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Ancient Rome and the Punic Wars (264
Ancient Rome and the Punic Wars (264

... Results of the Punic Wars: During and After Rome and Carthage had Roman control of been what you might call Macedonia the “superpowers” of • Hannibal had made an alliance with the Macedonian king the Mediterranean at • Rome attacked and defeated the time • Rome’s defeat of Carthage left Rome as the ...
Ancient Rome and the Punic Wars (264-146 BCE)
Ancient Rome and the Punic Wars (264-146 BCE)

... Results of the Punic Wars: During and After Rome and Carthage had Roman control of been what you might call Macedonia the “superpowers” of • Hannibal had made an alliance with the Macedonian king the Mediterranean at • Rome attacked and defeated the time • Rome’s defeat of Carthage left Rome as the ...
ANCIENT ROME HANDOUTS
ANCIENT ROME HANDOUTS

Early Rome - Villiers Park
Early Rome - Villiers Park

... expelled from Rome as the result of the rape of Lucretia, across the Adriatic the last tyrant of Athens, Hippias, was expelled from the city as the result of another sexual indiscretion. Can we believe that these two events, which had so much in common, really happened at the same time. Have a think ...
The Berbers
The Berbers

... Just as the aristocracy were willing to co-operate with Rome if they wer,e given the right sort of position in their cities and eventually in the empire as a whole, the creation of auxiliary units of Numidian cavalry gave a new role to an important component in African society, one which brought wit ...
Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar

... Leptius • A Roman General responsible for the reconciliation of Antony and Octavious ...
3. The Parthian Empire (176 BCE – 224 CE) By 200 BCE, the
3. The Parthian Empire (176 BCE – 224 CE) By 200 BCE, the

Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar

... • Deals with Roman generals and the life and times of ancient Rome • It is a political play about a general who would be king, but who, because of his own PRIDE and AMBITION, meets an untimely death ...
The Phoenicians and Carthage
The Phoenicians and Carthage

... known as the Punic Wars because Punica was the Roman name for Carthage. The Roman Navy surprised the sea trading people by winning the first war in 238BCE. The Carthaginians acquired a new base in Spain from which a great military leader named Hannibal led a team of elephants across southern France ...
Educational
Educational

How Excessive Government Killed Ancient Rome
How Excessive Government Killed Ancient Rome

... The author is a Senior Fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis. ...
1-Legacy of the Roman Empire
1-Legacy of the Roman Empire

Ancient Rome - Williams
Ancient Rome - Williams

... What happened to the ancient Greek civilization? • Aristotle’s greatest student, Alexander the Great conquered and united Greece. • He conquered the middle East. • He expanded his empire all the way to India. • After fighting for 11 years straight his soldiers wanted to go home. • After Alexander d ...
Iron Age to King Arthur
Iron Age to King Arthur

... Our town was called Corinium by the Romans, who built a military fort here soon after they invaded. It was built on the site of a possible earlier settlement called Caer-coryn, ‘the town on the Churn,’ at the crossing of the river. It became the junction of important pre-Roman and new Roman routes. ...
pakistan and the silk road the taxila contexts
pakistan and the silk road the taxila contexts

... emperors 35 (one in the time of Trajan) and a number of Roman pots have been discovered on the coast of South India 36, but the Roman evidence from South India traversing towards north-west is very negligible 37. Direct land contacts between the Roman Empire and Gandhara were always hampered. Parth ...
The Punic Wars
The Punic Wars

... • Rome built a navy (at first Carthage was stronger at sea). • The Roman Ships had a gangplank to hook on to enemy boats so legionaries could board and fight on deck. • Rome utterly destroyed the Carthaginian Navy. ...
James B. Tschen
James B. Tschen

... that this was the period in which roman history began. By the sixth century Bce rome was under the control of the etruscans, a federation of cities that by 500 Bce ruled italy from the campania region to the Po river. the literary  record  relects  this  period  of  Etruscan  suzerainty  as  well.  ...
Lesson 1: Punic War Games- Activity
Lesson 1: Punic War Games- Activity

... available for them to refer to historic information on Punic Wars, rather than taking notes directly from video. Write simplified instructions for activity on the board or overhead and check for understanding before beginning the activity. Student Tasks: Session 1- Students take notes on handout dur ...
Roman Educator Packet - Dayton Art Institute
Roman Educator Packet - Dayton Art Institute

... laws. By 27 BCE, the Roman Republic was finished, and the period of history known as the empire began with Julius Caesar Octavius who took the name Augustus and became the first emperor of the Roman Empire. Emperors would rule Rome until its demise in 476 CE. ...
The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) – Outline
The Punic Wars (264-146 BCE) – Outline

... 2. But Hannibal could not capture the city of Rome b. Rome: General Scipio i. Led an army against Carthaginian Iberia (modern-day Spain) ii. Then led an army against Carthage itself iii. Then returned to Italy to defend the city of Rome iv. Battle of Zama (202 BCE) 1. Hannibal’s first and only defea ...
Chapter 6: Ancient Rome and Early Christianity
Chapter 6: Ancient Rome and Early Christianity

... Centuries (named for a military formation of 100 soldiers) elected officials of the executive branch. However, the Senate—a group of 300 patrician men who served for life—had much more power. They advised the consuls, debated foreign policy, proposed laws, and approved contracts for constructing roa ...
Roman Military - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
Roman Military - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

... Rubicon River and entered Italy. • One of the laws of the original Twelve Tables was that no general could enter the city with his army. Julius Caesar ignored this law. In 49 BCE, he entered Rome with the Roman Legion, and took over the government. The poor people of Rome, who made up the bulk of th ...
Expansion During the Final Years of the Republic PowerPoint
Expansion During the Final Years of the Republic PowerPoint

The Trajan`s Column Frieze as a Confluence of Military Geography
The Trajan`s Column Frieze as a Confluence of Military Geography

... of the Dacians.” The armies’ inexorable forward push was enacted by hacking roads out of forests and building bridges over rivers and causeways across challenging terrain. Near the Iron Gates on the Danube, they carved an elevated roadway into the sheer rock cliffs over the river, near the site wher ...
Gladiatorial Murder Article_3
Gladiatorial Murder Article_3

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Travel in Classical antiquity

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