Title: Infinitives
1Infinitives
- Theyre not just used as bases anymore!
2Objectives
- I can
- Form and translate the five infinitives
- Recognize and translate the uses of the
infinitive subjective, historical, objective,
complementary, and indirect statement - Determine which types of verbs require infinitive
structures - Use the correct tense of infinitive to show
relationship in time to main verb of indirect
statement
3Objectives
- I can
- Translate a present infinitive to show concurrent
action with the main verb - Translate a perfect infinitive to show action
occurring before the main verb - Translate a future infinitive to show occurring
after the main verb
4Cultural Objectives
- I can
- Describe the effect of the Punic Wars on the
development of Rome - Identify the major personalities of the late
Republic and describe their contributions to the
end of the Republic - Explain the reasons behind the assassination of
Julius Caesar and the consequences of the action - Describe the civil war between Octavian and
Antony and how Octavian rose to power
5- I can
- Describe the principate of Augustus and his
political propaganda - Explain the fatal flaw set by Augustus not having
an heir and the effect this had on the rest of
Roman history
6Forming Infinitives
- Present active, present passive, perfect
passive, perfect actice, future active
7Present Active Infinitives
- Second principal part of the verb
- Amo, amare, amavi, amatus
- Usually ends with re
- Translation
- To verb
- i.e. amare to love
- Most commonly used as a complementary infinitive
which completes an incomplete verb like possum,
debeo, or volo - Debemus amare nostras vicinas. We ought to love
our neighbors.
8Possible confusion with re
- ere can be substituted for erunt in the
perfect active tense - amaverunt amavere
- If the ere is attached to the third principal
part of a verb, it is not an infinitive. - Remember that many third principal parts end with
u or v or s or x this will help you
recognize this alternate form. -
-
9Present Passive Infinitives
- Present passive infinitives are made from the
present active infinitive (2nd principal part) - For most verbs, remove the final e and replace it
with an i - Amare becomes amari
- Videre becomes videri
- Scire becomes sciri
103rd conjugation present passive infinitives
- For third conjugation (ere) and 3rd IO, (io,ere)
remove the ere and add i - Emere becomes emi
- Accipere becomes accipi
11Perfect active Infinitives
- Start with the third principal part
- Remove the i
- Add isse
- amavisse
- Translation to have ________
- most commonly used in indirect statements
- Scivit se interfecisse suum amicum
- He knew that he had killed his friend
12Perfect Passive Infinitives
- Begin with the 4th principal part
- Remove the us or um whichever is there.
- You will have to adjust this part to agree with
whoever is receiving the action most commonly it
will be accusative because of the indirect
statement - UM/OS MASCULINE
- AM/AS FEMININIE
- UM/A NEUTER
- Add esse as a separate part
- amatam esse to have been loved
- Most commonly used in indirect statement
- Scivit suum amicum interfectum esse a se.
- He knew that his friend had been killed by him.
13Future Active Infinitive
- Begin with the fourth principal part.
- Remove the us and addur you will have to
adjust this part to agree with whoever is doing
the action. It will usually be accusative
because of the indirect statement. - UM/OS MASCULINE
- AM/AS FEMININE
- UM/A NEUTER
- Add esse as a separate part.
- amaturam esse to be about to love
- Translation to be about to_________
14Formation Practice
- Choose five infinitives from your vocabulary list
and form the five infinitives with translation.
You must choose at least one 2nd conjugation
(ere) and at least one 3rd conjugation (ere)
verb.
15Uses of the Infinitive
- Historical, subjective, objective, complementary,
and the indirect statement
16Historical infinitives
- usually used for a series of actions
- translated as an imperfect tense verb to show a
continuous series - Example
- Caesar circumvenire Gallos, obstare copias, et
non sinere ullum exitus e castris. - Caesar was encircling the Gauls, blocking
supplies, and not allowing any exit from the camp.
17Subjective Infinitives
- functions as the subject of the sentence
- grammatically treated as a neuter singular noun
- in English can be translated as a gerund or an
infinitive - Example
- Regere aeque est difficillima res.
- To rule fairly is a most difficult thing.
18Objective Infinitives
- functions like a direct object
- most commonly used with iubeo, iubere, iussi,
iussus (to order) - treated like a neuter noun
- example
- Marius iubet milites oppugnare Sullam
- Marius orders the soldiers to attack Sulla.
19Complementary Infinitives
- complete the meaning of an incomplete verb
- most commonly used with a form of possum,
debeo, paro, coepit, volo, nolo, cupio, incipio,
necesse est, prohibeo and many other verbs that
leave the reader hanging as to what is happening - Example
- Caesar poterat vincire Galliam.
- Caesar was able to conquer Gaul.
20The Indirect Statement
- used to report a statement
- follows a verb of mental action such as saying,
thinking, understanding, knowing, perceiving, et
al. - subject of the indirect statement will used the
accusative - verb of the indirect statement will be an
infinitive - example
- Scio Caesarem mortuus esse.
- I know that Caesar is dead.
21The Infinitive of the Indirect Statement
- The choice of the tense of the infinitive is
relative to the main verb - same time present
- before perfect
- after future
- The first part of the perfect passive and future
active infinitive will be in the accusative and
will agree with the accusative subject.
22Examples
- scio Caesarem pugnare in Gallia.
- I know that Caesar is fighting in Gaul.
- same time
- Scio Caesarem pugnavisse in Gallia.
- .I know that Caesar was fighting in Gaul.
- before
- Scio Caesarem pungaturum esse in Gallia
- I know that Caesar will fight in Gaul.
- after
23Indirect Statement issues
- The subject cannot be left understood the
accusative noun must be there. - If the subject of the indirect statement is the
same as the main clause, you will use the
reflexive pronoun. - example
- Caesar scivit se debere non ferre Cleopatram
Romam. - Caesar knew that he ought not to bring Cleopatra
to Rome - debere is the indirect statemnent ferre in
complmentary, se is the subject accusative
reflexive.
24Infinitives Issue 2
- A LATIN infinitive cannot ever be used to show
purpose. To show purpose, you must use a
subjunctive or a gerund/gerundive. - Example
- Caesar went to Gaul to make his reputation
- Caesar ivit ad Galliam facere famam. WRONG
- Caesar ivit ad Galliam ut faceret famam. right
25Activity
- Based on your notes about the Late Republic and
your vocabulary list, write ten English sentences
that would be translated using infinitives. You
must have at least one example of each type.
26Make the infinitive chart for regno, regnare,
regnavi, regnatum rule
27Make the infinitive chart for duco, ducere, duxi,
ductus
28Application Using the chart you made, write the
correct form of the infinitive for each sentence.
- 1. Tiberius Gracchus thought the senators had
ruled long enough. - 2. Gaius Gracchus believed that the senators
were not ruling fairly. - 3. Marius thought that he would rule well.
- 4. Sulla thought that he would rule better.
- 5. The Romans learned that Marius and Sulla were
leading the country to civil war.
29- 6. Caesars soldiers knew that he led from the
front. - 7. Caesars men felt that Caesar was leading
them to victory. - 8. Pompeys men felt that he had led them well.
- 9. Pompey knew that Caesar was leading his
soldiers in Gaul very well. - 10. Pompey suspected that Caesar would lead his
troops against him.
30Translate the subject accusatives for the
previous sentences.
- 1. 8.
- 2. 9.
- 3. 10.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- 7.
31Ancient Rome
- How a small group of very well-organized people
ran the Western World for over 700 years and
influenced even America
32Unit Objectives
- Establish the chronology of Ancient Rome
- Analyze the geographical extent and impact of the
Romans - Trace the rise of Rome from city to superpower
and the cause and effect of the Punic Wars
33- Examine the causes and individuals involved in
the fall of the Republic and compare to USA - Identify the characteristics of Imperial Rome
from the rise of Augustus through the fall
34- Analyze the role of entertainment in Roman
culture - Trace the development of Christianity, its impact
on Rome, and Romes impact of Christianity
35Chronology of Ancient Rome
- Three time periods
- 753-509 BCE The Monarchy
- Rome was ruled by 7 kings beginning with Romulus
and ending with Tarquinius Superbus - 509 BCE- 31 BCE The Republic
- Rome was ruled by the Senate who was elected by
the people - 31 BCE AD 476 The Empire
- Rome was ruled by emperors
36(No Transcript)
37The Punic Wars Didos Curse
- How Rome went from a small city on seven hills to
the Mediterranean superpower
38War is the crucible of mankind.
- War is always bad but can bring about good
things. - forces change and speeds up development because
of the life or death struggle - forces people to find their leadership abilities
- development of weapons often leads to technology
then used for peacetime
39WAR
- speeds up development of medical care for
treatment of wounds and infectious diseases - forges close friendships between soldiers and
those not fighting because of shared struggles
and the intensity of the experience - exposes people to new ideas from other cultures
40The Downside of war
- widespread death and destruction
- extreme violence and hatred
- torture and inhumane acts
- some soldiers permanently psychologically
damaged all soldiers are changed by combat
41Roman Army
- Rome became the ruler of the Mediterranean World
because their army was so much better than
everybody else. - better weapons, training, organization,
technology - to be successful in politics, you had to have
military experience - Roman army spread Roman culture and language
- The Punic Wars developed the Roman army into the
impressive fighting force it would become.
42The First Punic War 264-241
- Roman ingenuity and tenacity triumphs over
Carthage
43First Punic War
- Carthage and Rome both want to control trade in
the Mediterranean - conflict starts over who will control island of
Sicily - Carthage naval power, Rome land power
- Rome had no real navy and losing on the sea
44First Punic War
- Carthaginian boat washed up on Roman shore
- Romans took it apart, used it as a model to build
their own ships - quickly built huge fleet
- Romans as land army trained for hand to hand
combat - invented the Crow little drawbridge with spike
on the end shaped like a crows beak - holds the ships together
- Rome defeats Carthage, takes over Sicily, and
makes Carthage pay reparations ( huge fine to pay
for war)
45Second Punic War 218-201 BC
- A tale of two boys and some elephants
46Second Punic War
- After defeat in first war, Carthage still
powerful and now hated Rome - Hannibal, son of a Carthaginian general, made to
swear as a little boy that he would always hate
the Romans - constantly reminded by his father
- Family moved to New Carthage, a colony on Spain
where his father died - at age 26 Hannibal became general
47Second Punic War
- Treaty from first war breaks down when Hannibal
invades towns in Spain - Hannibal leads marches toward Rome with 100,000
men and 36 elephants - Why bring elephants?
- marches over the Alps which no one expected
- Why?
48Second Punic War
- The Bad Battles
- Trasimene Hannibal trapped Romans between lake
and hill in the fog Romans lost over 20,000 men - Cannae 40,000 Romans killed in one day
- Romans just kept building another army
- Fabius the Delayer avoided battle with Hannibal
- fought by constantly harassing Hannibals troops
from sides and rear - Romans embarrassed but needed to train new armies
49Second Punic War
- Hannibal cant get Romans to come out and fight
another big battle - Why?
- stays in Italy nearly 20 years
- Romans are afraid of him
- Hannibal at the Gates becomes statement meaning
that disaster is coming - Roman mothers would threaten their children with
Hannibal will get you
50Second Punic War
- Earlier in the war in Spain, a young man named
Scipio had rescued his own father in battle - Scipio only 18, could easily have been killed
- Fought with Roman army against Hannibal from very
beginning - watched Hannibal and analyzed his techniques
- eventually he becomes Roman general
51Second Punic War Africa
- Scipio convinces senate to allow him to take a
Roman army to Carthage in Africa - knows Carthage will recall Hannibal from Italy to
protect the city - knows how Hannibal will fight and is not afraid
of elephants - Why would elephants be both good and bad?
- Scipio and Hannibal fight at Battle of Zama
- Scipio won, called Scipio Africanus afterwards
52Third Punic War 149-146 BC
- A Grumpy Old Man just cant be satisfied
53Third Punic War
- Carthage severely crippled by second war
- By treaty, not supposed to build another army
- Cato the Elder a Roman senator hates Carthage
- had fought against Hannibal
- thought Scipio Africanus had let Hannibal off to
easily - ultra-conservative thought everything too soft
54Third Punic War
- Cato ended every speech, regardless of what it
was about, with the statement Karthago delenda
est ( Karthage must be destroyed) - eventually Rome went back to war
- claimed Carthage was rebuilding an army
- burned city
- threw salt into ground as sign of destruction
- Carthage will later be rebuilt by Julius Caesar
because its location too good to waste
55Assessment
- 1. Who is the general who nearly destroyed the
Romans? - 2. What did the Romans learn from the First
Punic War? - 3. Which was the worst battle for the Romans?
the best? - 4. Who ended every speech with Carthage must be
destroyed and led the Romans into a third war
with Carthage? - 5. What general defeated the Carthaginians using
their own battle tactics?
56- 1. Quis est dux qui paene Romam vastavit?
- 2. Qui docti sunt Romani a Carthaginis militibus
in primo bello contra Carthaginem? - 3. Quod proelium erat pessimum Romanis?
Optimum? - 4. Qui confecit omnem orationem dicens Karthago
delenda est? - 5. Qui dux vicit Carthaginem modis doctis de
Carthaginis duce?
57The Aftermath of the Punic Wars
58Aftermath of Punic Wars
- well-trained army
- went on to conquer Greece, parts of Africa, parts
of Asia - No real competition
- increased trade, wealth
- Displaced farmers had lost farms while away
fighting - farms bought cheap by wealthy landowners
59Aftermath of the Punic Wars
- Displaced farmers become urban poor
- social unrest
- Patricians had used war to grab land and become
more powerful against plebians - The Gracchi
- two brothers Tiberius and Gaius
- mother daughter of Scipio Africanus
- Tiberius elected as tribune to protect the
plebians
60- Tiberius developed plan to take public land owned
by Rome but used by wealthy senators at little or
no cost and give to the soldiers who had lost
their land to predatory buyers during the war - Is this fair? What are the problems with this?
- Compare this the BLM in our country?
- Senate furious, attack Tiberius in the senate
with their chairs and beat him to death
61Gaius Gracchus The Little Brother
- Several years later, the problem of the urban
poor has increased - now wandering gangs of ex-soldiers prowling the
streets robbing and beating - Gaius gets elected tribune
- tries to pass the same laws Tiberius did
- Senate causes a riot in which Gaius Gracchus is
killed
62- Rome now has a permanent class of poor people
living in the city who will be a drain on the
economy and a source of political instability - eventually will become the first welfare state
because they have to provide free food for these
people
63Fall of the Roman Republic
- What went wrong and why? Can we avoid the same
issues?
64Review of the Roman Republic System
- Why did the Romans move from monarchy to
republic? - What are the patricians and plebians?
- What is a republic?
- How did they separate the powers of government?
Why? - How did the Punic Wars change Rome?
- For only what crime could a Roman citizen be
executed?(Junnius Brutus executed his own sons.)
65The Beginning of the End
- Gaius Marius
- Urban poor with nothing to do
- Why did Rome now have the urban poor?
- Marius cancelled the property requirement to be
in the army - Serve 25 years and you get free land
- Why would this appeal to the urban poor?
- Army becomes loyal to individual commanders who
allow them to share the booty (Define booty in
this context.)
66Gaius Marius
67Gaius Marius
- Why is it a problem for the army to be loyal to
its commander, not the country? - Why would soldiers feel this way?
- The Marian Spear
- specialized tip that fish-hooks when it hits a
shield - Why is this an improvement?
- How would this affect the soldiers and their
feelings about Marius?
68Gaius Marius breaks the cursus honorum
- You are supposed to wait 10 years between
consulships. - Marius was allowed to hold consecutive
consulships - Why is this problem?
- How will this contribute to the fall of the
republic? - The Social Wars Italians who were not citizens
rebelled until they were granted citizenship. - This conflict is where Marius gained most of his
power.
69Lucius Cornelius Sulla
- came from old but bankrupt family
- got his start serving with Marius but later
turned on Marius because he thought Marius was
giving too much power to the plebians - Civil War against Marius
- marched his army on Rome
- first time an elected official had attacked his
own city
70Lucius Cornelia Sulla
- Since Marius had established the precedent of
breaking the cursus honorum, Sulla wanted
multiple, consecutive consulships. - Instead became dictator
- Did not follow example of Cinncinnatus the
Dictator who left his farm, defeated the enemy,
and retired in three days
71Sulla
- passed laws to give the patricians more power
- established the precedent of using the army for
personal power - established the precedent of using proscription
- proscription is publishing a list of people
considered enemies of the state and guilty of
treason - anyone on the list can be killed by anyone the
killer would not be punished but rewarded with
part of dead persons property - Sulla retired eventually after wrecking havoc on
the system, became a farmer who grew cabbages,
and died two years later
72Lucius Cornelius Sulla the Dictator
73Julius Caesar 100- 44 B.C.
- Marius and Sulla and their civil wars had
severely undermined the Republic. - This is the best documented time period in Roman
history - Caesar wrote almost daily commentaries (Ancient
Tweets) - letters and speeches of Cicero
- Roman historians wrote much about this period
- Why? ( Think about WWII versus 1950s)
74Gaius Julius Caesar who destroyed the Republic
from old, rich family who claimed descent from
Venus
75Gaius Julius Caesar
- his father died when he was a teenager nephew to
Gaius Marius - Sulla tried to make him divorce his first wife
but he refused and left Italy - always very ambitious his role model was
Alexander the Great - Completed the cursus honorum
76Julius Caesar
- Master at manipulation
- gave great funeral games for his aunt to win
popularity with the common people - said that the best source of information about
enemies was their wives and daughters - could convince people to do what he wanted
without them seeming to know they were being
manipulated - military genius beloved by his troops
77The First Triumvirate
- Rome in general mess with massive corruption
- leads to formation of informal rule by a three
man alliance called a triumvirate - Pompey the Great military experience
- Crassus money
- Caesar popular support
- To cement alliance, Pompey married
- Caesars daughter, Julia
-
78Caesars Career in Gaul
- After consulship, became governor of Gaul
- needed money and military experience
- conquered Gaul (France and surrounding area)
which almost doubled the size of the empire, even
invaded Britain - sold conquered people into slavery
- built loyal army
- led by example
- shared with soldiers knew the name of every
centurion - spent 10 years with his army
79Caesar as a Threat
- Triple threat
- Money from Gaul
- Political support in Rome from plebians
especially - loyal army who would follow him to and back
- wants another consulship
- Crassus now dead tried to invade Parthia head
became a toy for king - Julia died in childbirth Caesar blamed Pompey so
no longer have personal connection - Senate demands he disband his army before he can
run for office
80Civil War ...again
- Pompey and Senate insecure about Caesars growing
power, especially his army - Caesar crosses the Rubicon and invades Italy
- Pompey and the Senate flee to Greece so that
Pompey can gather his troops which are mostly in
the Eastern provinces - forgot to take the treasury from Rome so Caesar
gets all the money
81Civil War Caesar versus Pompey and the Senate
- Big battle at Pharsalus
- Caesar outnumbered
- Pompey had senators bothering him already had
camp prepared for victory celebrations - Caesar told troops to go for faces of patricians
- Caesar won Pompey ran to Egypt to King Ptolemy
who owed him favors - Caesar pardoned everyone who fought against him
to avoid the problems that had followed
Marius/Sulla war
82Civil War and its aftermath
- Ptolemy just a kid his advisors convince him to
kill Pompey - Gives Caesar a present Pompeys head and
signet ring - Caesar very angry but decided to stay in Egypt to
help settle dispute between Ptolemy and his
sister/wife Cleopatra VII - Why would Caesar be angry?
83Cleopatra VII actually a blue-eyed, blonde Greek
not Egyptian very smart but ruthless knew how to
make the best out of what she had
84Only image of Cleopatra to survive except coins
85Caesar in Egypt
- Cleopatra sneaks into palace rolled up in a rug
- Caesar impressed by her intelligence and
willingness to learn - spends too much time in Egypt playing with
Cleopatra - she gives birth to son Caesarion but Caesar smart
enough not to recognize him legally - leads war to get Cleopatra the throne
- Ptolemy killed
- Library of Alexandria burned
- Caesar returns to Rome but makes plan to have
Cleopatra join him
86Caesar the Dictator
- Veni, vidi, vici
- changed calendar to Julian calendar
- cancelled debts
- Cleopatra and her son come to Rome and live
nearby - big insult to his wife Calpurnia
- big insult to people of Rome
- Why?
- appoints new senators to fill out ranks from war
- Senate very resentful
87The Conspiracy
- Caesar planning a war against Parthia
- Being dictator not so much fun sick with
epilepsy getting worse - Senate plans to kill him
- conspiracy led by Cassius and Brutus
- both had been pardoned by Caesar
- Brutus owed his career to Caesar but had issues
with him because of his mother - Brutus key figure because his ancestor had
overthrown last king
88The Murder of Caesar
- Caesar was warned by a soothsayer to Beware the
Ides of March - Went to senate meeting anyway
- held in Theater of Pompey because senate house
had been burned - separated him from Marc Antony his lieutenant
- surrounded by senators pretending to ask him
questions - stabbed 25-30 times
- Brutus the last assassin Et tu, mi fili
89After the Murder
- Conspirators rush out into Forum with bloody
knives yelling Sic semper tyrannis - John Wilkes Boothe will say the same thing when
he kills Lincoln - Not very well-planned had no plan of what to do
next - attacked by plebians who loved Caesar
- burned the houses of conspirators who had to flee
Rome - created a power vacuum that will led to the third
civil war and one man rule
90What can we learn from this?
- loyalty of army to country not individuals
- dont let people be exceptions to the structure
of the government - If you remove a ruler, especially by force,
always have a plan for the new government - Be careful about pardoning people they dont
usually forgive you. - Dont insult the public by having your girlfriend
live close to your wife.
91The Rise of Augustus and Transition to Rule by
Emperor
- What happens when people give up their civil
liberties
92Legacy of Julius Caesar
- Remember what happened to Julius Caesar
- Everyone, especially Marc Antony, thought Caesar
would name Marc Antony, his second-in-command, as
his heir - Antony had been working with Caesar throughout
his career - Antony had military experience and was well liked
by Caesars troops - Antony was a drunk.
93Caesars Will
- Caesar had no legitimate children (remember his
daughter Julia died in childbirth) - named his great-nephew Octavius as his heir and
adopted him as his son in his will - What did Octavius get?
- huge amount of money
- loyalty of army who adored Caesar and would want
to support whomever he named as successor - hatred of Marc Antony and many senators,
especially Brutus and Cassius
94Octavius Dilemma
- only 18 years old no government or military
experience - damned if he does accept
- Marc Antony and most of the senate will not
support him - damned if he doesnt accept
- Marc Antony and most of the senate will have him
killed to remove him as a threat to their rule - decides with help of two close friends to go for
it - goes to the army and makes a speech about needing
to punish the assassins of his father Julius
Caesar - the army backs him against the senate and Antony
95Octavius Rise to Power
- Step one was to get recognition for senate
- fights a battle against Marc Antony who was
fighting the senate surprisingly wins - orders senate to appoint him consul
- Senate refuses until Octavius brings his very
loyal army to Rome to convince them - Step Two was to punish Brutus and Cassius
- forms the Second Triumvirate of Octavius, Marc
Antony, Lepidus - Defeats Brutus and Cassius ( both commit suicide)
at the battle of Phillippi
96Octavius Continued Rise
- Step Three was to get rid of Antony
- divide the empire into two parts
- Octavius gets the Western part (Europe)
- Antony gets the Eastern part (Asia, Africa,
Egypt) - cement the alliance by having Antony marry
Octavius sister Octavia - Antony goes to Egypt because its the richest
part of the East
97Antony and Egypt
- Antony meets Cleopatra who arrives on a golden
boat - Cleopatra is very ambitious all she wants is to
rule the world - had tried with Caesar and that didnt work out
- plans to use Antony to get herself into world
power - Antony not thinking with the right body parts
- hooks up with Cleopatra divorces Octavia
- Remember Romans already dont like Cleopatra
98Octavius Continued Rise to Power
- Antonys behavior with Cleopatra perfect excuse
for conflict with Octavius - Octavius claims Antony is controlled by Cleopatra
a foreign queen - Romans do not trust powerful women
- Antony actually gave Cleopatra (with whom he was
busily having children) parts of the Roman
Empire as a present - How would the Roman react to this?
- Antony and Octavius meet at the Battle of Actium
to decide who will rule
99Battle of Actium 31 BC
- Octavius actually doesnt command the troops
- sick never very physically strong
- Marcus Agrippa, his friend since childhood,
commands troops - During battle when it looks like Cleopatra and
Antony are losing, she sails off with all the
money - Antony follows her and abandons his troops
- not going after the money, going after his lover
- his troops think hes whipped and join Octavius
100Final Removal of Antony
- After Actium, Antony joins Cleopatra in
Alexandria - they both know they are beaten when Octavius
arrives - both commit suicide
- Antony stabs himself (manages to screw that up
too) - Cleopatra by legend has herself bitten by a snake
smuggled into her tomb in a basket of figs - Probably really used poison since she practiced
with poisons - Octavius now sole ruler of Rome
101Octavius becomes first emperor
- Romans had been through three civil wars less
than 60 years - People just wanted someone who could stabilize
the government - Octavius very smart
- never had himself named dictator called himself
princeps which mean first citizen - held successive consulships but claimed his
official role only a tribune (which gave him veto
power) - real source of power army and money
- Named Augustus by senate
102Augustus Reign
- Very stable time
- begins the Pax Romana 200 years of relative
peace - supports the arts and literature
- pays for the Aeneid which is the most important
book in Roman literature - poets Horace and Ovid also wrote during this time
but Ovid was exiled for writing a seduction
manual - started the first fire brigades and police
- pays for lots of building projects
- I found Rome a city of bricks, I leave it a city
of marble - ruled until 14 AD
103Problems with Augustus Reign
- lost over 10,000 soldiers in Battle of Teutoberg
Forest in Germany when defeated by Arminius whom
the Romans had trained - succession issues because only had one child
Julia - she had five children including three boys but
they all died young - she was super slut who had to be exiled because
she went against Augustus family values policy - had to name his stepson Tiberius as his successor
- couldnt stand Tiberius
- Lack of a natural heir will lead to instability
of succession throughout Roman history - Beginning of emperor worship which will lead to
crazy emperors
104Vocabulary for Late Republic
105Aestas, aestatis f.
106Beneficium, beneficii n.
107Captivus, captivi m.
108Celeritas, celeritatis f.
109Cupiditas, cupiditatis f.
110Dictator, dictatoris m.
111Diligentia, diligentiae f.
112Donum, doni n.
113Gens, gentis f.
114Genus, generis n.
- Birth, descent, origin, class, kind
115Gloria, gloriae f.
116Ignis, ignis m.
117ius, iuris n.
118Modus, modi m.
119Regnum, regni n.
120Res, rei f.
121Sacrificium, sacrificii n.
122Appello, appellare, appellavi, appellatum
123Appropinquo, appropinquare, appropinquavi,
appropinquatum
- Approach ( takes dative for direct object)
124Ascendo, ascendere, ascendi, ascensum
125Cedo, cedere, cessi, cessum
126Doleo, dolere, dolui
127Duco, ducere, duxi, ductum
128Emo, emere, emi, emptum
129Eo, ire, ii/ivi, itum
130Faveo, favere, favi, fautum
- Support, favor, help (takes dative for direct
object)
131Fluo, fluere, fluxi, fluctum
132Iacio, iacere, ieci, iactum
133Neglego, neglegere, neglexi, neglectum
134Numero, numerare, numeravi, numeratum
135Regno,regnare, regnavi, regnatum
136Soleo, solere, solitus
137Studeo, studere, studui
- Be eager, be enthusiastic, strive for, study
138Volo, volare, volavi, volatum
139Augustus
140Augustus
- Primus princeps erat Octavius appellatus
Augustus. - Iulius Caesar erat frater Octavii aviae.
- Octavius putavit se futurum esse heredem Iulii
Caesaris quod Caesar nullos liberos habuit post
mortem Iuliae. - Saepe dixit amicis se recturum esse Romanum
Imperium sed nemo credidit adulescenti audaci.
141- Multi populi cogitaverunt Marcum Antonium,
Magistrum Equi Iulio Caesari in testamento
appellaturum esse heredem Caesaris. - Certe Marcus Antonius putabat se accepturum esse
a Caesare imperium sed errabat. - Post Caesar interfectus est a Bruto et Cassio cum
multis amicis et hostibus, Marcus Antonius Romam
regnabat - Senatores qui Caesarem interfecerant, non
consilia ceperant bona Romano imperio post
mortem Caesaris.
142- Senatores non intellexerunt populos Romae amare
Caesarem. - Hi cogitaverunt populos futuros esse felices ubi
senatus Romam rursus regnabat. - Marcus Antonius cogitavit populum cupiturum esse
sibi regere. - Senatus et Marcus Antonius errabant.
143- Ubi testamentum Caesaris lectum erat in Foro,
Octavius appellatus est Caesaris heres. - Antonius erat iratissimus et cupivit delere
Octavium. - Senatus erat iratissimus sed non cupivit regi vel
a Antonio cui nemo credidit vel a Octavio qui
vixerat vix septemdecim annos.
144- Octavius novit se esse in magno periculo.
- Senatus cupivit necare eum quod volebat regere et
Antonius eum necare cupivit quod regere volebat.
- Octavius decrevit se iturum esse Romam et
capturum esse imperium de senatu et Antonio. - Narravit suis amicis se debere capere illa quae
suus pater sibi dederat.
145- Pauci crediderunt Octavium posse fieri Caesaris
heredem sed hi non intellexerunt hunc
adulescentem. - Octavius novit se favorem Caesaris militum debere
petere. - Igitur occurrit cum militibus et sua consilia
explicavit eis. - Senatus tantum odium contra Antonium habuit ut
daret Octavio imperium exercituum.
146- Iusserunt Octavium vincere Antonium.
- Fatue senatus credidit se posse continere
Octavium quod erat adulescens. - Rursus errabant senatores.
- Octavius Antonium in proelio vicit sed tum se cum
Antonio et altero duce nomine Lepido iunxit
contra senatum. - Hi duces appellati sunt triumviri.
147- Iter fecerunt Romam et ceperunt urbem.
- Octavius praesertim Brutum et Cassium volebat
punire. - Publice scripserunt nomina hostium et similis
Sullae hos interficerunt. - Deinde ducentes suos execitus, Antonius et
Octavius qui fuerant hostes nunc exercitus Bruti
et Cassii in proelio prope Philippos
oppugnaverunt.
148- In hoc proelio vicerunt illos qui interfecerant
Caesarem. - Brutus et Cassius se necaverunt.
- Post proelium, Antonius et Octavius imperium
Romanum dividere decreverunt. - Removerunt potestatem Lepidi et Antonius regnabat
in provinciis orientibus dum Octavius regnabat in
Roma et provinciis occidentibus.
149- Stultus Antonius etiam putabat se posse vincere
Octavium facile consensit se ducere ad
matrimonium Octavii sororem Octaviam. - Sed nesciebat Octavium iam consilia capere et mox
bellum civile reventurum esse Romanis populis. - Antonius constituit se regnaturum esse suos
provincias de Aegyptio cum regina Cleopatra.
150- Octaviam quam multi Romani suspexerunt
repudiavit in hoc modo offendit multos Romanos. - Octavius explicavit senatui Antonium et
Cleopatram consilia cepisse contra Romam. - Dixit Cleopatram barbaram reginam ducere Antonium
et debere vastari. - Explicavit Antonium dedisse magnas partes Romani
imperii. - Senatus decrevit gerere bellum contra Antonium et
Cleopatram .
151- Iusserunt Octavium ducere Romanum exercitum
contra Antonium et reginam Cleopatram. - Prope Actium, Antonius et Octavius bellum
gerebant ubi subito Cleopatra e proelio
navigavit. - Antonius reliquit suos milites quod cupivit ire
cum uxore sua Cleopatra. - Milites senserunt Antonium amississe eius
fortitudinem.
152- Celeriter Antonii milites se iunxerunt cum
Octavio et nunc Octavius erat solus imperator
Romae. - Antonius et Cleopatra se interfecerunt in
Aegyptio. - Octavius sensit Caesarionem, filium Iulii
Caesaris e Cleopatra futurum esse periculum sibi.
153- Igitur iussit puerum necari, sed licet Octaviae
alere Antonii et Cleopatrae alteros liberos. - Octavius simulavit favere senatui sed iussit se
appellari consulem et tribunum. - Milites favebant Octavio et erant genus
potestatis optimae principi. - Senatus cupivit appellare eum dictatorem
perpetuum sed Octavius scivit illum officium
fuisse causam mortis Caesaris.
154- Igitur senatus nomen Augustum ei dedit.
- Octavius erat primus princeps Romae.
- Regnabat viginti et septem annos ut princeps
Romana Res Publica erat mortua.
155Augustus mutat Romam
- Augustus multa mutavit.
- Coepit legere milites custodi privato sibi.
- Hi milites erant Praetoriani Custodes qui altos
ordines et salaria magna habuerunt et iverunt
cum Augusto ubique. - Auxilio Agrippae et Maecenae Augustus bene
regnabat et correxit vitam plebiam.
156- Augustus multa aedificavit. Dixit se invenisse
Romam factam laterum et mutavit ad urbem factam
marmoris. - Dedit favorem poetis et scriptoribus praesertim
Verilio, Ovidio qui sero misit in exsilium, et
Horatio et Livio. - Sed duo discrimina paene vastaverunt Augusti
regnum.
157- Primum discrimen erat proelium in Germania ubi
XV milia militum necata sunt et tria aquilae
amissae sunt. - Augustus saepe dixit se cupere suas aquilas hi
victi milites vexabant principem maxime. - Secundum discrimen erat inopia liberis.
- Augusti uxor Livia duos filios habuit cum primo
marito sed nullos liberos cum Augusto.
158- Similis Iulio Caesari, Augustus solam unam filiam
Iuliam habuit. - Amavit suam filiam carissime sed Iulia erat
scortilla. - Habuit quinque liberos cum marito Agrippa sed
tres pueri mortui sunt ante Augustum. - Ubi Agrippa mortuus est, Augustus coegit Iuliam
esse uxorem filii vitrici eius Tiberium cui
habuit multum odium.
159- Augustus didicit Iuliam habuisse plurimas res
amoris publice et misit filiam in exsilium. - Non sivit Iuliae nomen dici in suo domo.
- Deinde coactus est appellare Tiberius ut heredem.
- Augustus est etiam hodie exemplar optimi
principis. - Senatus fecit edictum Augustum adoratum esse in
omnibus provinciis. - Multi dixit Augustum factum esse deum a Romanis.
160Augustus Mutat Romam QUiz
- 1. What two things did the Praetoriam Guard
have? - 2. What was the purpose of the Praetorian Guard?
- 3. Who helped Augustus rule?
- 4. Who benefitted from his rule?
161- 5. What change did Augustus say he made to the
city of Rome? - 6. Whom did he support?
- 7. What was the first crisis of his reign?
- 8. Why did he say he wanted his eagles?
- 9. What was the second crisis of his reign?
162- 10. How did he feel about his daughter?
- 11. Why did her children not inherit the throne?
- 12. What did he force Julia to do?
- 13. What did he learn about Julia?
- 14. After her exile, what would he not allow?
163- 15. Of what is Augustus considered an example?
- 16. What did the senate decree?
- 17. What did many people believe about Augustus?
164Writing with infinitives
- 1. Caesar wanted to rule Rome.
- 2. It was necessary for him to lead soldiers and
to have money. - 3. He knew that Gaul would be his opportunity.
- 4. To rule is life for Caesar.
165Writing With Infinitives 2
- 1. Octavius knew that Antonius wanted to destroy
him. - 2. Antony felt that Cleopatra would always love
him. - 3. Octavius understood that the Romans did not
like Cleopatra. - 4. Octavius wanted to rule Rome.
- Octavius, Octavii m.
- Antonius, Antonii m.
- Cleopatra, Cleopatrae f.
166Writing Practice
- Explain who Augustus was, what he wanted to do,
what he had to do to reach his goal, and where he
gained power. Please utilize your four sentence
types discussed earlier.
167Listening Practice
- 1. rex dux princeps regina
- 2. Iuliam Liviam Livillam Drusillam
- 3. Iulia Livia Agrippina Drusilla
- 4. Agrippam Cleopatram Sullam Marium
- 5. vicit duxit necavit amavit
168Historical Heroes Julius Caesar
- 1. Prior to beginning his quest, has Julius
Caesar been given any special talents or help? - 2. What motivates his quest?
- 3. What skills and resources does he use to
accomplish his goal? - 4. How does he obtain the skills and resources
he needs for success? - 5. What is his leadership style?
- 6. What dangers does he face?
- 7. What sacrifices does he make?
- 8. How does he utilize his success?
- 9. What could he have done differently?
- 10. What can we learn from his life that is
applicable to the 21st century?
169Historical Heroes Augustus
- 1. Prior to beginning his quest, has Augustus
been given any special talents or help? - 2. What motivates his quest?
- 3. What skills and resources does he use to
accomplish his goal? - 4. How does he obtain the skills and resources
he needs for success? - 5. What is his leadership style?
- 6. What dangers does he face?
- 7. What sacrifices does he make?
- 8. How does he utilize his success?
- 9. What could he have done differently?
- 10. What can we learn from the life of Augustus
that is applicable to the 21st century?
170Historical Heroes Cleopatra
- 1. Prior to beginning her quest, has Cleopatra
been given any special talents or help? - 2. What motivates her quest?
- 3. What skills and resources does she use to
accomplish her goal? - 4. How does she obtain the skills and resources
she needs for success? - 5. What is her leadership style?
- 6. What dangers does she face?
- 7. What sacrifices does she make?
- 8. How does she utilize her success?
- 9. What could she have done differently?
- 10. What can we learn from the life of Cleopatra
that is applicable to the 21st century?
171Historical Heroes Marc Antony
- 1. Prior to beginning his quest, has Antony
been given any special talents or help? - 2. What motivates his quest?
- 3. What skills and resources does he use to
accomplish his goal? - 4. How does he obtain the skills and resources
he needs for success? - 5. What is his leadership style?
- 6. What dangers does he face?
- 7. What sacrifices does he make?
- 8. How does he utilize his success?
- 9. What could he have done differently?
- 10. What can we learn from the life of Antony
that is applicable to the 21st century?