1 / 21

Chapter 4

Chapter 4. Founded in the eighth century B.C., Rome was ruled by Etruscans and experienced a period of monarchy before the republic emerged. The Rise of Rome, 753-265 B.C. A Great City is Founded Geography Rome was located on hills overlooking a fertile low-lying plain and the Tiber River

dooley
Download Presentation

Chapter 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 4 • Founded in the eighth century B.C., Rome was ruled by Etruscans and experienced a period of monarchy before the republic emerged.

  2. The Rise of Rome, 753-265 B.C. • A Great City is Founded • Geography • Rome was located on hills overlooking a fertile low-lying plain and the Tiber River • The Etruscan Influence • The Roman Monarchy, ca. 753-509 B.C. • Overthrow of Etruscans • Sextus, son of the Etruscan king Tarquin the Proud, raped Lucretia at knifepoint and she committed suicide • The Etruscan monarchy was overthrown

  3. The Rise of Rome, 753-265 B.C. • Governing an Emerging Republic • Struggle of Orders • A series of political reforms from 509 to 287 B.C. • The poor wanted guarantees against the abuses of the powerful • The wealthy plebeians wanted a role in government • Governing the Republic • Laws passed by the Tribal Assembly did not need Senate approval • Three main social classes: Patricians, Wealthy Plebeians, and Poor Plebeians • Informal Governance: Patrons and Clients

  4. The Rise of Rome, 753-265 B.C. • Clients’ Role • Consisted of people from all walks of life who looked to powerful patrons for help in their careers • Clients received ritual gifts • The patron was supposed to exert a moral authority over his clients, helping them to be good citizens • Dominating the Italian Peninsula • Italian Wars • The Latin League - Romans were united by fellow Latin tribes in religious and military ties • Two years later, Rome defeated the allies and dissolved the League

  5. Chapter 4 • Foreign Policy • Most of their success came from their generosity in victory • Romans allowed all the tribes to retain full autonomy in their own territories and to elect their own officials, keep their own laws, and collect their own taxes. • The Romans valued piety and moral seriousness and made the family the center of urban social life.

  6. Family Life and City Life • A Pious, Practical People • Loyalty to the Family • Marriage Patterns • Marriages were arranged, a woman could be given in two ways. • Her family might transfer her to her husband’s control, or she might remain under her father’s hand • The Challenges of Childhood • Child-Rearing Practices • Newborns were bound in strips of cloth for two months to ensure that their limbs would grow straight • Many physicians recommended that children begin to drink sweet wine at six months

  7. Family Life and City Life • Child-Rearing Practices (cont.) • Fewer than half of the newborns raised reached puberty • At the age of six or seven, children were put in the care of tutors • By twelve, boys graduated to higher schooling • Life in the City • Life in the Forum • The Forum was the economic, social center, and the political center • In the afternoon, work ceased and the men headed for the baths, and the late afternoon and evening it was time for leisure • Diet • Men dined reclining on couches, and women and children are seated in chairs • Bread, porridge, vegetables mixed with oil, and wine

  8. Chapter 4 • The success of Rome’s army eventually brought changes, positive and negative, to Roman Society. • The Romans’ Victorious Army • Weapons and Discipline • All soldiers took an oath binding themselves to the army until death or the end of the war

  9. Expansion and Transformation, 265-133 B.C. • Wars of the Mediterranean • First Punic War • Rome’s clash with Carthage began over who would control Messana • New Roman Navy • Before the Romans, the basic tactic at sea was ramming one ship into another, but they developed a new vessel that featured a special platform that allowed many infantrymen on board to fight hand to hand. • Second Punic War • Over who would control the city of Saguntum • General Hannibal and Publius Cornelius Scipio • Scipio decisively defeated Hannibal at the Battle of Zama in 202 B.C.

  10. Expansion and Transformation, 265-133 B.C. • Third Punic War • Cato the Elder tried to spur his countrymen to resume the fighting against Carthage • Rome crushed the city of Carthage in 146 B.C. • Eastern Conquests • An Influx of Slaves • Slave Occupations • In the cities, slaves and citizens often worked in the same occupations, and all could earn money through their labor • The most undesirable jobs were generally reserved for slaves

  11. Expansion and Transformation, 265-133 B.C. • Slave Revolts • Between 73 and 71 B.C. the gladiator Spartacus and his army of almost 70,000 slaves ravaged portions of Italy. • Economic Disparity and Social Unrest • New Poverty • The population swelled with propertyless day laborers

  12. Chapter 4 • Republican armies conquered some of the great Hellenistic cultural centers which brought an influx of Hellenistic ways to Rome. • Resisting Change

  13. Hellenizing of the Republic • Roman Engineering: Fusing Utility and Beauty • Engineering • Romans had learned much about engineering from the Etruscans • Aqueducts • Brought water from rivers or springs into cities • Concrete: A New Building Material • Pantheon • A temple dedicated to all the gods, built in A.D. 125

  14. Hellenizing of the Republic • Latin Comedy and the Great Prose Writers, 240-44 B.C. • Cicero • Defined Latin literature • Caesar’s Writings • Commentaries

  15. Chapter 4 • An economic downturn, which some leaders tried to prevent with reforms, led to a decay in the political life of the Roman republic, as political murder and dictatorship became common.

  16. The Twilight of the Republic, 133-44 B.C. • The Reforms of the Gracchi, 133-123 B.C. • Tiberius’s Reforms • Proposed an agarian law that would redistribute public land to landless Romans • Some senators beat Tiberius and 300 of his followers to death • Gaius’s Reforms • Tiberius’s brother built granaries, roads, and bridges to improve the distribution of grain into the city • Populares vs. Optimates: The Eruption of Civil Wars, 123-46 B.C.

  17. The Twilight of the Republic, 133-44 B.C. • Marius • The first general to come to power based on the support of the army • He created a professional army, put the soldiers on the payroll, and cultivated an army with many rootless and desparate men who were loyal only to him • Defeated first the Numidians in Africa, and then the Celts to the north • Sulla • Commanded six legions in the final stages of the Italian wars, and his successes earned him a governorship in Asia • Sulla defeated Mithridates

  18. The Twilight of the Republic, 133-44 B.C. • First Triumvirate • Was made up of three men who appealed to various sectors of Roman society • Pompey, Julius Caesar, and Crassus • Julius Caesar, 100-44 B.C. • Civil War • War between Caesar and Pompey began in 49 B.C. • After losing a decisive battle in Greece in 48 B.C., Pompey fled to Egypt where he was assassinated • In 46 B.C. Caesar returned to Rome

  19. The Twilight of the Republic, 133-44 B.C. • Political Titles • Caesar accepted the title of “dictator” in 48 B.C., and proclaimed himself “dictator for life” • Caesar had his image placed on coins • Conspiracy • Many Romans were outraged by the honors Caesar took for himself • Sixty senators entered into a consiracy to murder their leader • Caesar’s Murder • On March 15, the “ides,” assassins surrounded the dictator as he approached the Senate meeting place; they drew knives and plunged them into his body

More Related