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ROME AND THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY, 600 BC-500 AD CHAPTER 5

ROME AND THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY, 600 BC-500 AD CHAPTER 5. http://www.mitchellteachers.net/WorldHistory/AncientRome/Images/MapRomeEmpireAtHeight.jpg. The Rise of Rome. Latins , Greeks, and Etruscans settle in Italy by 550 BC

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ROME AND THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY, 600 BC-500 AD CHAPTER 5

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  1. ROME AND THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY, 600 BC-500 AD CHAPTER 5 http://www.mitchellteachers.net/WorldHistory/AncientRome/Images/MapRomeEmpireAtHeight.jpg

  2. The Rise of Rome • Latins, Greeks, and Etruscans settle in Italy by 550 BC • Latin herders and farmers came first to area near present city of Rome, by 1000 BC • Greek colonists settled southern Italy and Sicily by 550 BC • Etruscans came from middle east area and settled north of Latins • Etruscans merge with Latins and take control by 650 BC • Rome becomes a city based on farm life http://historyfacebook.wikispaces.com/file/view/etruscans.gif/30589536/etruscans.gif

  3. Roman Republic Begins • Roman patricians (large land owners) overthrow TarquiniusSuperbus in 509 BC • By 264 BC Romans conquer most of the Italian peninsula • Citizenship is offered to defeated people willing to accept Roman rule http://cloacamaxima1.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/tarquinius_superbus.jpg

  4. Rome’s Success Due to Four Principals • Extend citizenship and allow people local rule of themselves • Excel militarily • Builds colonies and roads to connect them closely • Creates political institutions to deal with specific problems http://www.gutenberg.org/files/11688/11688-h/Images/Illus0281.jpg

  5. Political Structure of the Republic • Two major groups of Roman people • Patricians who control the Senate • Plebeians (wealthy businessmen) who run the Plebeian Assembly • Senate controls the government and passes laws by the 3rd century BC • Two consuls, chosen by Senate, run the republic • Praetors act as judges to enforce laws fairly http://195.176.180.15:82/medina/courses/cm0910/group1/multimedia/image/img_poc8_18.jpg

  6. Patricians and Plebeians Conflict With Each Other • Early laws prohibit marriage between the two groups • Position of “tribune” gives plebs some say with the Senators • By 287 BC, Plebeian Assembly can finally pass laws • Patricians continue to direct power from the Senate http://www.latin-teacher.com/latinI/images/tribune.jpg

  7. Roman Law Treats Conquered People Fairly • Twelve Tables provide early justice for Rome • Law of Nations develops • Natural law, applied universally to all citizens • Many of these principles live on today http://sljglobal.wikispaces.com/file/view/tables.jpg/165182367/tables.jpg

  8. Punic Wars Create an Empire • Three wars against Carthage develop between 264 and 146 BC • Carthage is leading power trading in the Mediterranean in 264 • Rome builds a navy and prepares to protect its interests in Sicily http://www.ancient.eu.com/uploads/images/283.jpg

  9. First Punic War • War ends in 241 BC with Roman victory • Carthage gives up Sicily and pays tribute to Rome for 10 years • Carthaginian leader Hannibal prepares for a second war http://www.militarygenius.com/hannibal_barca_carthage_pictures_pics_images_photos_pix_photographs_gallery/hannibal_barca_carthage_second_punic_war_rome_romans_1.jpg

  10. Second Punic War • Hannibal marches from Spain to Rome from the north • Battle at Cannae in 216 is huge Roman loss • By 206, Hannibal is pushed out of Italy • Scipio Africanus wins the Battle of Zama in 202 • Carthage gives up its western empire and all but a few naval ships http://www.myartprints.com/kunst/roman/publius_scipio_africanus_c234_hi.jpg

  11. Third Punic War • For many years before 146 BC, Cato the Elder ends every speech with “Carthage must be destroyed” • Romans defeat Carthage and destroy the city in 146 • Greek supporters of Carthage face Roman attack between 146 and 129 BC • Romans conquer the land surrounding the Mediterranean Sea, call it “Mare Nostrum” (Our Sea) http://www.myartprints.com/kunst/roman/cato_elder_234_149_bc_toga_hi.jpg

  12. The Republic Struggles • Patricians take more and more land as the empire grows • Small farmers, unable to compete, leave the farms • Brothers Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus try to push land reform, but they are killed by angry Patrician leaders in the Senate http://www.glogster.com/media/3/13/66/8/13660811.jpg

  13. Army Reforms Bring Civil War • Roman consul and general Marius reforms army in 107 BC • Accepts poor people into the army, promising them land in return • Soldiers fight for the generals, not for Rome • Generals become politicians to get laws passed to make the land available to their men http://en.academic.ru/pictures/enwiki/77/Marius_Glyptothek_Munich_319.jpg

  14. Sulla Replaces Marius • Senate gives him control of an army in Asia Minor • Plebeian Assembly counters by offering the position to Marius • Civil war develops, and Sulla controls Rome by 82 BC • He restores power to the Senate, but use of military in this way signals a new era in the Roman Republic http://www.mmdtkw.org/AU0505MariusSulla.jpg

  15. Civil Wars Recur Over Next 50 Years • Crassus, Pompey, and Caesar form the First Triumvirate in 60 BC • Crassus is wealthiest man in Rome and takes control of Syria • Pompey is the respected older general who takes control of Spain • Caesar is the young rising general who goes to Gaul to defeat a traditional Roman rival http://www.mmdtkw.org/RomeShak208-Triumvirate1.jpg

  16. Confrontation Between Caesar and Pompey • Crassus dies in battle in 53 BC • Pompey fears the growing popularity of Caesar and recalls him to Rome in 49 • Caesar illegally crosses the Rubicon River into Rome with his army • Pompey flees to Greece, recreates his army, but loses civil war to Caesar by 46 BC http://arrrpirates.wikispaces.com/file/view/death_of_pompey.jpg

  17. Caesar Becomes Dictator • Formerly legal only for six months • Caesar fills the Senate with his friends • Other Senators fear he will become dictator for life • Marcus Brutus leads an assassination on the Ides of March in 44 BC, starting a new civil war http://edweb.tusd.k12.az.us/sabino/library/English/JuliusCaesar/julius2.gif

  18. Second Triumvirate Forms • Brutus, Cassius, and other Senators flee to Greece to build an army • Friends of Caesar form a new leadership group • Octavian (Caesar’s nephew and adopted son) • Marc Antony (Caesar’s closest friend and ally) • Lepidus (one of Caesar’s generals) http://www.mmdtkw.org/RomeShak311-VirRPC.jpg

  19. Octavian and Antony Vie For Power • Brutus and his soldiers face defeat at Battle of Philippi in 42 BC • Lepidus is pushed aside • Octavian and Antony fight for control of the empire • Antony allies with Cleopatra of Egypt • Octavian wins and they die after the Battle of Actium in 31 BC http://www.backtoclassics.com/images/pics/giovannibattistatiepolo/giovannibattistatiepolo_the_meeting_of_anthony_and_cleopatra_detail.jpg

  20. Augustus Becomes Imperator • Octavian allows Senate to continue to exist, but under his control • Takes title “Augustus Caesar” • Senate names him “Imperator” (Emperor) • He creates an army of 150,000 soldiers to protect Rome • He also creates the Praetorian Guard, 9000 soldiers protecting him http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1a/Praetorian_GuardSoldiers_basrelief_cropped.jpg

  21. Early Empire Lasts Until 180 AD • Early emperors are generally effective, with some exceptions • Corrupt emperors like Caligula and Nero create civil war by 69 AD • Order restores and the PaxRomana continues • The Five Good Emperors extend the empire and protect it within its borders http://0.tqn.com/d/ancienthistory/1/0/6/y/2/Nero.jpg

  22. The Five Good Emperors • Generally tolerant, effective rulers • Expanded their power, cut that of the Senate • Built many aqueducts, bridges, and roads • The Five Emperors are: • Nerva • Trajan • Hadrian • Antoninus Pius • Marcus Aurelius http://history.blinkweb.com/uploads.00123065/00223419.jpg

  23. Empire Expands • Hadrian withdraws Romans from Mesopotamia • He builds wall in England to protect against Picts and Scots • He fortifies along the Danube and Rhine Rivers to keep Germanic tribes out http://www.aeria.phil.uni-erlangen.de/photo_html/portrait/roemisch/kaiserzeit/adoptivkaiser/hadrian/hadrian8.jpg

  24. Unity Provides Order • Latin spreads throughout the western empire, Greek in the east • All free adults become citizens by order of Caracalla in 212 • Local people rule themselves • Provincial cities are small and consistent throughout empire • Greco-Roman civilization prospers http://vickileon.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/07/627px-Caracalla.jpg

  25. Farming and Trade Grow • Romans trade as far away as China through the Middle East • Farming remains key productive area • Giant farms called latifundia develop • Upper classes grow fabulously wealthy • Working people find fewer and fewer jobs as slaves work everywhere http://pages.uoregon.edu/klio/maps/re/Limes%20-%20Rekonstruktion%20einer%20villa%20rustica.gif

  26. The Arts in Rome • Romans excel in architecture • Invent the arch, domes • Copy Greek use of columns • First to use concrete in great amounts • Build roads, bridges, aqueducts • Golden Age of Roman literature is during Augustus’ rule • Virgil’s Aeneid provides epic mythology • Horace’s Satires attack human weaknesses • Livy’s Early History of Rome traces its development to 9 BC http://th08.deviantart.net/fs71/PRE/i/2010/108/1/4/Roman_Architecture_by_dedeyutza.jpg

  27. Family Life and Women’s Roles • Father is “paterfamilias” • Upper class children educated, boys and girls both • Children become adults at 16 • Fathers arrange marriages for daughters • Divorce becomes possible in Roman life • Women get more rights by 100s AD, including owning and inheriting property http://rfe.name/pml/images/1200/1290_1-the-roman-family.jpg

  28. Slavery Leads to Revolts • Growth of the empire leads to worsening treatment of slaves • Contractors build large works with many slave workers and very tough conditions • Famous revolt develops under Spartacus in 73 BC • 70,000 men revolt • Romans crucify 6000 survivors http://blog.webexpedition18.netdna-cdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/1960-Spartacus.jpg

  29. Living Conditions in Rome • Rome has a million people at height of empire • Wonderful buildings, but overcrowded noisy, dirty, unsafe living conditions • Rich live in comfortable villas • Poor live in six-story buildings called insulae • Fire is constant threat; Rome burns in 64 AD http://wings.buffalo.edu/AandL/Maecenas/rome/roman_house/mcxx0005.jpg

  30. Rising Poverty Creates Problems • 200,000 people receiving free food during time of Augustus • Games take place on holidays, free to public • Gladiatorial games are very popular http://www.crystalinks.com/romegladiator.jpg

  31. Christianity Develops in Roman Empire • Early Romans believe their gods allow them to conquer others • Tolerate other religions • Jews revolt in 66 AD, however, and Romans crush the rebellion • Jesus dies shortly before the revolt, and Christianity begins to split away from Judaism http://www.fanaticus.org/DBA/armies/II43/Maccabean.jpg

  32. New Faith Spreads Around the Empire • Apostles like Simon Peter and Paul spread the faith • Oral stories and written letters become new basic ideas of the faith • New Testament develops • Romans see Christianity as a form of Judaism still • Overtime, intolerance develops about the new faith http://salvationandprophecy.com/images/Apostle%20Paul.jpg

  33. Roman Persecution of Christians • Christians refuse to follow Roman gods or worship emperors • Romans see this as treason, punishable by death • Persecution begins during reign of Nero when the city burns http://www.gutenberg.org/files/27312/27312-h/images/i222.jpg

  34. Romans Change Their Ideas • Christianity starts to grow and becomes accepted • Idea of salvation appeals to poor people in the empire • Easy to relate to since Jesus was born a man • Christian communities provide support for suffering people • It pushes idea of equality • Diocletian continues to persecute in the late 200s • In 313 AD, Constantine issues the Edict of Milan • Makes Christianity legal • Theodosius makes Christianity the official religion of the empire in 395 AD http://users.moscow.com/khakimian/images/constantine2.jpg

  35. Decline and Fall of Rome • Problems bedevil Rome • In the 200s, emperors rule as long as armies support them • 57 emperors in one 50 year period • Economic problems caused by high taxes, little land for poor & inflation of prices • Plagues decimate the population • Economy dries up as a result of all these things • Romans allow Germanic invaders to live in empire safely but serve as soldiers http://apwhwiki.pbworks.com/f/1240528237/invasions-romans.png

  36. ChurchHierarchy • Pope was on top and ruled over lower levels. • Archbishops(patriarchs) • Bishops • Priests • Many were land owners and collected tax sending back to church-pyramid cash flow

  37. Diocletian and Constantine Try to Create Order • Diocletian creates “Tetrarchy”—four man rule—at end of 200s-allow Christianity • Constantine builds new capital in the east, Constantinople • Army and the civil service get larger • Taxes go up, but collection goes down • Roman money loses value • Diocletian orders that jobs will be hereditary-same as parents • Rulers after these two men fail to keep control http://heritage-key.com/HKimages/008/tetrarchs.jpg

  38. The Fall of the West • Huns enter western Europe from central Asia • Germanic tribes sweep into Rome, looking for protection • Romans can’t move the Visigoths out of the Danube River area • The Vandals sack Rome in 410 AD • Last Roman emperor, Romulus Augustulus, loses power in 476 AD • Germanic prince Odoacer declares himself emperor in the west • Roman Empire continues in the east until 1453 http://xenohistorian.faithweb.com/europe/Augustulus.png

  39. Possible Causes of the Fall • Christian influences challenge military control of empire • Roman values decline as conquered people take over large areas of land • Lead poisoning leads to brain damage, weakens leadership • Plague wipes out 10% of population • Slavery leads to lack of technological growth • Political system fails to work and Romans cannot fix it http://www.audiobooksonline.com/media/ss_size1/Decline-and-Fall-of-the-Roman-Empire-Volume-1-Edward-Gibbon-unabridged-library-mp3-compact-discs-Blackstone-Audio-books.jpg

  40. So… • It is hard to say why the West falls • Multiple causes make life in the West difficult • Eastern life continues under the “Byzantine Empire” for next 1000 years • Europe feels the effects of a lack of centralized power for the next 500-800 years after 476 AD http://explorethemed.com/Images/Maps/RomeDivided936.jpg

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