The Roman Republic
... conquered nearly all of Italy Different laws for different parts • Three groups: Rome, ...
... conquered nearly all of Italy Different laws for different parts • Three groups: Rome, ...
Ancient Rome - Roman Conquest
... rulers who share power. These three leaders struggled with on another for power, and civil wars broke out. ...
... rulers who share power. These three leaders struggled with on another for power, and civil wars broke out. ...
The Punic Wars • Rome experienced three wars with Carthage
... Elder captured Spain, and then began to invade northern Africa. Hannibal abandoned his campaign in Italy and went south to defend the Carthage itself. By the end of this war, Carthage was stripped of its various territories, and reduced to a small area around the city of Carthage itself. It was forc ...
... Elder captured Spain, and then began to invade northern Africa. Hannibal abandoned his campaign in Italy and went south to defend the Carthage itself. By the end of this war, Carthage was stripped of its various territories, and reduced to a small area around the city of Carthage itself. It was forc ...
Rome questions - RedfieldAncient
... (a) Why was there conflict between Rome and Carthage in this period? (b) Assess the consequences of the growth of empire on Roman social and political Life in this period. ...
... (a) Why was there conflict between Rome and Carthage in this period? (b) Assess the consequences of the growth of empire on Roman social and political Life in this period. ...
What happened next information: Event E: The Third Punic War
... -The wars with Carthage had a momentous effect on Roman military expansion in the Mediterranean region. Victory in the First Punic War (264 - 241 B.C.E.) left Rome with control of Sicily, and eventually neighboring Sardinia and Corsica. During the Second Punic War (218 - 201 B.C.E.), in addition to ...
... -The wars with Carthage had a momentous effect on Roman military expansion in the Mediterranean region. Victory in the First Punic War (264 - 241 B.C.E.) left Rome with control of Sicily, and eventually neighboring Sardinia and Corsica. During the Second Punic War (218 - 201 B.C.E.), in addition to ...
Roman Republic Continued
... 3. What were the differences and similarities between Rome’s patricians and plebeians? 4. What was the advantage to writing down the laws? 5. What were some advantages and disadvantages of the time limits on Roman government service? 6. Why do you think Romans gave full citizenship to conquered peop ...
... 3. What were the differences and similarities between Rome’s patricians and plebeians? 4. What was the advantage to writing down the laws? 5. What were some advantages and disadvantages of the time limits on Roman government service? 6. Why do you think Romans gave full citizenship to conquered peop ...
Rome Notes Roman Values and Virtues • Greeks vs. Romans
... Third PW – ca 146… Cato: “Carthago delenda est”….For years Cato had muttered that Carthage had to be destroyed….. So, Rome successfully mopped up what was left of Carthage and left it in ruins ...
... Third PW – ca 146… Cato: “Carthago delenda est”….For years Cato had muttered that Carthage had to be destroyed….. So, Rome successfully mopped up what was left of Carthage and left it in ruins ...
Mediterranean Sea Italian Peninsula Rome
... How was geographic location important to economic, social, and political development of Ancient Rome?_______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ _ ...
... How was geographic location important to economic, social, and political development of Ancient Rome?_______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________ _ ...
Guided Reading Lesson 2 Rome As a Republic
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valentina+religion!!!!!!!!!!!!! - ps1286-1
... location so they could say ?whatever happens is a sign from the gods.? The Roman architects first learned from the Greeks but when they became a world power they built with more imagination. Romans also went to public baths which were most common in ancient days. Most Roman men and women tried to vi ...
... location so they could say ?whatever happens is a sign from the gods.? The Roman architects first learned from the Greeks but when they became a world power they built with more imagination. Romans also went to public baths which were most common in ancient days. Most Roman men and women tried to vi ...
HI101 Chapter 4 1. During his reign, Augustus accomplished all of
... 6. Gaius Marius redirected the loyalty of the Roman soldiers from the state to their generals by A. opening recruitment to propertyless men and securing booty and land for them. B. tightening recruitment to only men of property and suppressing the Italian rebellion. C. enlisting masses of slaves who ...
... 6. Gaius Marius redirected the loyalty of the Roman soldiers from the state to their generals by A. opening recruitment to propertyless men and securing booty and land for them. B. tightening recruitment to only men of property and suppressing the Italian rebellion. C. enlisting masses of slaves who ...
2 Roman Society 2
... (what was it a combination of?) • How was Rome’s military organized? • How could someone obtain citizenship in Rome? What rights did they have as citizens? • THINKER: What similarities does the government of Ancient Rome have with America’s government? ...
... (what was it a combination of?) • How was Rome’s military organized? • How could someone obtain citizenship in Rome? What rights did they have as citizens? • THINKER: What similarities does the government of Ancient Rome have with America’s government? ...
Roman Expansion & Punic Wars
... Alps and invades Italy from the north. Over 10 years, he repeatedly defeats the Roman army, but does not attack the city of Rome Roman army sails to North Africa, where it threatens to destroy Carthage. Hannibal returns to Carthage, and is defeated Rome does not destroy Carthage and fears it wil ...
... Alps and invades Italy from the north. Over 10 years, he repeatedly defeats the Roman army, but does not attack the city of Rome Roman army sails to North Africa, where it threatens to destroy Carthage. Hannibal returns to Carthage, and is defeated Rome does not destroy Carthage and fears it wil ...
The Roman Empire
... who had wanted the reign of the emperors to end and the Senate to rule Rome as it had been during the Roman Republic. ...
... who had wanted the reign of the emperors to end and the Senate to rule Rome as it had been during the Roman Republic. ...
Republic
... Started the 2nd Punic War and became the leader of Carthage. A consul of the Roman army who encouraged poor people to join the army. Before only people who owned property could fight. A consul who had conflicts with Marius that leads to a civil war in Rome. Defeated Marius and makes himself dictator ...
... Started the 2nd Punic War and became the leader of Carthage. A consul of the Roman army who encouraged poor people to join the army. Before only people who owned property could fight. A consul who had conflicts with Marius that leads to a civil war in Rome. Defeated Marius and makes himself dictator ...
Roman Republic PPT
... horses and 37 elephants to fight. • Hannibal’s troops started in Spain and moved over the Pyrenees mountains and the Alps into Italy. • Hannibal’s forces were greatly weakened after crossing the Alps. ...
... horses and 37 elephants to fight. • Hannibal’s troops started in Spain and moved over the Pyrenees mountains and the Alps into Italy. • Hannibal’s forces were greatly weakened after crossing the Alps. ...
6-1 The Romans Create a Republic
... 1. Location was good for trade 2. 2 cities vied for control of the Mediterranean Sea a. Rome and Carthage ...
... 1. Location was good for trade 2. 2 cities vied for control of the Mediterranean Sea a. Rome and Carthage ...
Rome Spreads its Power
... Carthage began to flourish once again Cato the Elder urged for the destruction of Carthage ...
... Carthage began to flourish once again Cato the Elder urged for the destruction of Carthage ...
Roman Republic - Walker World History
... 58 BC Conquered Gaul Pompey ordered Caesar to disband his army and return to Rome; Caesar disobeyed and when he did return he destroyed Pompey and his supporters ...
... 58 BC Conquered Gaul Pompey ordered Caesar to disband his army and return to Rome; Caesar disobeyed and when he did return he destroyed Pompey and his supporters ...
The Punic Wars
... Carthage and passionately hated it • Roman leaders began to antagonize Carthage in order to provoke Third Punic another war War • Rome declared war when Carthaginians fought back against the Numidians who had been attacking them ...
... Carthage and passionately hated it • Roman leaders began to antagonize Carthage in order to provoke Third Punic another war War • Rome declared war when Carthaginians fought back against the Numidians who had been attacking them ...
The Roman Republic
... a. Rome and Carthage go to war for control of __________. b. After 23 years of fighting, Carthage’s ________ is defeated and Rome gains control of this rich, grain growing island. 2. Second Punic War (218-202 B.C.) a. __________________ (from Carthage) invades Italy with 50,000 infantry, 9,000 caval ...
... a. Rome and Carthage go to war for control of __________. b. After 23 years of fighting, Carthage’s ________ is defeated and Rome gains control of this rich, grain growing island. 2. Second Punic War (218-202 B.C.) a. __________________ (from Carthage) invades Italy with 50,000 infantry, 9,000 caval ...
Berber kings of Roman-era Tunisia
For nearly 250 years, Berber kings of the 'House of Masinissa' ruled in Numidia, which included much of Tunisia, and later in adjacent regions, first as sovereigns allied with Rome and then eventually as Roman clients. This period commenced with the defeat of Carthage by the Roman Army, assisted by Berber cavalry led by Masinissa, at the Battle of Zama in 202, and it lasted until the year 40, during the reign of the Roman Emperor Gaius a.k.a. Caligula (37–41).During the Second Punic War (218–201) Rome had entered into alliance with Masinissa, himself the son of a Berber tribal leader. Masinissa had been driven out of his ancestral realm by a Carthage-backed Berber rival. Following the Roman victory at Zama, Masinissa (r.202–148) was celebrated as a ""friend of the Roman people"". He became King of Numidia for over fifty years. Thereafter for seven generations his line of kings continued its relationship with an increasingly powerful Roman state.During this era, the Berbers ruled over many cities as well as extensive lands; the peoples under their governance enjoyed a general prosperity. Municipal and civic affairs were organized using a combination of Punic and Berber political traditions. One descendant king, a grandson of Masinissa, Jugurtha (r.118–105), successfully attacked his cousin kings, who were also allies of Rome; thus he became Rome's enemy during a long struggle. In the Roman civil wars after the fall of the Roman Republic (44 BC), Berber kings were courted for their military support by the contending political factions. Thereafter, Berber kings continued to reign, but had become merely clients of Imperial Rome.One such Berber king married the daughter of Cleopatra of Egypt. Yet he and his son, the last two Berber kings (reigns: 25 BC–40 AD), were not accepted by many of their own Berber subjects. During this period, Roman settlers increasingly were taking for their own use as farms, the traditional pasture lands of transhumant Berber tribes. Then the Romans were challenged, however, but not by these Berber kings.The commoner Tacfarinas raised a revolt in defense of Berber rights to the land. Tacfarinas became a great tribal chief as a result of his insurgency (17-24 AD) against Rome.