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Ancient Rome BCE-CE De nobis fabula narratur

“The Romans knew how to govern people, establish legal structures and construct roads that took them to the ends of their known world”. Ancient Rome BCE-CE De nobis fabula narratur. Geography-. Middle of the Mediterranean Larger and more arable land than Greece- mts north and south

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Ancient Rome BCE-CE De nobis fabula narratur

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  1. “The Romans knew how to govern people, establish legal structures and construct roads that took them to the ends of their known world” Ancient Rome BCE-CEDe nobis fabula narratur

  2. Geography- • Middle of the Mediterranean • Larger and more arable land than Greece- mts north and south • River valleys- Po in the North, Tiber in middle of boot • Rome - inland accessible by boat- defensible,on “Seven Hills”

  3. Reality: Etruscans unsure of origin used iron, bronze and silver Rome and Latins under rule of king beginning fear of kings, rebelled invaded by Gaul 390 BCE Origins of Rome • Legend: Romulus and Remus raised by she-wolf 733bce traced boundaries with plow • Later: Virgil’s Aeneus, hero of Troy, roams the Med looking for a home

  4. Steps to Unification • Etruscans and Gauls squeezed out by Latins • 290- conquered central Italy then Samnites in South • 265 took over Greek city states • key- staying power of army, won over conquered people- become Roman citizens

  5. Meanwhile, back in Rome, the importance of citizenship • gradual struggle between the patrician and plebeian classes • 2 consuls and Senate made up of patricians • popular assemblies established with a representative tribune- veto power • 450 BCE 12 Tables Roman Law codified • Result- increase of privileges for plebes

  6. The Punic Wars 264-146 BCE • Major rival in Med- Phoenician Carthage • First Punic War 264-42- copied ships and corvus • out of Sicily • Second Punic war 218-202- Hannibal 216 Battle of Camnae • Third- treaty infringement trumped up Cato’s speech • Carthago delenda est” Carthage plowed and sowed with salt • Result Rome now the POWER in the Mediterranean

  7. 8 Struggles Continue in the Republic • Graft, corruption, struggle between patrician and plebeians • Gracchi Brothers Tiberias and Gaius • Marius consul 6 x • Sulla- general seized Rome in 82 BCE restored power to Senate • set precedent

  8. Republic’s Last Gasp • First Triumvirate Julius Caesar, Pompey, Crassus • Julius Caesar challenges the Senate crosses the Rubicon • 47 BCE virtual ruler, increased Senate to 900 • 44 BCE assassinated, Second Triumvirate • Octavius, Marc Antony, Lepidus • Battle of Actium 31 BCE End of an era

  9. The Roman Empire • Caesar Augustus- purpose “to restore the republic” • 27 BC Augustus become “First Citizen” Princeps • ended strife- beginning of Pax Romanae • tried to impact life- morality, building • sculpture- deified him, literature as well • Consolidation- of power/ Senate limited • SPQR Senatus Populusque Romanus- banner

  10. The Roman World • Ever expanding- see maps- spread Pax Romanae • Politically - emperor/ dictatorship • Extended Roman citizenship as they spread • The Roman family- gradual less influence for fathers • family strong unit- run like the state • women become more independent- socially and ownership • politically active as wives of emperors- Livia, wife of CA

  11. The Roman World (cont) • Golden Age- literature Horace, Virgil, Ovid and Livy • Religion- state religion, Roman gods reflected Greek • emperor became “divine” connection to gods • tolerant of other religions Mithras, Persian god of light • Christianity-”And there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus” • persecutions not as many as thought- made stronger • sometimes combined with others- e.g. Celtic gods

  12. Slavery in the Roman World • Important to building projects and way of life • Conquests supplied slaves so came from all over • Not related to ethnicity or skin color • Greek slaves educated and highly prized • Rebellions like Sparticus 73BCE occurred- Crassius • put down, crucified slaves and held a 10 day party for Rome • Slaves gradually won freedom and numbers decreased

  13. The Roman Builders- All over the Empire • Amazing accomplishments- Roads that still last • Aqueducts- bringing water to every important city • Temples for the gods- copied Greek style- massive • Forum- public area of the city- center- oration etc. • Theaters- for entertainment- drama • Coliseums- more fun, fights, gladiators, animals • Baths- public places- series of rooms dif temps

  14. The Roman Emperors- the Good, Bad and Ugly • Good- Marcus Aurelius-phil “citizen of the world” • Calm and unified- Trajan, Hadrian, walls and rebels • Bad- Caligula- named horse “consul”, Commodus, fought gladiators with blunted weapons, Nero, mass murder- inc his mother, pregnant wife, brother • Many later emperors were generals- most powerful could become emperor

  15. The Roman legacy- writing and the law • alphabet- should look familiar to us • Romans wrote down everything- very literate, passed on to use use every day, alma mater, alter ego, per capita, vice versa, a.m/, p.m., RIP ,list goes on ad infinitum • some consider the statutes and case law most important legacy- took idea that a written law can protect one person from another- put it into practice- Because it’s the laws means something to us- not necessarily in other cultures. • tried to appeal to people through argument- idea of people deciding • magistrates important in Rome- e.g. of Apostle Paul

  16. The Roman Provinces- still impacted • Gaul- France today- many roads, aqueducts, theaters • The Rhine- no border- Trier and Wiesbaden • Britain- difficult place, Bath and Hadrian’s wall • Palestine- Masada- rebellion and magnificent cities like Baalbek • Africa- riches of Egypt and the granary of the Empire

  17. Why a Roman “Fall” • Instability caused by no real plan of succession • Trouble on the borders • Morally bankrupt? • Division of Empire- Diocletian • Later Constantine- new capitol- Constantinople-

  18. Christianity and Rome • Helped Christianity spread- communication • Appeal- unrest, questioning of polytheism • explained spiritual aspects, Christ’s teachings • emphasis of eternal life • community exclusive (mystery religion) • Persecution- under Nero, blamed for fire • mostly tolerant, Christians refused to worship state • Effect- spread slowly- letters formed NT • officially tolerated 313 Edict of Milan

  19. The Barbarians at the Gates • Pressure from Germanic tribes looking for safety • Huns pressured the Visogoths-410- ran into the empire • Vandals- 455- sacked Rome • Series of invasions- physical damage, but also intellectual • established German kingdoms in West- illiterate,look at art • The East survives- becomes Byzantium- keeps the learning from the ancient world

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