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100 B.C. – 44 B.C. Hand in your noun packet on the cart Go over test/quizzes Practice noun endings Julius Caesar packet Their concept of an afterlife is not extremely pleasant for most people Shades (manes) in Orcus, Hades, Chaos, Tartarus, etc. Shining examples of virtue and valor go to Elysium (among the Roman authors, only famous people are here) Reincarnation possible, not necessarily a widely held belief Concept is less developed No Elysium (at the time of Homer) 15As for man, his days are as grass: as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. 16For the wind passeth over it, and it is gone; and the place thereof shall know it no more. 17But the mercy of the LORD is from everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his righteousness unto children's children; 18To such as keep his covenant, and to those that remember his commandments to do them. 19The LORD hath prepared his throne in the heavens; and his kingdom ruleth over all. Achilles’ choice: 1) Great and famous war hero—die young OR 2) Live a long and happy life with family but NO FAME -Serving as quaestor (provincial administrator) in Hispania in 69 BC -Sees a statue of Alexander the Great -Realizes that by the time he was 30, Alexander had the world at his feet Alexander conquered all major civilizations of the near East (356–323 BC) No to make it to Elysium Fama (fame) Gloria (glory) Fatum (destiny) to a lesser extent; applies especially to Aeneas Living as a part of history/making history with their lives Caesar’s view of Alexander In vocabulo HOMMO littera ‘m’ ______________________________ [is extra]. Verb of caput, potest, oportet, necesse est Oportet litteram “H” _________________ [delete] in HOCULUS. Marcus _________________________ [letters] ad patrem absentem non scribit quia improbus est. Charta e papyro ________________________ [is made out of/from]. Magister _________________ [with a pen] in _____________________ [paper] scribit. Cera est materia _______________________ [soft]. LItterae Titi et Marci aeque __________________________ [=foedae] sunt. _____________________ [iron] est materia _________________ [hard]. ________________________ sunt bestiolae quae ceram efficiunt. _________________________ [such] litterae sunt difficile legere. Marcus multa __________________________ [mistakes] facit quia stultus atque impiger est. Pastor bonus Pastorem bonum Pastoris boni Pastori bono Pastore bono pastores boni pastores bonos pastorum bonorum pastoribus bonis pastoribus bonis Materia mollis Materiam mollem Materiae mollis Materiae molli Materia molli materiae molles materias mollas materiarum mollium materiis mollibus materiis mollibus Talis littera Talem litteram Talis litterae Tali litterae Tali littera tales litterae tales litteras talium litterarum talibus litteris talibus litteris 1st declension: a, charta, epistula, insula, materia, cera 2nd declension masculine: us/r, magister, magistrum, magistri, discipulus, calamus 2nd declension neuter: um, mendum, oppidum 3rd declension masc, fem, or neuter Nominative: ovis, mollis (adj.) Nominative: mare, rex, mater, pes maris, regis, matris, pedis, Materia dura Etc. Are the same! materiae durae Crassus Pompey Julius Caesar HW: Finish questions about Caesar and the third triumvirate. Quiz Friday: Julius Caesar and the Third Triumvirate You need a notebook out, because we are going to take notes for about 10-15 min. The first triumvirate including Crassus, Pompey the Great, and Caesar is formed Caesar becomes consul with the support of Crassus and Pompey Julia, wife of Pomey and daughter of Caesar dies, and the bond between the two men weakens. Crassus is killed in the East by the Parthians; third triumvirate weakened Caesar dominates Gaul and makes a lot of money; the Senate and Pompey grow to fear his power Caesar begins his return March to Rome and refuses to disband his army as Pompey wishes. Caesar crosses the Rubicon river in Northern Italy and states “alea iacta est:” “the die is cast.” He has rolled the die of fate. (We often say dice erroneously because “dice” is plural). Pompey moves his troops to Greece so he can fight Caesar on more open terrain Caesar travels, without field rations for his troops, to Greece and defeats Pompey at the battle of Pharsalia. Pompey is assassinated and Caesar is given his severed head. A conspiracy of sixty senators, including Cassius and Brutus, was formed because Caesar’s immense power and prestige were feared by Roman nobles. Caesar is assassinated by the conspirators, including some of his closest friends on the Ides of March. His last words are supposedly, “Et tu, Brute?” YEAR: 44 B.C. Caesar’s will is read and Octavian, later Augustus Caesar, is listed the heir to his power Pompey/Pompey the Great Crassus Triumvirate Spartacus The Rubicon Octavian/Augustus Pharsalia “Alea iacta est;” “The die is cast” Crucifiction Latin Club today Need a tutor for a Latin 2 student Matt Koch needs to pay me for Fall Forum. Please finish your group translation of the paragraph about Janus. Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres. All Gaul is divided into three parts. 1) 2) Nihil est incertius vulgo, nihil obscurius voluntate hominum, nihil fallacius ratione tota comitiorum. Nothing is more uncertain than the mob, nothing is secretive than the will of men, nothing is more deceitful than all the reckoning of the assemblies. Alea iacta est Veni vidi vici. Et tu Brute? What they literally mean/why he said them Greedy, unscrupulous/immoral businessman Wealthy Fires Brought back decimation: killed every tenth Crucified 6000 of Spartacus’ rebellious comrades Chopped off head, gold poured down throat Eliminated piracy in the Mediterranean in three months Pompey began his career as a victorious commander under Sulla Defeated Mithradates in Pontus Married Julia, Julius Caesar’s daughter Defeated by Caesar at battle of Pharsalus Assassinated/decapitated on his way to Egypt Caesar defeated Mithradates’ son in Pontus Originally applied to a victorious commander; command/power; leave “imperium” untranslated; the emperor and some higher ranking officials had imperium Pro Roscio Defends Roscius on charge of patricide; Roscius is acquitted ; Roscius was accused by a powerful associate of Sulla In Verrem Verres was a corrupt governor in Sicily; Cicero prosecuted him for corruption; defense attorney for Verres gave up In Catilinum Catiline was the mastermind behind a conspiracy to overthrow the state; Cicero sucessfuly prosecuted him Cicero sides with Brutus and Cassius against Caesar; staunchest and most vociferous defender of the Roman republic; Eventually he is killed by Antony and Augustus 2,ooo,ooo million people in Gaul “As Caesar loved me, I weep for him; as he was fortunate, I rejoice at it; as he was valiant, I honour him; but, as he was ambitious, I slew him.” Brutus, in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar