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The Roman Republic 1 ©2010, TESCC Early Romans Latin- Early settlers of Rome Etruscans- Northern Italy Eventually take control of Rome and build it into a great city. Build it on 7 hills for protection. 509 BCE- Romans drive Etruscans out. 2 © 2010, TESCC Roman Government The Forum- The central public square used for government meetings. Republic- a government without a king Not a true democracy because of elected representatives by the people. 3 © 2010, TESCC Roman government Patricians- wealthy landowners that controlled the republic. Consuls- two individuals that directed the daily affairs of government and led the army. One-year terms 4 © 2010, TESCC The Senate 300 member council of patricians that made laws and served Rome. Most powerful part of The Republic. 5 © 2010, TESCC The Plebeians The common people (common farmers, artisans, merchants) Had no say in governement Allowed to take part in the assembly, but had less power than the Senate. Twelve Tables- 451 BCE Plebeians have Roman laws written. Gives common people some protection against unfair patrician decisions. 6 © 2010, TESCC The Roman Army Superior due to its discipline and organization. Used a tight battle formation used by Greek foot soldiers. Opponents used mob warfare. Legion- basic army unit. 7 © 2010, TESCC Roman Alliances How did Rome maintain its alliances with former enemies? 1. Granted Roman citizenship to allies. 2. Allowed allies to keep local government. 3. Gave protection and maintained order in Italy. 8 © 2010, TESCC The Punic Wars 264-202 BCE- Series of wars between Rome and Carthage Carthage- North African city founded by Phoenicians. First Punic War Rome- superior army Carthage- superior navy Rome gains Sicily- makes it a province (territory outside of Italy) Second Punic War Hannibal invades Italy. 9 © 2010, TESCC Hannibal Carthaginian general Invades Italy from the north via the Alps with elephants. Battle of Cannae Hannibal pulls back from Rome. Romans believe he is retreating and follow. Hannibal surrounds and defeats. Scipio- Roman general attacks Carthage Hannibal tries to return home. Defeats Hannibal at the Battle of Zama. 10 © 2010, TESCC Destruction of Carthage Romans burn it because it represented Hannibal. Survivors sold into slavery. Becomes a Roman province along with Greece and the Mediterranean. 11 © 2010, TESCC The Roman Republic in Crisis Hannibal’s invasion destroyed the farms. Newly conquered lands begin to import food into Rome. Farmer income declines. Latifundia (large estates) created. 12 © 2010, TESCC The Gracchus Brothers Tiberius Gracchus Elected to tribune promising aid to the farmers. Called for taking land and distributing it to the landless. Limit farm size Gaius Gracchus Gives grain to the poor. Opened more land to farmers. Secured more rights for the middle class. 13 © 2010, TESCC More turmoil… Romans originally stayed united due to their fear of Carthage No Carthage– nothing to fear Senate unable to provide effective leadership. Patricians become more concerned w/ keeping their power and wealth. Slave revolts ! 14 © 2010, TESCC Spartacus 73 BCE Proclaims war on Rome in attempt to free the slaves. 2 years of successful revolts Eventually killed along with 6000 followers. 15 © 2010, TESCC The rise of dictators Dictator- one person w/ absolute power Military loyalty came from loyalty to Rome. Gaius Marius Ensures loyalty of troops by promising loot from conquered lands. Lucius Sulla Rival to Marius Bloody wars over power Defeats Marius and becomes dictator of Rome. 16 © 2010, TESCC First triumvirate 60 BCE- Three army generals unite to rule Rome. Pompey Crassus Julius Caesar Caesar becomes consul and commands the Roman legions in Gaul. Conquers Gaul (France) and England. Pompey gets support from Senate. Orders Caesar to return home w/out the army. Caesar invades Rome w/ army and defeats Pompey. Becomes a “hero of the empire.” 17 © 2010, TESCC Julius Caesar Reforms Rome 1. Reorganized government with him as dictator. 2. Lowered taxes. 3. Makes governors responsible to him. 4. Grants citizenship to conquered peoples. March 15, 44 BCE- Caesar assassinated Stabbed in the Senate “Beware the Ides of March.” 18 © 2010, TESCC Second triumvirate Mark Antony Lepidus Octavian Created by Mark Antony. Falls in love w/ Cleopatra, queen of Egypt. Octavian crushes the combined fleet of Antony and Cleopatra. 19 © 2010, TESCC Octavian 31 BCE- creates the Roman Empire Allows Senate to keep some power, but he would retain sole rulership. Changes name to Augustus “honored and majestic” Takes title of “Caesar” “first citizen” 20 © 2010, TESCC The Roman Empire Augustus gains control of the following: Military Takes complete control of Gives veterans bonuses of land. Provinces Supervised all the governors. Loyalty to Rome Granted citizenship to more conquered peoples of Europe. 21 © 2010, TESCC Pax Romana “The Roman Peace”- 27-180 AD Period of peace and prosperity. Julio-Claudian dynasty No real line of succession to the throne. First four emperors after Augustus that were either related to him or his wife. Not as good as Augustus. 22 © 2010, TESCC Tiberius 14-37 AD Augustus’ stepson Plots and violence become common in Roman politics. 23 © 2010, TESCC Caligula Cruel and insane Rules for 4 years Assassinated by his imperial guard. 24 © 2010, TESCC Claudius 41-54 AD Restores order to the Roman Empire. 25 © 2010, TESCC Nero Claudius’ stepson Becomes Emperor at age 17. Becomes bloodthirsty and violent. Murders own mother for criticizing his mistress. Rome burns in 64 AD. Nero blames the Christians. Army rebels against him, and he commits suicide. 26 © 2010, TESCC Vespasian The year after Nero’s death, 2 emperors are assassinated and 1 commits suicide. Chosen by military as emperor of Rome. Restores discipline in the army and the administration of the Empire. Puts down revolts in Judaea and Gaul. 27 © 2010, TESCC Judean revolt 66 AD- Jews revolt against Rome. Jerusalem captured and Holy Temple is destroyed. Masada- 1000 Jews take refuge in a mountain fortress. 2 year siege- falls to Rome in 73 AD. All the Jews inside commit suicide. 28 © 2010, TESCC Nerva Vespasian's sons rule for almost 10 years. Senate chooses Nerva as the new emperor in 96 AD. Establishes the adoptive system. Adopts a son and declares him the heir to the throne. 29 © 2010, TESCC Trajan 98-117 AD Adopted son of Nerva. Spanish-born Wise and popular Eases tax burden. Empire reaches its greatest size. 30 © 2010, TESCC Hadrian 117-138 AD Devoted to protecting the Empire, rather than expanding it. Creates Palestine out of Jewish territory. Encourages non-Jews to live there. 31 © 2010, TESCC Marcus Aurelius Last of the adopted emperors. “Good Emperors” Many border wars with the Germanic tribes. Abandons the adoptive system and chooses his own son as the new emperor. Commodus- unfit to rule End of the Pax Romana 32 © 2010, TESCC The Height of the Roman Empire Empire stretched from Asia Minor to the Danube and Rhine Rivers to Great Britain. Roman governors Enforced Roman law and settled provincial disputes. 33 © 2010, TESCC The Height of the Roman Empire Roman Prosperity New roads, drained swamps, irrigation systems for the deserts. Roman Citizenship By 212 AD, virtually all free people in the Empire became Roman citizens. 34 © 2010, TESCC