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Founding the Roman Republic
Founding the Roman Republic

Group #1: William Shakespeare
Group #1: William Shakespeare

Section 1 Vocabulary
Section 1 Vocabulary

... Republic Citizens have the right to vote for their leaders Most powerful part of government was the senate ...
Caesar Augustus - St. Olaf Pages
Caesar Augustus - St. Olaf Pages

... The obverse of this coin features Augustus, facing right, encircled by the letters “CAESAR AUGUSTUS TRIBUNIC POTEST.” This shows partially how he wanted to be known. Quite simply, this gives his name, and the fact that he is ruling with tribunician’s power. In other words, he is ruling rightly accor ...
Augustus standard outline
Augustus standard outline

... legions. He soon was a formidable power in the city and was elected to the position of consul.  At the same time, others were trying to fill the void of power left by Caesar's death. Marc Antony, a famous general and relative of Caesar, thought he should be dictator. He clashed with Octavian until ...
Julius Caesar
Julius Caesar

... father Julius came from a noble background  When he was 10, his aunt married ...
Imperator Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus Divi Filius Augustus
Imperator Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus Divi Filius Augustus

Julius Caesar Background
Julius Caesar Background

... Human freedom; “I am the center of my universe” attitude being good only to increase one’s own happiness; self BEFORE duty! Eliminating fear from life, especially fear of death and the fear of the supernatural (the gods live in their own world and are too busy to bother with us on earth). Speaking i ...
Across - Fairfield City School District
Across - Fairfield City School District

Handout Roman
Handout Roman

Cold Case Docs
Cold Case Docs

Act I.s96
Act I.s96

... 17 ___ scolds the commoners for taking a holiday. He reminds them that not too long ago they gave the same praise to Pompey. 20 Flavius compares Caesar to a ___ whose feathers were the people which gave him flight. 21 Cassius also compared the Roman people to ___ and Caesar to a wolf. 22 Brutus' cha ...
Patricians and Plebeians - Western Civilization HomePage
Patricians and Plebeians - Western Civilization HomePage

... The patricians and the plebeians agreed on the Law of Twelve Tables in 449BCE. The Twelve Tables were a legal code that everyone could see. Citizens could no longer be changed in secret, and even elected officials were required to follow the law, though an official could not be charged with a crime ...
Dictators
Dictators

Pax Romana - Arizona School for the Arts
Pax Romana - Arizona School for the Arts

... ...
Do Now: Chapter 7 Glossary: • Republic • Consul • Veto
Do Now: Chapter 7 Glossary: • Republic • Consul • Veto

... Page 212 1. Who were the Patricians? 2. Who were the Plebeians? ...
Ch. 7: The Roman World
Ch. 7: The Roman World

... refuse to approve, the acts of the other • This division was based on the principle of checks & balances, which prevents any part of the gov’t from becoming too powerful (a principle later adopted by the U.S. ...
Julius Caesar Background
Julius Caesar Background

... Human freedom; “I am the center of my universe” attitude being good only to increase one’s own happiness; self BEFORE duty! Eliminating fear from life, especially fear of death and the fear of the supernatural (the gods live in their own world and are too busy to bother with us on earth). Speaking i ...
Republic to Empire
Republic to Empire

... – Slaves made up about 1/3 of population Slave life: Revolts led by Spartacus (73 B.C.) – dies in battle. 6,000 slave followers executed by crucifixion. ...
Ambitio: The Suicidal Political System of the Roman Republic
Ambitio: The Suicidal Political System of the Roman Republic

The Suicidal Political System of the Roman Republic
The Suicidal Political System of the Roman Republic

NB #7: The Roman Republic and Democracy
NB #7: The Roman Republic and Democracy

... At around the same time when democracy was developing in Athens, a Latin speaking people who lived on the Italian peninsula called the Romans were becoming more prominent. A group of people from the northern part of Italy called the Etruscans had ruled over the Romans until 509 BC, when Rome success ...
Augustus Information Augustus was born Gaius Octavius on Sept
Augustus Information Augustus was born Gaius Octavius on Sept

Rome Book Worksheet
Rome Book Worksheet

Julius Caesar Reading and Questions Page 3
Julius Caesar Reading and Questions Page 3

... However, the Romans continued to fight. Citizens were called up from all parts of the empire to defend their homeland. By 202 B.C. Rome was able to defeat Hannibal, under the direction of a Roman general named Scipio. In 146 B.C. Carthage again began to grow in strength and power. Rome worried that ...
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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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