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AP World History
AP World History

Rome
Rome

... Rome as a Republic – 509 B.C. ...
Roman Republic
Roman Republic

TheBeginningsofRome
TheBeginningsofRome

... served in the governing body called the Senate. This should all sound somewhat familiar to you because in NC, we have representatives and senators as well. At first, the republic was only run by patricians. The senate was all patricians. If we compare that with today, typically, all US senators in o ...
Rome: From Republic to Empire
Rome: From Republic to Empire

... 1. They ruled much of Italy including Rome itself 2. They were driven out of Italy in 509 BCE making way for Rome to step forward ...
notes on the Roman Empire - Stjohns
notes on the Roman Empire - Stjohns

... victorious on many occasions, unable to win decisively and ultimately loses when Scipio leads an attack against Carthage itself ...
BrainPop #2 Pax Romana and Pax Romana
BrainPop #2 Pax Romana and Pax Romana

... Throughout the 200 years Rome needed a professional and permanent army to protect itself from rebellions and outside invaders. Rome’s military was strong and well trained. As time passed new emperors used the Roman military to increase the size of the empire all the way into England, Africa, and the ...
Roman Government
Roman Government

... Directions:   Read the following paragraph and use what you have learned about the Roman Republic  to answer these questions. ...
The Patricians and the Plebeians
The Patricians and the Plebeians

... The Patricians and the Plebeians The Etruscans were a brutal civilization from the northern part of the Italian peninsula. The Etruscans conquered most of Rome and, for more than a century, rained terror on the Roman people. The patricians were the most prosperous families of Rome. In 509BC, a group ...
The Patricians and the Plebeians
The Patricians and the Plebeians

... The Patricians and the Plebeians The Etruscans were a brutal civilization from the northern part of the Italian peninsula. The Etruscans conquered most of Rome and, for more than a century, rained terror on the Roman people. The patricians were the most prosperous families of Rome. In 509BC, a group ...
Chapter 10 Packet 2017
Chapter 10 Packet 2017

...  Each legion was divided into ...
EMPERORS OF ROME
EMPERORS OF ROME

File - Ms. Smith`s Language Arts and Social Studies
File - Ms. Smith`s Language Arts and Social Studies

The Fall of Rome
The Fall of Rome

... when the last emperor, Romulus Augustus, was deposed by a barbarian, Odoacer  Eastern (Byzantine) Empire Lasted until 1453 when the empire was conquered by the Ottoman Turks ...
NOTES on PYRRHUS and PUNIC WARS
NOTES on PYRRHUS and PUNIC WARS

...  Pyrrhus was King of Epirus, a Greek kingdom that splintered off from Alexander’s empire.  Rome went to war with Taranto, a Greek city in Southern Italy in 280 BC  Taranto appealed to Epirus for help against Rome. Pyrrhus was a renowned mercenary, and brought an army (including elephants) into It ...
The Roman World Takes Shape
The Roman World Takes Shape

The Origins of Rome
The Origins of Rome

...  Consuls (x2)- executive; leaders in battle  Praetors- administered laws  Quaestors- administered treasury  Tribune (x10)- protected rights of Plebeians ...
Timeline from Boatwright, Romans
Timeline from Boatwright, Romans

... c. 200—c. 170 Numerous colonies are established in both peninsular Italy and the Po Valley 195 Cato’s consulship, and (to 194) command in Spain 192—189 Rome defeats Antiochus III in the Syrian War 186—183 Suppression of the cult of Bacchus in Italy 171—168 Third Macedonian War; end of its monarchy 1 ...
Slide 1
Slide 1

... senate, which is something their predecessors had failed to accomplish. All of these emperors died without passing the succession on (except Marcus Aurelius), so each of these emperors were elected by the Senate from within its own ranks. This period was the period of the greatest political stabilit ...
From Republic to Empire
From Republic to Empire

Rome: The Crisis of the Republic
Rome: The Crisis of the Republic

ancient rome - WMLGalaxy
ancient rome - WMLGalaxy

... Rights gained by the Plebeians over the years: • Tribunes of the Plebs to represent their interests to the Senate • Council of Plebs that could make laws only about themselves • All laws were written down – The Twelve Tables • One consul had to be a plebeian – in this way it was possible for a pleb ...
The destruction of Carthage during the Punic Wars. New York Public
The destruction of Carthage during the Punic Wars. New York Public

File
File

From Republic to Empire 2013
From Republic to Empire 2013

... When: ◦ 265 to 146 b.c.e ...
< 1 ... 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 ... 138 >

Promagistrate

A promagistrate (Latin: pro magistratu) is a person who acts in and with the authority and capacity of a magistrate, but without holding a magisterial office. A legal innovation of the Roman Republic, the promagistracy was invented in order to provide Rome with governors of overseas territories instead of having to elect more magistrates each year. Promagistrates were appointed by senatus consultum; like all acts of the Roman Senate, these appointments were not entirely legal and could be overruled by the Roman assemblies, e.g., the replacement of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus by Gaius Marius during the Jugurthine War.Promagistrates were usually either proquaestors (acting in place of quaestors), propraetors, acting in place of praetors, or proconsuls acting in place of consuls. A promagistrate held equal authority to the equivalent magistrate, was attended by the same number of lictors, and generally speaking had autocratic power within his province, be it territorial or otherwise. Promagistrates usually had already held the office in whose stead they were acting, although this was not mandatory.One should also mention here the procurator, a posting originally as a financial manager in a province, a position which held no magisterial power until Claudius gave them his power in the mid 40s AD, enabling them to administer provinces.The institution of promagistracies developed because the Romans found it inconvenient to continue adding ordinary magistracies to administer their newly acquired overseas possessions. Therefore, they adopted the practice of appointing an individual to act in place or capacity of (pro) a magistrate (magistratu); a promagistrate was literally a lieutenant. Subsequently, when Pompeius Magnus was given proconsular imperium to fight against Quintus Sertorius, the Senate made a point of distinguishing that he was not actually being appointed a promagistrate: he was appointed to act not in place of a consul (pro consule), but on behalf of the consuls (pro consulibus).The Roman legal concept of imperium meant that an ""imperial"" magistrate or promagistrate had absolute authority within the competence of his office; a promagistrate with imperium appointed to govern a province, therefore, had absolute authority within his capacity as governor of that province; indeed, the word provincia referred both to the governor's office or jurisdiction and to the territory he governed. A provincial governor had almost totally unlimited authority, and frequently extorted vast amounts of money from the provincial population — he had total immunity from prosecution during his term in office. It became fairly common for provincial governors to seek continual election to office to avoid trial for extortion and bribery, two famous examples being Gaius Verres and Lucius Sergius Catilina.The near limitless power of a high-ranking promagistrate has led to the term ""proconsul"" being used to designate any high-ranking and authoritative official appointed from above (or from without) to govern a territory without regard for local political institutions (i.e., one who is not elected and whose authority supersedes that of local officials). One of the most prominent examples of this is Douglas MacArthur, who was given vast powers to implement reform and recovery efforts in Japan after World War II, and has been described occasionally as ""the American proconsul of Japan"".
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