Unit 7 Lesson 4 The End of the Republic
... - added Syria in 63 BC - enlarged province of Asia - added Palestine ...
... - added Syria in 63 BC - enlarged province of Asia - added Palestine ...
27 BC - AD 14 - Warren County Public Schools
... Ruled 40 years, power divided between him and Senate; conquests expanded the empire and brought peace – Pax Romana ...
... Ruled 40 years, power divided between him and Senate; conquests expanded the empire and brought peace – Pax Romana ...
The Fall of the republic
... There was a new source of labor used to farm the land. Prisoners brought to Italy during the wars. This forced small farms out of business ...
... There was a new source of labor used to farm the land. Prisoners brought to Italy during the wars. This forced small farms out of business ...
Chapter 8 Section 3
... *Crassus was killed in battle in 53 B.C. *Senate was fearful of Caesar’s popularity w/poor E. The Senate wanted Caesar to give up his army and for Pompey to rule Rome alone. F. Caesar decided to fight and marched into Rome, destroying Pompey’s army in 48 B.C. ...
... *Crassus was killed in battle in 53 B.C. *Senate was fearful of Caesar’s popularity w/poor E. The Senate wanted Caesar to give up his army and for Pompey to rule Rome alone. F. Caesar decided to fight and marched into Rome, destroying Pompey’s army in 48 B.C. ...
27 BC - AD 14 - Warren County Schools
... Ruled 40 years, power divided between him and Senate; conquests expanded the empire and brought peace – Pax Romana ...
... Ruled 40 years, power divided between him and Senate; conquests expanded the empire and brought peace – Pax Romana ...
Fall of the Roman Republic
... killed in battle the Senate decided that Pompey should rule Rome alone. 0 The Senate ordered that Caesar return home and turn over his 5,000 man army. 0 Caesar feared for his own life, so he returned home WITHOUT turning over his army. He knew this would cause civil war…and it did. 0 He drove out Po ...
... killed in battle the Senate decided that Pompey should rule Rome alone. 0 The Senate ordered that Caesar return home and turn over his 5,000 man army. 0 Caesar feared for his own life, so he returned home WITHOUT turning over his army. He knew this would cause civil war…and it did. 0 He drove out Po ...
Chapter 8 Section 3 - Ms-Jernigans-SS
... Soldiers became motivated by material rewards rather than a sense of duty. ...
... Soldiers became motivated by material rewards rather than a sense of duty. ...
File
... his army, against the wishes of Pompey, thereby declaring war on the Republic. 18. Caesar pushed Pompey all the way out of Rome and finally defeated him in Greece. Caesar gave Cleopatra, the ruler of _____________, power over Greece as a Roman ally. 19. Many senators feared Caesar’s rapid rise to po ...
... his army, against the wishes of Pompey, thereby declaring war on the Republic. 18. Caesar pushed Pompey all the way out of Rome and finally defeated him in Greece. Caesar gave Cleopatra, the ruler of _____________, power over Greece as a Roman ally. 19. Many senators feared Caesar’s rapid rise to po ...
File
... Relations between Caesar and Pompey deteriorated after Caesar’s daughter, who Pompey had married, died in 54 B.C. and the third triumvir, Crassus, was killed at Carrhae the following year in an ill-judged attack on the Parthians, an Iranian people who controlled the territory east of the Roman prov ...
... Relations between Caesar and Pompey deteriorated after Caesar’s daughter, who Pompey had married, died in 54 B.C. and the third triumvir, Crassus, was killed at Carrhae the following year in an ill-judged attack on the Parthians, an Iranian people who controlled the territory east of the Roman prov ...
Augustus standard outline
... Triumvirate. This was an alliance where the three men shared supreme power in Rome. ...
... Triumvirate. This was an alliance where the three men shared supreme power in Rome. ...
Julius Caesar
... They expand the Roman Republic territory into Britain. Crassus was killed in battle. The Senate Pompey. ...
... They expand the Roman Republic territory into Britain. Crassus was killed in battle. The Senate Pompey. ...
THE CRISIS OF THE ROMAN REPUBLIC
... The End of the Republic • In 40 BC, the triumvirs split the Roman dominion – Antony took the East – Octavian took Rome – Lepidus took Africa. • Antony began affair with CLEOPATRA • 32–31 BC, Octavian vs Antony – Sea battle of ACTIUM in 31 BC • Octavian became the sole master of the Roman ...
... The End of the Republic • In 40 BC, the triumvirs split the Roman dominion – Antony took the East – Octavian took Rome – Lepidus took Africa. • Antony began affair with CLEOPATRA • 32–31 BC, Octavian vs Antony – Sea battle of ACTIUM in 31 BC • Octavian became the sole master of the Roman ...
133-27 BC
... • They pursued the Senate forces and defeated Brutus and Cassius at the Battle of Philippi in 42 B.C. • Their purge resulted in the deaths of over 300 senators, including Cicero, who had tried unsuccessfully to preserve the ideals of the old republic in the face of Caesar’s ambitions Mark Antony & O ...
... • They pursued the Senate forces and defeated Brutus and Cassius at the Battle of Philippi in 42 B.C. • Their purge resulted in the deaths of over 300 senators, including Cicero, who had tried unsuccessfully to preserve the ideals of the old republic in the face of Caesar’s ambitions Mark Antony & O ...
From Republic to Empire
... Marc Antony was once a general that had been in alliance with Octavian However, by putting himself against Octavian, he was doomed to lose. He went to Egypt where he fell in love with Cleopatra. Since he was no longer in Rome, Octavian was able to spread rumors about Marc Antony. This allowed Octavi ...
... Marc Antony was once a general that had been in alliance with Octavian However, by putting himself against Octavian, he was doomed to lose. He went to Egypt where he fell in love with Cleopatra. Since he was no longer in Rome, Octavian was able to spread rumors about Marc Antony. This allowed Octavi ...
Rise of an Empire
... Rome’s greatest public speaker (his ideas influenced the writers of the United States Constitution) favored a republican form of government ...
... Rome’s greatest public speaker (his ideas influenced the writers of the United States Constitution) favored a republican form of government ...
The Roman Empire ppt
... without his army in 49 B.C.E. [Caesar refused] Pompey and followers fled and Caesar assumed ...
... without his army in 49 B.C.E. [Caesar refused] Pompey and followers fled and Caesar assumed ...
Caesar Augustus (Octavian)
... The rise of Gaius Octavius to Caesar Augustus began by him being adopted by Julius Caesar, his great uncle, when he was 18. When Caesar was assassinated a year later, the 19 year old had enough political power to be appointed consul of Rome. After the initial chaos at the death of Caesar, he joined ...
... The rise of Gaius Octavius to Caesar Augustus began by him being adopted by Julius Caesar, his great uncle, when he was 18. When Caesar was assassinated a year later, the 19 year old had enough political power to be appointed consul of Rome. After the initial chaos at the death of Caesar, he joined ...
Chapter 7 Continued: The Roman Republic 753 BC to 27 AD
... makes the Roman calendar more accurate; this is used for the next 1500 years in Europe ...
... makes the Roman calendar more accurate; this is used for the next 1500 years in Europe ...
FROM REPUBLIC TO EMPIRE
... • he wanted Rome to return to a representative republican government • his writings influenced the writers of the Constitution • Octavian publicly supported Cicero's ideas, but he privately thought Rome should have one strong ruler • Octavian was declared consul, tribune, and commander-in-chief for ...
... • he wanted Rome to return to a representative republican government • his writings influenced the writers of the Constitution • Octavian publicly supported Cicero's ideas, but he privately thought Rome should have one strong ruler • Octavian was declared consul, tribune, and commander-in-chief for ...
The Emperors of Rome - Aquinas Classical Civilisation
... Octavian (the future Augustus) and Lepidus, known to historians today as the Second Triumvirate. • The triumvirate broke up in 33 BC. Disagreement between Octavian and Antony erupted into civil war, the final war of the Roman Republic, in 31 BC. Antony was defeated by Octavian at the naval Battle of ...
... Octavian (the future Augustus) and Lepidus, known to historians today as the Second Triumvirate. • The triumvirate broke up in 33 BC. Disagreement between Octavian and Antony erupted into civil war, the final war of the Roman Republic, in 31 BC. Antony was defeated by Octavian at the naval Battle of ...
The Collapse of the Republic
... Crassus was a wealthy landowner while the other two were military leaders. ...
... Crassus was a wealthy landowner while the other two were military leaders. ...
Augustus
... Octavian recognized the necessity of making peace with his rival. In late 43 BC, the two--joined by Antony's ally, the general Marcus Aemilius Lepidus--met and formed the Second Triumvirate to rule the Roman domains. By 40 BC the triumvirs had divided the Roman world among them. Octavian was in cont ...
... Octavian recognized the necessity of making peace with his rival. In late 43 BC, the two--joined by Antony's ally, the general Marcus Aemilius Lepidus--met and formed the Second Triumvirate to rule the Roman domains. By 40 BC the triumvirs had divided the Roman world among them. Octavian was in cont ...
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (triumvir)
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (Latin: M·AEMILIVS·M·F·Q·N·LEPIDVS), (born c. 89 or 88 BC, died late 13 or early 12 BC) was a Roman patrician who was triumvir with Octavian (the future Augustus) and Mark Antony, and the last Pontifex Maximus of the Roman Republic. Lepidus had previously been a close ally of Julius Caesar.Lepidus has always been portrayed as the weakest member of the triumvirate. He was disparaged by a number of ancient historians as feeble and untrustworthy. He typically appears as an easily marginalised figure in depictions of the events of the era, most notably in Shakespeare's plays. While some scholars have endorsed this view, others argue that the evidence is insufficient to discount the distorting effects of propaganda by Lepidus' opponents, principally Cicero, and later, Augustus.