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Excerpts from - Faculty Website Index
Excerpts from - Faculty Website Index

... In June of 47 B. C., Julius Caesar finally departed Egypt. As a parting gift he left the pregnant Cleopatra three Roman legions to protect her, but also to guard the interests of Rome against a woman Caesar clearly understood was as ruthless as he in her ambitions. Desperately needed in Rome to sort ...
2013 njcl Roman History
2013 njcl Roman History

Debtor of the mighty
Debtor of the mighty

Name: Date - Mr. Dowling
Name: Date - Mr. Dowling

... of Julius Caesar. He lived in a small house and traveled without bodyguards. Unlike Julius Caesar, Octavian was respectful to the senators. Later in his career, Octavian allowed other men to serve as consuls, but the Senate knew that Octavian controlled the military, so he was the actual ruler of th ...
DOC - Mr. Dowling
DOC - Mr. Dowling

... of Julius Caesar. He lived in a small house and traveled without bodyguards. Unlike Julius Caesar, Octavian was respectful to the senators. Later in his career, Octavian allowed other men to serve as consuls, but the Senate knew that Octavian controlled the military, so he was the actual ruler of th ...
From Warlord to Restorer of the Golden Age
From Warlord to Restorer of the Golden Age

Slides: From Cicero to Empire File
Slides: From Cicero to Empire File

Name: Date:
Name: Date:

Chapter 11: Rome and Christianity
Chapter 11: Rome and Christianity

No Slide Title
No Slide Title

... was much older and more powerful than their Roman counterparts. They had a large army and a powerful navy. Etruscan art and technology was as good as, and sometimes better than, the technologies of civilizations older than their own. ...
History
History

... Monarchy, Republic, empire, and fall of Rome are in chronological order. The office of Tribune was established to protect the rights of the plebeians with the power of veto. The Rubicon was a river which marked the boundary between Italy and Gaul. When Caesar crossed it in 49, he broke Roman law by ...
Roman Republic Gale Encyclopedia of World History: Governments
Roman Republic Gale Encyclopedia of World History: Governments

... The Senate, the governing council and dominant institution of the Republic, advised  both the magistrates and the people. Early on, the Senate was composed of three  hundred men, mostly former magistrates and senior statesman, drawn from patrician  (aristocratic) families and divided according to so ...
2010 TSJCL Roman History
2010 TSJCL Roman History

... 51. The Comitia Centuriata elected all of the following EXCEPT A. aediles B. consuls C. praetors D. censors 52. In 180 BCE, the tribune L. Villius passed a law regulating the legal age for certain offices. Because of this, a man could not be consul before the age of A. 36 B. 39 C. 42 D. 4 53. All of ...
8.1 The 3 Punic wars
8.1 The 3 Punic wars

chapter 5 - republican and imperial rome
chapter 5 - republican and imperial rome

... Whether intended or not, Rome's expansion brought with it power, wealth and responsibility. The Roman constitution which had been well adapted to the mastery of Italy would be severely tested by the need to govern an empire beyond the seas. By the middle of the second century B.C.E., Rome faced a se ...
From Republic to Empire
From Republic to Empire

The Roman Republic
The Roman Republic

... to feel threatened by his ideas in 121 B.C. they had him killed. In 107 B.C., General Gaius Marius, a military hero, became consul. Marius thought he could end Rome’s troubles by setting up a professional army, open to everyone. Another general, Lucius Cornelius Sulla, was given a military command t ...
The Ultimate Empire
The Ultimate Empire

From Warlord to Restorer of the Golden Age
From Warlord to Restorer of the Golden Age

Chapter 13 Everyday Stateman
Chapter 13 Everyday Stateman

...  Based on the Curiae which was the organization of the original 3 tribes  Important earlier on in Rome’s History  Met only formally on occasion to bestow imperium on consuls and praetors ...
Who Did What in the Roman Republic
Who Did What in the Roman Republic

JC Review Guide Acts I_III0
JC Review Guide Acts I_III0

... Which military figure was recently defeated by Caesar when the play opens? Who warned Caesar about the “Ides of March”? List the omens of chaos that are mentioned in Act I, scene iii. What is the “ . . . enterprise / Of honorable dangerous consequence” to which Cassius refers? What was the Roman bel ...
C7S1 Founding of Rome
C7S1 Founding of Rome

... Chapter 7, Main Idea Activities 7.1, continued EVALUATING INFORMATION Mark each statement T if it is true or F if it is false. 1. Italy’s geography enabled it to control regions to its north and south. 2. Rome’s location helped protect it from invasion by sea. 3. Citizens in assemblies did not have ...
Making Rome Come to Life
Making Rome Come to Life

... presentation online at previously been used in power, the Senate itself http://programmaterials. Rome as an emergency could not pass laws. It aallnet.org. position lasting six did, however, appoint months. The trouble citizens to political posts begins when Caesar and controlled foreign policy. Caes ...
Ancient Rome
Ancient Rome

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Senatus consultum ultimum

Senatus consultum ultimum (""Final decree of the Senate"" or Final Act, often abbreviated SCU), more properly senatus consultum de re publica defendenda (""Decree of the Senate about defending the Republic"") is the modern term (based on Caesar's wording at Bell. Civ. 1.5) given to a decree of the Roman Senate during the late Roman Republic passed in times of emergency. The form was usually consules darent operam ne quid detrimenti res publica caperet or videant consules ne res publica detrimenti capiat (""let the consuls see to it that the state suffer no harm""). It was first passed during the fall from power of Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BC, and subsequently at several other points, including during Lepidus' march on Rome in 77 BC, the Conspiracy of Catiline in 63 BC, and before Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon in 49 BC. The senatus consultum ultimum effectively replaced the disused dictatorship, by removing limitations on the magistrates' powers to preserve the State. After the rise of the Principate, there was little need for the Senate to issue the decree again.
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