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ANCIENT ROME

ANCIENT ROME. April. Warm-up for Tuesday, april 8. In your notebook, go to the page where we made a KWL chart for ancient Greece. In the L column, list all of the things you have learned about ancient Greece. Warm-up for Wednesday, april 9. republic patrician plebeian.

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ANCIENT ROME

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  1. ANCIENT ROME April

  2. Warm-up for Tuesday, april 8 • In your notebook, go to the page where we made a KWL chart for ancient Greece. • In the L column, list all of the things you have learned about ancient Greece.

  3. Warm-up for Wednesday, april 9 • republic • patrician • plebeian A type of government in which citizens select their leaders A member of a wealthy family in the ancient Roman Republic An ordinary citizen in the ancient Roman Republic

  4. Warm-up for Wednesday, april 9 An elected official who led the Roman Republic The power of one branch of government to reject bills or proposals passed by another branch of government A person in the ancient Roman Republic appointed to rule for six months in times of emergency, with all the powers of a king • consul • veto • dictator

  5. Map activity • Phschool.com

  6. Warm-up for Thursday, april 10 • Write the sentences in your social studies notebook, filling in the blank with the appropriate vocab word from yesterday. • Ordinary citizens, or _________, could not hold office or be senators. • In a ________, the leaders rule in the name of the people who select them. • Two chief officials called ________ led the Roman government. • _______ is Latin for “I forbid.” ***challenge!***

  7. Read first. Then write. • Read the sentences in the table. Then write them in correct order in your social studies notebook.

  8. Structuring paragraphs In the Roman Republic, the most powerful part of the government was the senate. The senate mirrors our own legislative branch of government—the branch that proposes and votes on new laws. At first, the senate was made up only of 300 upper-class men called patricians. A patrician was a member of a wealthy family in the ancient Roman Republic. Ordinary citizens were known as plebeians. In the early republic, plebeians could not hold office or be senators.

  9. Rise and collapse of the republic • The Etruscans take power in Rome. • The Etruscans were ruled by an all-powerful king. • The Romans didn’t like that. • The Romans took power, but adopted some Etruscan ideas. • Some gods • The Greek alphabet • The toga

  10. Warm-up for Friday, april 11 • Use each of the following vocab words in a complete sentence, written in your social studies notebook. • consul • dictator • patrician

  11. Rise and collapse of the republic • Because of the Etruscan kings, the Romans did not want to put their trust in one single leader. • They expanded their territory to the entire Italian peninsula. • By 264 BC, the Romans had created a republic, a brand-new form of government. • In the republic, the senate had the most power: proposing and voting on new laws.

  12. Rise and collapse of the republic • At first, only patricians could be in the senate or hold office. This changed in 367 BC. • Two consuls led the government, enforcing the laws and policies. They were elected by the citizens. They ruled for one year only. • Consuls had to agree; they both had veto power. • In an emergency, a dictator could be appointed, holding all the power of a king, but only for six months.

  13. Rise and collapse of the republic • Tensions rose between the patricians and plebeians. • Roman armies invaded more territory. • The Romans destroyed the city of Carthage in 146 BC and took all its land, from Spain to North Africa. • They also conquered Greece. • Rome dissolved into civil war.

  14. Rise and collapse of the republic • Julius Caesar conquered Gaul (modern-day France) in 58-51 BC. This won him loyalty and respect. • In 49 BC, Caesar crossed the Rubicon River into Italy and seized power. He became a dictator for life (instead of just six months). • The senators were angry about Caesar’s power grab, so they assassinated him at a senate meeting. • The civil war continued for another nine years.

  15. Rise and collapse of the republic • At the end of the civil war, Octavian held power. He became the first emperor. • The Roman Republic had ended after 500 years. • It ended because of civil war and the ambition of powerful political figures. • The Roman Empire began.

  16. Achievements of the roman republic • It lasted 500 years. • Rome grew from a city-state to a holder of vast empires. • It developed the largest elected government ever (at that point).

  17. for Monday, april 21 • council (noun): an assembly of people brought together for consultation, decision-making, or advice. • counsel (verb): to give advice • console (noun): a small cabinet or desk-like structure • console (verb): to soothe grief • consul (noun): An elected official who led the Roman Republic

  18. Warm-up for Tuesday, april22 • Use each of the following vocab words in a complete sentence, written in your social studies notebook. • veto • plebeian • patrician

  19. One-Pager: roman republic FOLLOW ALL DIRECTIONS! Remember, these will be hanging at the Cultural Arts Fair on Thursday. Do your best work and make yourself proud! When Finished, put your work in the bin and read “focus on the roman senate”.

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