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... e) P1 assessing the impact of military conquests on the army, economy, and social structure of Rome. Why did the Roman Republic fail to survive challenges by Julius Caesar? - The Roman Republic, in the face of changing social and economic conditions, succumbed to civil war and was replaced by an imp ...
The Punic Wars - Grade10AncientMedieval
The Punic Wars - Grade10AncientMedieval

... The Second Punic War turned Rome from a regional power into an international empire: it had gained much of northern Africa, Spain, and the major islands in the western Mediterranean. Because Philip V of Macedon had allied himself with Hannibal and started his own war of conquest, the second Punic Wa ...
Introduction
Introduction

... Domitian had ruled from A.D. 81 – 96, and was widely regarded as one of Rome’s “wicked” emperors (at least by the senatorial class, which has provided us with most of our source material and which suffered most from his paranoia and cruelty; the general population seemed generally indifferent to him ...
The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire
The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire

... Constantine became a Christian. He wanted others to believe, too. After that, it was legal to be a Christian. ...
agricola, tacitus, and scotland - Council for British Archaeology
agricola, tacitus, and scotland - Council for British Archaeology

... Julius Frontinus, is credited by Tacitus with campaigning against the Silures of south Wales, although it is hard to believe that the north of Britain was yet sufficiently secure to have been left free of Roman military activity at this stage. As Tacitus recounts it, all of this was, however, but th ...
TERMS AND NAMES USEFUL FOR ROMAN ART CA
TERMS AND NAMES USEFUL FOR ROMAN ART CA

... the first century BCE) in the Capitoline Museum is traditionally called "Brutus"; it likely depicts some Republican hero. Aemelius Paullus: General who defeated the Macedonians in 167 BC and was honored with an equestrian statue at Delphi. The reliefs on the base of this statue depict the battle of ...
Andrew Chow November 19, 2012 History 10A Augustus and
Andrew Chow November 19, 2012 History 10A Augustus and

... Entire groups of people were brought together and given an opportunity to exchange goods and ideas under the regime of Alexander the Great. If it were not for Alexander’s conquests, it might have been much later before these diverse groups of people came in contact with one another. Augustus and Ale ...
Ancient Rome. History and culture
Ancient Rome. History and culture

... ______ fed and cared for them. Later a shepherd looked after the ____ until they grew up. Years later, Mars told his twin sons to build a city there. The city was Rome. One day, Remus made fun of the wall Romulus had built around the city. The twins argued, fought and Romulus _______Remus. Today, hi ...
TTC Foundations of West. Civ II
TTC Foundations of West. Civ II

... A. Aristotle learned much from his master, and the differences between them should not be exaggerated. B. Aristotle was a prolific writer but also a rigorously systematic one. C. Marked by what one scholar called “inspired common sense,” Aristotle based his ideas on observation and close study, not ...
Document C: Augustus (Modified)
Document C: Augustus (Modified)

... Document C: Augustus (Modified) When Emperor Augustus felt ill and thought his life was coming to an end, he began writing down his accomplishments. This is a first person account of his life and accomplishments. Initially, it was carved into bronze and put in Augustus’ mausoleum. Later copies were ...
File
File

SOCIETAS VIA ROMANA NEWSLETTER
SOCIETAS VIA ROMANA NEWSLETTER

... liberty and their freedom. They knew what was sacred. They knew from where true sanctity was derived. And they knew what true courage entails, honoring it in every story they told. For the ancient Romans, the principles of justice by which they had established their Republic were handed down by the ...
The Roman Dictator
The Roman Dictator

... Senate passed a senatus consultum, an order that one of the consuls would nominate a Dictator to serve for a period of six months. The nomination was either rei gerendae causa (for the matter to be done), or seditionis sedandae causa (for the putting down of rebellion). In many cases, the Dictator r ...
Further information: Celts and human sacrifice, Threefold death and
Further information: Celts and human sacrifice, Threefold death and

The Five Good Emperors* Hadrian
The Five Good Emperors* Hadrian

Caesar
Caesar

... them and took all their money, including his ransom, and then had them all crucified. You can see that Caesar was sometimes charming and sometimes extremely cruel, even back then. ...
masada
masada

... The main reasons of the Jewish War were the impoverishment of the Jewish peasantry. Sixty years of Roman taxation had meant only one thing: the Jews had to pay money, which was spent in Italy and on the border. Another reason was the religious tension between the Jewish populace and the Roman govern ...
The Third Punic War - Prep World History I
The Third Punic War - Prep World History I

... a monarchy, than to a republican and Roman policy. Again, there were some who took the opposite line to these. They said that if it were really true that, before the Carthaginians had made the surrender, the Romans had behaved as alleged, holding out inducements here, and making half revelations the ...
Answers to questions for What Every Child Needs
Answers to questions for What Every Child Needs

... solar calendar. The Roman lunar calendar was in drastic need of reform. 3. Sosigenes was a great astronomer and mathematician. Like all scholarly Greeks of his day, he lived in Alexandria so he could study and work at the great university library of Alexandria, which was built by Cleopatra’s ancesto ...
The Roman Empire (A.D. 14–180 ) Height of the Roman Empire
The Roman Empire (A.D. 14–180 ) Height of the Roman Empire

... Meanwhile, Rome’s poor and unemployed crowded into the cities. They lived in small smelly rooms in apartment houses with six or more stories called islands. Each island covered an entire block. At one time there were 44,000 apartment houses within the city walls of Rome. First-floor apartments were ...
Julio-Claudian emperors
Julio-Claudian emperors

... western part of the Roman empire was overthrown by barbarians, there were 165 Roman emperors! No emperor ever ruled as long as Augustus who occupied the imperial throne for 41 years. Only six other emperors ruled for more than 20 years. It was certainly one of the best and worst jobs in the world as ...
Roman Military - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
Roman Military - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

Document
Document

... Some senators begin to conspire. . . Brutus, Caesar’s friend who believes that he must act against Caesar for the good of Rome Casca, who hates the ordinary citizens of Rome yet is jealous because they love Caesar and not him Cassius, a greedy and jealous man who wants to take drastic measures to ke ...
Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome
Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome

... pathological in Roman culture. The modern scholarly concentration upon the (negative) characteristics of Roman society and culture, and its focus upon the aggressive stance of Rome—and Rome alone—toward the world, probably derives ultimately from the tradition of hostile analysis of successful imper ...
The Crisis of the Third Century
The Crisis of the Third Century

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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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