise and Fall The Classical Era 600
Packet #5 The Roman Empire: Rise and Fall The Classical Era 600

... elite class determined by birth known as patricians. The common people are known as the plebeians.  Class struggles were a long standing problem in Rome  The Roman Senate came to hold an especially important position in the Roman Republic. o The senate or council of elders was as a select group of ...
Cloze 11
Cloze 11

... wars against Carthage, a city in northern Africa. The word ______ means “Phoenician” in Latin. As you learned earlier in this book, the Phoenicians were an ancient civilization that had built the city of Carthage. _____ and __________ went to war three times between 264 and 146 BC. The wars began wh ...
RMVIKTST
RMVIKTST

... a. Economic b. Social c. Political 7. Contagious diseases, brought to Rome by soldiers in the Roman Legions, killed thousands. a. Economic b. Social c. Political 8. Romans spent more money than they should have on entertainment and expensive luxuries. a. Economic b. Social c. Political 9. After the ...
Rome
Rome

... Carthage making them give up lands in Spain, most of their war ships, and more money to pay for damages – 3rd Punic War • 50 years later • Carthage gains some more power, but is no threat to Rome • Romans burn down the city, sold the surviving population into slavery, and sowed salt in the soil so n ...
Ancient Rome
Ancient Rome

... The Seven Hills of Rome east of the Tiber form the heart of Rome. The Seven Hills of early Rome – the Cermalus, Cispius, Fagutal, Oppius, Palatium, Sucusa and Velia – figured prominently in Roman mythology, religion, and politics. The original city was held by tradition to have been founded by Romul ...
MYTH: Horatii
MYTH: Horatii

... before his own family. From that time on, any Roman citizen condemned to death could appeal his sentence to the Comitia for pardon. After a long hard fight, two of the Horatii were dead and all three of the Curiatii wounded. The remaining Horatius, knowing he could not defeat three warriors by himse ...
notes
notes

... C. They ate much meat and fish, but they also grew vegetables. D. Clothes were mostly made from wool. Men wore short woolen tunics and close fitting trousers. These were covered with cloaks and fastened on the right shoulder with a brooch. ...
Roman Daily Life/Accomplishments
Roman Daily Life/Accomplishments

... – To divorce, a messenger was sent telling him/her to take their belongings away. – The woman remained legally subject to her father. ...
Warm Up: Monday, September 10 th
Warm Up: Monday, September 10 th

the roman republic PP
the roman republic PP

... or organize games and festivals • The two most powerful magistrates were called consuls, they were elected every year to run the city and lead the army ...
CLASSICAL civilization in the mediterranean
CLASSICAL civilization in the mediterranean

... In 509 BCE the Romans overthrow the last Etruscan king & created an aristocratic republic. The Senate was created (like our Senate/Congress) to make laws for the republic Only patricians (upper-class aristocrats with lots of land) could be in it. They elected 2 consuls every year to lead the city (l ...
Chapter 14 The Roman Republic
Chapter 14 The Roman Republic

... In 123 B.C., Tiberius Gracchus’s younger brother, Gaius Gracchus, was elected tribune. When the Senate began to feel threatened by his ideas in 121 B.C. they had him killed. In 107 B.C., General Gaius Marius, a military hero, became consul. Marius thought he could end Rome’s troubles by setting up a ...
What could a member of the consul always do
What could a member of the consul always do

... Because of its geography The two things Romans learned from the Etruscans are? The Alphabet and architecture What could a member of the consul always do? Overrule, or veto, the other’s decisions What did Patricians say about their ancestry? That it gave them the authority to make laws for Rome Who w ...
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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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