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Classical Rome

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Title: Classical Rome


1
Classical Rome
2
Vocabulary
  • Patricians- A member of one of the noble
    families of the ancient Roman Republic, which
    before the third century B.C. had exclusive
    rights to the Senate and the magistracies.
  • Plebeians- Of or relating to the common people of
    ancient Rome
  • Senate- An assembly or a council of citizens
    having the highest deliberative and legislative
    functions in a government,
  • Praetor- An annually elected magistrate of the
    ancient Roman Republic, ranking below but having
    approximately the same functions as a consul.
  • Provinces- A territory governed as an
    administrative or political unit of a country or
    empire
  • Ius Civile (civil law)- the legal code of ancient
    Rome codified under Justinian the basis for
    many modern systems of civil law regulated
    civilian life
  • Ius naturale (natural law)- Laws that apply to
    all societies and all people
  • Struggle of the Orders- conflict between the
    patricians plebeians over equality of rights
    for plebeians
  • Tribunes- An officer of ancient Rome elected by
    the plebeians to protect their rights from
    arbitrary acts of the patrician magistrates
  • Paterfamilias- A man who is the head of a
    household or the father of a family

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  • Manumission- the formal act of freeing from
    slavery
  • Latifunda- A great landed estate, especially of
    the ancient Romans
  • Pax Romana- the Roman peace the long period of
    peace (_at_200 years) enforced on states in the
    Roman Empire-
  • First Triumvirate- Power of the consuls divided
    among three leaders Pompey, Crassus, Julius
    Caesar
  • Princeps Civitas- title given to Augustus
    meaning First Citizen of the State
  • Messiah- One who is anticipated as, regarded as,
    or professes to be a savior or liberator.
  • Five Good Emperors- Golden Age of the Roman
    Empire under Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus
    Pius, Marcus Aurelius
  • Gladiators- A person, usually a professional
    combatant, a captive, or a slave, trained to
    entertain the public by engaging in mortal combat
    with another person or a wild animal in the
    ancient Roman arena
  • Tetrarchy- Joint rule by four governors

4
Geography Rome
  • Rome is located in the center of the Italian
    peninsula. This location helped the Romans expand
    in Italy and beyond.
  • The Apennine Mountains run down the center of
    Italy but are not too rugged nor high.
  • Fertile plains supported a growing population.
  • Ancestors of the Romans settled along the Tiber
    River. These villages eventually grew into Rome.

Rome
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GREECE
ROME
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Etruscans--Who were they?
  • Etruscans settled in the northern part of the
    Italian peninsula establishing city-states
  • Traded with Phoenicians Greeks
  • Phoenicians were seafaring carriers of culture
  • Greeks created colonies in the southern part of
    peninsula (ie. port of Naples)
  • -- technologically advanced-built temples,
    walls, canals-
  • masters of public works!
  • -- Organized government
  • under successive kings
  • -- Ruled over the city of
  • Rome until 509BCE
  • when the aristocrats
  • overthrew the king

9
The Roman Republic 509 B.C. 31 B.C.
1
  • In 509 B.C., the Romans drove out the Etruscans
    and set up a new
  • government, which they called a republic. In a
    republic, some
  • officials are chosen by the people.

In the early republic, the senate dominated the
government. Its members were patricians, or
members of the landholding class.
Little by little, the plebeians, or common
people, gained some political power. These
included the right to elect their own officials,
called tribunes. The tribunes could veto, or
block, laws that they felt harmed plebeians.
More than 2,000 years later, the framers of the
United States Constitution would adapt Roman
ideas of government, such as the senate, the
veto, and checks on political power.
10
Roman Republic Government
  • Rome
  • Senate set up under the kings as a council of
    elders to advise the king (Patricians)
  • Assembly made up of all citizens capable of
    bearing arms (Plebeians)
  • Patricians Plebeians met in the assembly to
    elect
  • Two Consuls- to govern the city
  • Magistrates- appointed judges upon retirement
    served in Senate
  • Tribunes- plebeians appointed to protect
    commoners

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ROME UNITED STATES
Executive ? Two consulselected by the assembly for one year Chief executives of the government Commanders-in-chief of the army ? Presidentelected by the people (electoral college) for 4 years Chief executive of the government Commander in chief of the army
Legislative ? Senate of 300 memberschosen from aristocracy Control foreign and financial policy ? Centuriate Assemblyall citizensoldiers were members for life Elect consuls Make laws ? Tribal Assemblycitizens grouped according to where they lived were members for life Elect tribunes Make laws ? Senate of 100 memberselected by people for 6 year terms Make laws Advise president on foreign policy ? House of Representatives of 435 memberselected by the people for 2 years Make laws Originate revenue bills
Judicial ? Praetorseight judges chosen for one year by Centuriate Assembly Two oversee civil criminal courts The others govern provinces ? Supreme Courtnine justices appointed for life by president Highest court Hear civil and criminal appeals cases
Legal Code ? Twelve Tables List of rules that were basis of Roman legal system ? US Constitution Basic law of the US Supremacy of Constitution
Citizenship ? All adult male landowners ? All native-born or naturalized persons
Republican Governments
13
Twelve Tables
  • Law Codes originally written on wood then
    inscribed later on bronze and placed in the Forum
    (town square)
  • 450 BCE 10 consuls drew up 10 laws just before
    they finished they added two more laws
  • Prohibiting marriage between the classes
  • Laws were binding and cannot be changed
  • Significance?
  • - judges could no longer interpret the laws
    unjustly
  • -becomes the basis for western civilization
    civil criminal legal system

14
Quick Look at the 12 Tables
  • In your base groups, decide what laws you would
    use from the 12 Tables to solve the case assigned
    to your group.
  • Timekeepers- 8 mins! Be ready to share.

15
End of Roman Republic- Beginning of Roman Empire
  • Following Caesars murder, Roman citizens took
    matters into their own hands.
  • Octavian, Caesars adopted son takes rule
  • Octavian renamed Augustus-first emperor ending
    the 500 year old Roman Republic
  • 42BCE Augustus soldiers demand that the senate
    give Consulship to Augustus
  • Plebeians re-elect Augustus as consul thirteen
    times
  • Ruled for 41 years and began the Pax Romana
    (Roman Peace) that lasted _at_ 200 years (27BCE to
    CE 180)
  • Restored law, security, initiated reforms in
    government, created public works

16
Augustus Reforms
  • Created efficient civil service to enforce the
    laws.
  • Opened up high-level jobs to men of talent,
    regardless of race.
  • Allowed cities and provinces to govern
    themselves.
  • Ordered a census, or population count, in order
    to make the tax system more fair.
  • Set up a postal service and issued new coins.
  • Employed the jobless.

17
Great Achievements Legacies of Rome
  • Latin- unifying language of the Roman Empire
  • Arch, dome, aqueducts roads
  • Literature- Virgils Aeneid
  • Satire
  • Julian Calendar some days months names
  • Christianity as a dominant religion
  • Codified Legal system

18
Religious Diversity in the Early Empire
4
  • As long as people honored Roman gods and
    acknowledged the divine spirit of the emperor,
    they were allowed to worship other gods as they
    pleased.
  • After the Romans conquered Judea, they excused
    the monotheistic Jews from worshiping the Roman
    gods.
  • Rome mistrusted Christians because they refused
    to make sacrifices to the emperor or honor the
    Roman gods.
  • Roman officials persecuted the Christians. Many
    Christians became martyrs, people who suffer or
    die for their beliefs.

19
Rebellion under Roman Rule
  • 66 CE Jews rebelled against Roman rule in
    Jerusalem
  • Romans destroyed their cities
  • 132 CE Jews rebelled again
  • Romans crushed the revolt and forced the Jews to
    scatter out of Jerusalem to outskirts of Roman
    empire and other territories

20
The Teachings of Jesus
  • Some of Jesus teachings were rooted in Judaism
  • Belief in one God
  • Ten Commandments
  • Mercy and sympathy for the poor and helpless
  • Obedience to the laws of Moses
  • Jesus also preached new beliefs
  • Called himself the Son of God
  • Proclaimed that he brought salvation and
    eternal
    life to anyone who would believe in him
  • Jesus also emphasized Gods love and taught
    the need for justice, morality,
    and service to others.

Did you know that Jesus lived His entire life
under Roman rule?
21
Spread of Christianity
  • At first, the apostles and disciples preached
    only in Judea.
  • Disciples began to preach inJewish communities
    throughout the Roman world.Jews who accepted
    thebeliefs of Jesus became the first
    Christians.
  • Paul spread Christianity beyond the Jewish
    communities, to non-Jews.

22
The Empire in Crisis
5
With the end of the Pax Romana, political and
economic turmoil rocked the Roman empire.
Political Problems
Economic Social Problems
  • High taxes to support the army burdened business
    people and farmers.
  • Poor farmers were forced to work and live on
    wealthy estates.
  • Overcultivated farmland lost its productivity.
  • Emperors were repeatedly overthrown or
    assassinated.
  • In one 50-year period, 26 emperors ruled, and
    only one died of natural causes.

23
Empire in Trouble-Decline of Rome
  • Empire too large to govern
  • Corruption in military and untrained soldiers
    most were hired mercenaries
  • Civil wars broke out
  • Distrust of the leaders
  • Ineffective emperors
  • Increased reliance on slave labor
  • Rich became lazy and self-centered (all for self,
    not for the good of the people)
  • Heavy taxes no jobs for the poor
  • Trade decreases prices increased
  • Population declined due to disease, starvation,
    war
  • Barbarian tribes, such as the Huns, Visigoths,
    Franks, and Saxons overrun the empire
  • Empire split in half- Western Roman Empire
    Eastern Roman Empire

24
Foreign Invasions
5
  • A weakened Rome could not withstand the forces of
    Germanic invasions.
  • The Huns dislodged other Germanic peoples and,
    little by little, conquered the Roman empire.

25
Can the Empire Be Saved? Two Reformers Tried
5
Diocletian
Constantine
  • Divided the empire into two parts to make it
    easier to govern
  • Tried to increase the prestige of the emperor
  • Fixed prices to slow inflation, or the rapid rise
    of prices
  • Established laws to ensure steady production of
    food and goods
  • Continued Diocletians reforms
  • Granted toleration to Christians, which led to
    the rapid growth of Christianity
  • Built a new capital at Constantinople, making the
    eastern part of the empire the center of power

26
Western Eastern Roman Empires
  • By 476 CE Visigoths sack Rome Western Roman
    Empire comes to an end and is thrown into an Age
    of Darkness
  • Eastern Roman Empire (Constantinople) later
    renamed the Byzantine empirelasts another 1000
    years!

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Just a great map to look at!
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