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Ancient Rome

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Ancient Rome Origins of Rome According to legend, Romulus and Remus founded Rome in 753 B.C. They were the twin sons of the god Mars and a Latin princess. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ancient Rome


1
Ancient Rome
2
Origins of Rome
  • According to legend, Romulus and Remus
  • founded Rome in 753 B.C.
  • They were the twin sons of the god Mars and a
    Latin princess.
  • The twins were abandoned on the Tiber River as
    infants and raised by a she-wolf.

3
Origins of Rome
  • Romes Geography
  • Build on 7 rolling hills at a curve on the Tiber
    River near the center of the Italian peninsula
  • Midway between Alps and Italys southern tip
  • Near midpoint of Mediterranean Sea

4
Origins of Rome
  • The First Romans
  • From 1000 to 500 B.C., 3 groups inhabited the
    region and battled for control
  • Latins
  • Considered first Romans
  • Greeks
  • Established colonies along southern Italy and
    Sicily
  • Etruscans
  • Native to northern Italy

5
The Early Republic
  • republic- a form of government in which power
    rests with citizens who have the right to vote
    for their leaders
  • In Rome, citizenship with voting rights was
    granted only to free-born male citizens

6
The Early Republic
  • Patricians
  • wealthy landowners
  • held most of the power
  • Inherited power social status
  • claimed ancestry gave them power to make laws

7
The Early Republic
  • Plebians
  • common farmers, artisans, merchants
  • made up the majority of the population
  • citizens of Rome with right to vote
  • barred by law from holding most important
    government positions
  • In time, Romes leaders allowed the plebians to
    form their own assembly elect representatives
    called tribunes
  • Tribunes protected the rights of the plebians
    from unfair acts of patrician officials

8
Twelve Tables
  • Victory for plebians forced creation of written
    law code
  • Laws carved on 12 tablets (tables) hung in the
    Forum
  • Became basis for later Roman law
  • Established idea that all free citizens had a
    right to protection of the law

9
Roman Republic
10
Comparing Republican Governments
Rome United States of America
Executive 2 consuls, elected by the assembly for 1 year- chief executives of the government and commanders-in-chief of the army A president, elected by the people, for 4 years- chief executive of the government and commander-in-chief of the army
Legislative Senate of 300 members, chosen from aristocracy for life, controls foreign financial policies, advises counsels Centuriate Assembly, all citizen-soldiers are members for lifeselects consuls, makes laws Tribal Assembly- citizens grouped according to where they live, members for life elects tribunes makes laws Senate of 100 members, elected by the people for 6 year terms- makes laws, advises president on foreign policy House of Representatives- 435 members- elected by people for 2 yrsmakes laws, originates revenue bills
Judicial Praetors, 8 judges chosen for 1 year by Centuriate Assembly2 oversee civil criminal courts (others govern provinces) Supreme Court- 9 justices appointed for life by president- highest court, hears civil and criminal appeals cases
Legal code 12 Tables- list of rules that was the basis of Roman legal system U.S. Constitution- basic law of the United States
Citizenship All adult male landowners All native-born or naturalized adults
11
Roman Army
  • All citizens who owned land were required to
    serve in the army
  • Seekers of certain political offices had to
    perform 10 years of military service
  • Roman soldiers were organized into large military
    units called LEGIONS

12
Romes Rise to Greatness
  • Key Factors
  • Military organization
  • Fighting skill of the Roman army

13
Romes Commercial Network
  • Location gave easy access to lands around
    Mediterranean Sea
  • Traded Roman wine and olive oil for a variety of
    foods, raw materials, and manufactured goods from
    other lands
  • Other large powerful cities interfered with
    Roman access to Mediterranean
  • Carthagerise to power put it in direct
    opposition with Rome

14
War with Carthage
  • 264 B.C.- Rome Carthage went to war
  • Beginning of the Punic Wars
  • 3 wars fought between 264-164 B.C.
  • 1st- for control of Sicily western
    Mediterraneanlasted 23 yrs, Carthage defeated
  • 2nd- Carthaginian general named Hannibal is
    defeated by Romans
  • 3rd Rome sacks Carthage and ends War

15
End of Punic Wars
  • Victories gave Rome dominance over the western
    Mediterranean
  • Empire stretched from Anatolia to Spain

16
The Republic Collapses
  • Romes increasing wealth and expanding boundaries
    brought many problems
  • Growing discontent among lower classes of society
  • Breakdown in military order
  • Led to emergence of a new political system

17
Julius Caesar Takes Control
  • 60 B.C.- J.Caesar, a military leader, joined
    forces with Crassus, a wealthy Roman, and Pompey,
    a popular general
  • Caesar was elected consul in 59 B.C.
  • For 10 years these men dominated Rome as a
    triumvirate (a group of 3 rulers)

18
Julius Caesar Takes Control
  • Caesar was a strong leader and genius at military
    strategy
  • Served only 1 year as consul
  • Appointed himself governor of Gaul (now France)
  • Led his legions to conquer all of Gaul
  • Shared fully in hardships of warwon mens
    loyalty and devotion

19
Julius Caesar Takes Control
  • Reports of Caesars success in Gaul made him
    popular with the people of Rome
  • Pompey became his political rival and feared his
    ambitions
  • At Pompeys urgings in 50 B.C., Caesar was
    ordered to disband his legions and return home

20
Julius Caesar Takes Control
  • Caesar defied the Senates order
  • On the night of January 10, 49 B.C., he took his
    army across the Rubicon River in Italy
  • He marched his army swiftly toward Rome and
    Pompey fled
  • Caesars troops defeated Pompeys armies in
    Greece, Asia, Spain, Egypt
  • Caesar returned to Rome where he had the support
    of the army and the masses
  • The senate appointed him dictator for life

21
Caesars Reforms
  • Caesar governed as an absolute ruler
  • He started a number of reforms
  • Granted Roman citizenship to many people in the
    provinces
  • Expanded the senate, adding friends supporters
    from Italy other regions
  • Helped poor by creating jobs esp. through the
    construction of new public buildings
  • Increased pay for soldiers

22
Caesars Reforms
  • Nobles and senators expressed concern over
    Caesars growing power, success, popularity
  • They feared him becoming a tyrant
  • Many important senators, led by Marcus Brutus
    Gaius Cassius, planned his assassination
  • On March 15, 44 B.C., they stabbed him to death
    in the senate chamber

23
Beginning of the Roman Empire
  • Civil war broke out after Caesars death
  • Destroyed what was left of the Roman Republic
  • 3 of Caesars supporters banded together to crush
    the assassins
  • Octavian, Mark Antony, Lepidus
  • Took control of Rome and ruled for 10 yrs as the
    2nd Triumvirate

24
2nd Triumvirate
  • Alliance ended in jealousy violence
  • Octavian forced Lepidus to retire
  • Octavian and Antony became rivals
  • Antony met Cleopatra, fell in love with her,
    followed her to Egypt
  • Another civil war erupted, Octavian defeated
    forces of Cleopatra Antony
  • Antony Cleopatra committed suicide

25
Octavian
  • Restored some aspects of the republic
  • Became unchallenged ruler of Rome
  • Accepted title of Augustus or exalted one
  • Kept title imperator or supreme military
    commander (emperor is derived from this title)

26
A Vast Powerful Empire
  • Peak of Romes power- from peak of rule of
    Augustus (27 B.C. to A.D. 180)
  • Peace reigned for 207 yrs- Pax Romana- Roman
    peace
  • Roman Empire included more than 3 million square
    miles its population was between 60-80 million
    people
  • 1 million people lived in Rome during this time

27
Augustus
  • Stabilized frontier
  • Glorified Rome with public bldgs
  • Created system of government that survived for
    centuries
  • Set up a civil service- paid workers to manage
    affairs of government
  • Civil servants drawn from plebians and former
    slaves administered the empire

28
Agriculture
  • Agriculture- most important industry in the
    empire
  • 90 of people were involved with farming

29
Roman World
  • Most Romans lived in the countryside worked on
    farms
  • Diverse society- merchants, soldiers, slaves,
    philosophers, foreigners
  • Romans honored
  • Strength more than beauty
  • Power more than grace
  • Usefulness more than elegance

30
Gods Goddesses
  • Honored gods goddesses through rituals hoping
    to gain favor and avoid misfortune
  • Government religion were linked
  • Head god Jupiter

31
Society Culture
  • Classes have little in common lives different
    for poor and rich
  • Government provided games, races, mock battles,
    gladiator contests to distract control masses
  • Colosseum- huge arena that could hold over 50,000
    people
  • Christianity- a new religion slowly emerging
    during this time

32
CHRISTIANITY
33
Roots in Judaism
  • Many people in the Mediterranean were practicing
    Jews at this time
  • They lived in Judea, but were treated bad by the
    Romans
  • They hoped that a messiah, or a deliverer sent by
    God, would help free them
  • This had been told by prophets for many years

34
Roots in Judaism (contd)
  • After several rebellions the Jews were forced to
    live in other parts of the Mediterranean and the
    Middle East
  • Continued to study the Torah and pass down their
    beliefs

35
Jesus
  • During this time he grew up in Nazareth
  • He traveled around preaching kindness and
    repentance of sins
  • He gathered many followers called disciples
  • Often taught through parables
  • Controversy arose over his status (messiah or
    not) and this scared the Romans
  • They felt he was a threat to Roman stability
  • Ordered to die on a cross by Pontius Pilate in 33
    AD

36
Early Christians
  • Many believed that Jesus rose from the dead and
    was the true messiah
  • Followers of his disciples became known as
    Christos, the Greek word for messiah
  • These people formed a community of believers
  • Two men helped spread Christianity
  • Paul ? wrote letters about Jesus helped convert
    non-Jews
  • Peter ? went to Rome to help set up the church

37
Early Christians Suffer
  • Believed that their religion was the one true
    faith and refused to worship the emperor or other
    Roman gods
  • The Romans felt divine punishment would befall
    the Christians, still they made martyrs of many
    (death in arenas)
  • Christians competing with polytheistic beliefs

38
The Romans Convert
  • The strength of Christians in Roman cities at
    this time made them more influential
  • The religion really flourished with the aid of
    emperor Constantine
  • Issued the Edict of Milan which allowed everyone
    to worship freely
  • It eventually became the official religion of the
    Roman Empire in 392 AD

39
The Early Church
  • Early Christians knew that organization of the
    church and tangible writings were important for
    success
  • Organized into a hierarchal system
  • Priests ? Bishops ? Patriarchs (5 Bishops of the
    largest cities) ? Pope

40
The Early Church (contd)
  • At the Council of Nicaea church doctrine
    (official teachings) was established by Bishops
  • People in Greece did not think the Pope had
    authority over them
  • In time the Church would split into 2 factions
  • Roman Catholic Church (Rome)
  • Eastern Orthodox Church (Greece)

41
The Decline of the Roman Empire
42
Problems within the Empire
  • With the death of Marcus Aurelius and end of the
    Pax Romana, violence and corruption took center
    stage in the Empire
  • Several problems contributed to the decline
  • Political Instability
  • Economic Decline
  • Invasion from the North

43
Political Instability
  • Began with the successor to Marcus Aurelius
  • He was killed by his own troops
  • Political disorder took over Rome, as armies
    appointed 28 emperors only to kill them off
  • Since there was so much internal fighting, the
    borders were not protected and Germanic tribes
    were successful in attacking the Empire

44
Economic Decline
  • A byproduct of political instability
  • Warfare hurt trade, farming
  • Inflation happened when more coins were printed
    to pay soldiers
  • Economics affected all parts of the Empire
  • Money was needed to pay the soldiers ? landowners
    were more heavily taxed ? farmers abandon their
    land ? food shortage

45
Emperors Attempts at Reform
  • Emperor Constantine tried to stop the decline of
    the Empire and halt German invasion
  • Moved capital to Byzantium (more suited for trade
    and protected by natural barriers)
  • Renamed this city Constantinople

46
Empire Splits
  • Problems arose after Constantines death
  • Theodosius I said that when he died the Empire
    would be two separate one East and West
  • Byzantine Empire ? eastern empire
  • Roman Empire ? western empire

47
Invaders
  • Germanic warriors ? looking for warmer climate,
    wealth trying to escape the Huns labeled by
    Romans as barbarians
  • Visigoths ? most important Germanic group
    defeated large sections of Roman Empire
  • Huns ? came from central Asia led by Attila
    entered Gaul and eastern Europe eventually
    brought down by plague and famine

48
End of the Roman Empire
  • When the Huns left and the Empire left in ruins,
    it was very easy for the Germanic tribes to take
    over
  • It ended when Germanics named themselves king,
    along with a series of preceding events
  • Though the Empire fell, its culture did not
  • The Germans and Byzantines adopted language, laws
    and religion
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