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Rome: From Kingdom to Republic

Rome: From Kingdom to Republic . HST 397 – Ancient History Prof. Marc Cooper. Gaul. Alps. Apennine Mountains. Adriatic Sea. Pyrenees. Rome. Spain. Italy. Mediterranean Sea. Sicily. Africa. Geography. Widest in the north. Most of the peninsula is less than 125 miles wide.

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Rome: From Kingdom to Republic

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  1. Rome: From Kingdom to Republic HST 397 – Ancient History Prof. Marc Cooper

  2. Gaul Alps Apennine Mountains Adriatic Sea Pyrenees Rome Spain Italy Mediterranean Sea Sicily Africa

  3. Geography • Widest in the north. • Most of the peninsula is less than 125 miles wide. • Italy enjoys a mild Mediterranean climate. • The Alps mountains in the north block cold winds. • Apennine mountains run diagonally across northern Italy and then turn southward to bisect the peninsula • Most people lived on the west side of the Apennines • South - poorer soil and less water. • Hills of Italy are gentle enough for pasturing and wood was plentiful. • Hills did not act as barriers to isolate cities as was the case in Greece.

  4. The Etruscans and the Origins of Rome

  5. Romulus and Remus: Roman Foundation Legend • Legendary twins rescued by a she-wolf; founded Rome in 753 BCE. • No evidence for their existence • Roman tradition makes Romulus the founder of the state • Responsible for the state cult • Responsible for setting up the major civil and religious institutions

  6. Etruscan lands ca. 650 - 550 BCE

  7. Etruscans • Cities developed under Greek influence in the 8th century • Dominated northern Italy including Rome • Borrowed much of their culture from the Greek colonists in the south including alphabet • Formed a confederacy of 12 cities to defend themselves against • Gauls to the north • Greek piracy at sea • Hill tribes to the east and south • Probably founded Roman monarchy

  8. The kingdom of Rome was on the Tiber River • City founded at lowest ford • Villages formed town in the 8th century BCE • Etruscan kings ruled Rome from ca. 600 – 500 BCE

  9. The Roman republic and its constitution • Social classes • Patricians - aristocrats • Plebians – commoners • Class important in early law • Status equally important • Patron – Client relationship • Patrons became “nobile” in later Republic • Patrons control government

  10. Establishment of the republic • Rome nobility deposed the last Etruscan king in 509 BCE • Republican constitution included two consuls • Consuls were elected by an assembly dominated by the patricians • Senate advised the consuls and ratified major decisions • Senate and consuls represented the interests of the patricians

  11. Conflicts between patricians and plebeians • Patricians granted plebeians the tribunes • Plebiscites became law by 400 BCE • Tribunes' power to intervene and veto decisions • Plebeians' tribunes dominated Roman politics, early third century BCE

  12. The expansion of the republic: 338 BCE

  13. Rome Unifies Italy • Controls Latin League by 338 BCE • Unifies Italy by 270 BCE • Reduces Etruscans to federati • Hill tribesmen defeated – Roman settlers bring urban life to central/southern Italy • Greek colonists in south submit • Gauls in Po valley defeated – Roman settlers establish cities

  14. Roman expansion: 279 BCE

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