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Ancient Rome and Early Christianity

Ancient Rome and Early Christianity. 500 BC – 500 AD Ch 6. The Roman Republic. Sec 1. What do you know about Rome?. Objectives. Describe the formation of the Roman Republic and the spread of its influence Understand the importance of the Twelve Tables. Origins of Rome.

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Ancient Rome and Early Christianity

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  1. Ancient Rome and Early Christianity 500 BC – 500 AD Ch 6

  2. The Roman Republic Sec 1

  3. What do you know about Rome?

  4. Objectives • Describe the formation of the Roman Republic and the spread of its influence • Understand the importance of the Twelve Tables

  5. Origins of Rome • Legend says that the city was founded by Romulus and Remus, twin sons of Mars and a Latin princess • The twins were abandoned as infants and raised by a she-wolf

  6. Geography • Rome was built on 7 rolling hills at a curve on the Tiber River, near the center of the Italian peninsula • Midpoint between the Alps and Italy’s southern tip

  7. First Romans • The earliest settlers in Italy arrived in pre-historic times • From 1000 BC – 500 BC 3 groups inhabited the region and fought for control

  8. Latins • Latins –built the original settlement at Rome, a cluster of wooden huts atop one of the 7 hills

  9. Greeks • Greeks- established colonies along southern Italy and Sicily • Brought all of Italy, including Rome, into closer contact with Greek civilization

  10. Etruscans • Etruscans- natives to northern Italy who were skilled metalworkers and engineers • Influenced through their alphabet and architecture like the arch

  11. The Early Republic • Around 600 BC an Etruscan became king of Rome • In following decades Rome grew from a collection of hilltop villages to a city that covered nearly 500 square miles • The last king of Rome, Tarquin the Proud, was a harsh tyrant who was driven from power in 509 BC

  12. Republic • The Romans declare they would never be ruled by a king again • The Romans established a republic, form of government in which power rests with citizens who have the right to vote for their leaders • Citizenship with voting rights was granted only to free-born male citizens

  13. Patricians and Plebians • Different groups struggled for power in the early republic • Patricians- wealthy landowners who held most of the power • Inherited power and social status • Plebeians- common farmers, artisans, and merchants who made up the majority of the population • Barred by law from holding the highest government positions

  14. Tribunes • Tribunes- political body elected by the plebeians that protected them from unfair acts of patrician officials

  15. Twelve Tables • Twelve Tables- written laws hung in the Forum that established the idea that all free citizens had a right to the protection of the law

  16. Government • Mix of monarchy, oligarchy, and democracy • Consuls- 2 people who directed the army and government like kings. • Limited to a one year term • Senate- 300 aristocratic lawmakers who were chosen from the upper class of Roman society • Dictator- leader with absolute power that could be appointed to power for 6 months in times of distress

  17. Roman Army • Great value was placed on the military • All citizens who owned land were required to serve • Roman soldiers were organized into legions- large military units made up of 5000 foot soldiers • Each legion was supported by cavalry, soldiers on horseback • Legions were divided into centuries, made up of 80 men

  18. Rome Spread its Power • By 265 BC Rome conquered the Etruscans to the north and the Greek city-states to the south • Kept a lenient policy towards conquered states. • Closest to Rome became full citizens • Territories that were farther became citizens except for the right to vote • All others became allies who were left alone as long as they supplied troops to the army

  19. Rome’s Commercial Network • Rome’s location gave it easy access to the Mediterranean Sea • Merchants moved by land and sea • They traded wine and olive oil for a variety of foods, raw materials, and manufactured goods from other lands

  20. War with Carthage • Punic Wars- 3 wars between Rome and Carthage from 264 BC to 146 BC • The first war resulted in control of Sicily for Rome

  21. Hannibal • Hannibal- Carthaginian general and brilliant military strategist who fought against Rome • Army consisted of 50,000 men, 9,000 cavalry, and 60 elephants • Led his men across the Alps to surprise the Romans • Initially worked but was never able to take Rome

  22. Rome Triumphs • Romans decided to attack Carthage and force Hannibal to defend his home city • In 202 BC Hannibal was defeated at Zama near Carthage • During the Third Punic War, Rome laid siege to Carthage • The city was burned at all 50,000 inhabitants were sold into slavery

  23. The Roman Empire Sec 2

  24. What kind of government did Rome have?

  25. Collapse of the Republic • The republican government grew more unstable as the empire got bigger • As Rome grew the gap between rich and poor got bigger • Small farmers could not compete with rich landowners who owned huge estates run by slaves • Many farmers were forced to sell their land and move to cities to look for work

  26. Civil War • Civil War- conflict between groups within the same country • Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus attempted to help Rome’s poor by proposing reforms but were both assassinated

  27. Military Upheaval • As the republic grew more unstable generals began taking power for themselves • They recruited soldiers by promising them land and pay • Soldiers were now loyal to their commanders and not the republic

  28. Julius Caesar • Julius Caesar- Roman military leader who became dictator for life in 44 BC • In 60 BC, Caesar joined forces with Crassus and Pompey • With their help, Caesar was elected consul in 59 BC • For the next 10 years they dominated Rome as a triumverate- group of 3 rulers

  29. Julius Caesar • After his 1 year as consul, Caesar appointed himself governor of Gaul (France) • From 58-50BC, he led his men in a successful campaign to conquer all of Gaul • Victories in Gaul earned him respect and loyalty of his troops and the people of Rome

  30. Caesar vs. Pompey • In 50 BC, at Pompey’s urging, the Senate ordered Caesar to disband his legions and return home • In January 49 BC, Caesar marched his army to Rome and Pompey fled • After defeating Pompey’s army in Greece, Asia, Spain, and Egypt, Caesar returned to Rome

  31. Caesar’s Rule • In 46 BC Julius Caesar was named dictator and in 44 BC he was named dictator for life • Caesar governed as an absolute ruler, one who has total power

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