
Rome #2
... The Roman leader Scipio attacks Carthage causing Hannibal to rush home and help. Battle of Zama= Scipio defeats Hannibal ending the 2nd Punic War. Hannibal later kills himself to avoid capture. ...
... The Roman leader Scipio attacks Carthage causing Hannibal to rush home and help. Battle of Zama= Scipio defeats Hannibal ending the 2nd Punic War. Hannibal later kills himself to avoid capture. ...
Unit 2 CA Review Sheet 2016
... *All citizens are created equal *Right to representation in a court of law *Trial by jury of your peers ...
... *All citizens are created equal *Right to representation in a court of law *Trial by jury of your peers ...
20130508152130
... eventually was given away • Senate felt threatened and had him killed in 121 B.C. ...
... eventually was given away • Senate felt threatened and had him killed in 121 B.C. ...
CC 302 Study Guide: Exam 1 Important Names, Events, Terms to
... Cursus honorum (“ladder of offices”): the prescribed series of magistracies that Roman senators sought to hold in order to become leading public figures Consul: full power of Kings but 1year term (Brutus) Praetor: 2nd in command to consuls, annual magistracy with imperium, an important step in the c ...
... Cursus honorum (“ladder of offices”): the prescribed series of magistracies that Roman senators sought to hold in order to become leading public figures Consul: full power of Kings but 1year term (Brutus) Praetor: 2nd in command to consuls, annual magistracy with imperium, an important step in the c ...
Political - Spring Branch ISD
... democracy of the world, under one man, the best ruler and director”, he was Reflecting that the Roman Empire was the best of democracy and monarchy: the people’s wishes were fulfilled, and the emperor was fair and ...
... democracy of the world, under one man, the best ruler and director”, he was Reflecting that the Roman Empire was the best of democracy and monarchy: the people’s wishes were fulfilled, and the emperor was fair and ...
File
... • Military breaks down as generals seek to maximize their own power. Many recruit the poor and homeless to fight for them as soldiers. • Rome lapses into a period of civil war – fighting between groups within the same country. ...
... • Military breaks down as generals seek to maximize their own power. Many recruit the poor and homeless to fight for them as soldiers. • Rome lapses into a period of civil war – fighting between groups within the same country. ...
From Classical to Contemporary
... 287 BCE: Tribal Assembly gave full civil equality and legal protection to plebeians although upper class remained in power (Perry 120); considered to be end of plebeian-patrician struggle but Rome was still ruled by upper class ...
... 287 BCE: Tribal Assembly gave full civil equality and legal protection to plebeians although upper class remained in power (Perry 120); considered to be end of plebeian-patrician struggle but Rome was still ruled by upper class ...
The legacy of Rome: the language and imagery of power
... repeated on buildings, monuments, statues and coins throughout the empire and have served to define many modern terms (Slide 3). For example, on line one, the letters ‘IMP’ stand for Imperator, a term that originally denoted a person who could exercise a specific power (imperium) in the republic but ...
... repeated on buildings, monuments, statues and coins throughout the empire and have served to define many modern terms (Slide 3). For example, on line one, the letters ‘IMP’ stand for Imperator, a term that originally denoted a person who could exercise a specific power (imperium) in the republic but ...
ancient roman civilization - University of Memphis, the Blogs
... Number doubled again in 267 after conquest of Italy, and went up in later Republic, when questors were regularly employed in administering provinces. Was regarded as the first major office in a public career. Censor: office created in 444 BCE to take over the consuls’ traditional responsibilities in ...
... Number doubled again in 267 after conquest of Italy, and went up in later Republic, when questors were regularly employed in administering provinces. Was regarded as the first major office in a public career. Censor: office created in 444 BCE to take over the consuls’ traditional responsibilities in ...
Main Idea 1
... The first branch was made up of both plebeians and patricians. Their primary job was to elect the magistrates. ...
... The first branch was made up of both plebeians and patricians. Their primary job was to elect the magistrates. ...
End of Republic/Triumvirate Powerpoint
... Discontent of Italian allies ◦ After Punic Wars, allies permitted to Have some form of local gov’t Trade with Rome Inter-marry with Romans ...
... Discontent of Italian allies ◦ After Punic Wars, allies permitted to Have some form of local gov’t Trade with Rome Inter-marry with Romans ...
Rome
... Plebeians won the right to form political organizations of their own (Plebian trial assembly) Elected Tribunes (officials with power to protect plebeians from abuse by patrician magistrate) The Tribunes could VETO any action of a magistrate or any bill in a Roman assembly or Senate ...
... Plebeians won the right to form political organizations of their own (Plebian trial assembly) Elected Tribunes (officials with power to protect plebeians from abuse by patrician magistrate) The Tribunes could VETO any action of a magistrate or any bill in a Roman assembly or Senate ...
Section 3 * The Late Republic
... • The Roman army began to run out of soldiers. • Gaius Marius, a consul at the time, decided to invite the poor to join the army. ...
... • The Roman army began to run out of soldiers. • Gaius Marius, a consul at the time, decided to invite the poor to join the army. ...
Slide 1
... The native language of the Romans was Latin, an Italic language. An inflectional and synthetic language, Latin relies little on word order, conveying meaning through a system of affixes attached to word stems. Its alphabet, the Latin alphabet, is based on the Old Italic alphabet, which is in turn ...
... The native language of the Romans was Latin, an Italic language. An inflectional and synthetic language, Latin relies little on word order, conveying meaning through a system of affixes attached to word stems. Its alphabet, the Latin alphabet, is based on the Old Italic alphabet, which is in turn ...
The Hellenistic Age, 336-31 BCE
... contacts with Etruscans, in seventh and sixth centuries B.C.E. ...
... contacts with Etruscans, in seventh and sixth centuries B.C.E. ...
File - UAGC SOCIAL STUDIES
... fruit falls from your trees it is yours no matter where it falls. If you lied in court you would be thrown off of the Tarpeian Rock. You could not hold a political or business meeting at night. Dinner parties and religious festivals at night were ok. Everyone who died had to buried or burned o ...
... fruit falls from your trees it is yours no matter where it falls. If you lied in court you would be thrown off of the Tarpeian Rock. You could not hold a political or business meeting at night. Dinner parties and religious festivals at night were ok. Everyone who died had to buried or burned o ...
6.2 – The Roman Empire
... • Military breaks down as generals seek to maximize their own power. Many recruit the poor and homeless to fight for them as soldiers. • Rome lapses into a period of civil war – fighting between groups within the same country. ...
... • Military breaks down as generals seek to maximize their own power. Many recruit the poor and homeless to fight for them as soldiers. • Rome lapses into a period of civil war – fighting between groups within the same country. ...
what is republican government?
... country that has a government in which power is held by the people who elect representatives. • These representatives manage the government for the good of the people. ...
... country that has a government in which power is held by the people who elect representatives. • These representatives manage the government for the good of the people. ...
WORLD HISTORY Greece and Rome NOTES
... First and foremost in his legacy “Hellenism” means to “be like the Greeks” and had a profound impact on western human history Greek artists, merchants, and artisans settled in land conquered by Alexander’s army New “Greek” cities were built; all followed similar patterns of design They con ...
... First and foremost in his legacy “Hellenism” means to “be like the Greeks” and had a profound impact on western human history Greek artists, merchants, and artisans settled in land conquered by Alexander’s army New “Greek” cities were built; all followed similar patterns of design They con ...
Fusion Rome Becomes An Empire
... “As Rome grew, the gap between rich and poor grew wider. Many of Rome’s rich landowners lived on huge estates. Thousands of enslaved persons – many of whom had been captured peoples in various wars – were forced to work on these estates. By 100 B.C., enslaved persons formed perhaps one-third of Rome ...
... “As Rome grew, the gap between rich and poor grew wider. Many of Rome’s rich landowners lived on huge estates. Thousands of enslaved persons – many of whom had been captured peoples in various wars – were forced to work on these estates. By 100 B.C., enslaved persons formed perhaps one-third of Rome ...
Rome - Teacher Pages
... Army. Praetors- They were in charge of civil law Roman Senate- 300 Patricians who served for life. They advised government officials, and eventually gained the power of making laws. ...
... Army. Praetors- They were in charge of civil law Roman Senate- 300 Patricians who served for life. They advised government officials, and eventually gained the power of making laws. ...
Cursus honorum

The cursus honorum (Latin: ""course of offices"") was the sequential order of public offices held by aspiring politicians in both the Roman Republic and the early Empire. It was designed for men of senatorial rank. The cursus honorum comprised a mixture of military and political administration posts. Each office had a minimum age for election. There were minimum intervals between holding successive offices and laws forbade repeating an office.These rules were altered and flagrantly ignored in the course of the last century of the Republic. For example, Gaius Marius held consulships for five years in a row between 104 BC and 100 BC. Officially presented as opportunities for public service, the offices often became mere opportunities for self-aggrandizement. The reforms of Lucius Cornelius Sulla required a ten-year period between holding another term in the same office.To have held each office at the youngest possible age (suo anno, ""in his year"") was considered a great political success, since to miss out on a praetorship at 39 meant that one could not become consul at 42. Cicero expressed extreme pride not only in being a novus homo (""new man""; comparable to a ""self-made man"") who became consul even though none of his ancestors had ever served as a consul, but also in having become consul ""in his year"".