1 / 35

Unit 3 Ancient Rome

Unit 3 Ancient Rome. Part I: The Romans Create a Republic. History. Legend of Romulus and Remus (753 B.C.) Influenced by Greeks and Etruscans Greek gods, agriculture Etruscan writing, architecture. Last Roman king kicked out 509 BC Romans establish a

hans
Download Presentation

Unit 3 Ancient Rome

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. Unit 3Ancient Rome Part I: The Romans Create a Republic

  2. History • Legend of Romulus and Remus (753 B.C.) • Influenced by Greeks and Etruscans • Greek gods, agriculture • Etruscan writing, architecture

  3. Last Roman king kicked out 509 BC • Romans establish a REPUBLIC – A FORM OF GOVERNMENT IN WHICH POWER RESTS WITH CITIZENS WHO HAVE THE RIGHT TO VOTE TO SELECT THEIR LEADERS

  4. Government • People in Rome are either: PLEBEIANS – COMMON FARMERS, ARTISANS, AND MERCHANTS or PATRICIANS – WEALTHY LANDOWNERS

  5. Only free male citizens vote • Most people/voters are plebeians • Plebeians are not allowed to hold high government positions

  6. Plebeians were not treated fairly • Tribunes were elected to protect the rights of plebeians • In 451 BC, Tribunes create the 12 TABLES • A written code of laws that established the idea that all free citizens have a right to protection under laws

  7. Government Branches • Rome’s government was a mix of monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy • Two Consuls (executive) led the army and government • SENATE (legislative) – 300 PEOPLE WHO WERE THE GOVERNING BODY • Praetors (judicial) were judges

  8. In times of crisis, the Republic could appoint a DICTATOR – A LEADER WHO HAD ABSOLUTE POWER TO MAKE LAWS AND COMMAND THE ARMY • They had to be chosen by consuls and senate • They could only rule for 6 months • Look at chart on page 143

  9. Military • All male landowners had to serve • Roman soldiers were grouped into LEGIONS – LARGE MILITARY UNITS • Military was very important to Rome’s rise

  10. Rome Expands • War with Carthage over access to the Mediterranean • Rome and Carthage fought the Punic Wars from 264 to 146 B.C. • 1st war goes to Rome • 2nd war sees HANNIBAL – A CARTHAGINIAN GENERAL vs. SCIPIO – A ROMAN GENERAL

  11. Hannibal fought hard for about 15 years, but was finally defeated • 3rd War saw Carthage completely destroyed

  12. Unit 3 Ancient Rome Part II: Changes in the Roman Empire

  13. Problems Arise • Gap between the rich and poor grows • Homeless • Unemployed • Poor (1/4) • Slaves (1/3 of pop.)

  14. Rome falls into a CIVIL WAR - CONFLICT BETWEEN GROUPS WITHIN THE SAME COUNTRY

  15. 1st Punic War • War started in 264 B.C. • 3 Wars fought between 264 and 146 B.C. • 1st war was for control of Sicily, and lasted 23 years (264-241 B.C.) • Rome defeated Carthage in 1st Punic War • 2nd Punic War begins in 218 B.C. • 29-year-old Carthaginian general named Hannibal led the army against Rome

  16. 2nd Punic War • Hannibal had an army of 50,000 infantry, 9,000 cavalry, and 60 elephants • To surprise the Romans, he led his army around Italy and came down through the Alps • For a decade he terrorized Italy • Won important battle of Cannae in 216 B.C. • Never captured Rome

  17. Julius Caesar • ROMAN GENERAL WHO BECAME DICTATOR IN 46 BC • Becomes consul in 59 BC • Spends next 10 years building up troops/support across Empire • Returns to Rome in 46 BC • Appointed dictator

  18. Caesar was an ABSOLUTE RULER – ONE WHO HAS TOTAL POWER • Made many important changes for poor • People love him; senators hate him • “Ides of March” • March 15, 44 BC • Stabbed to death in senate chamber by senators

  19. 3rd Punic War • 149-146 B.C. • Carthage no longer a real threat to Rome • Senator Cato ended all his speeches with “Carthage must be destroyed” • 149 B.C. Rome laid siege to Carthage • 146 B.C. Carthage was set afire and the remaining 50,000 citizens sold into slavery

  20. The Republic falls, The Empire Begins • Mark Antony and AUGUSTUS – CAESAR’S NEPHEW WHO BECAME A GREAT EMPEROR quickly take control • Antony and Augustus become rivals • Antony defeated at the Battle of Actium in 31 BC

  21. Augustus becomes emperor • His rule starts the PAX ROMANA – PERIOD OF ROMAN PEACE AND PROSPERITY FROM 27 BC TO 180 AD

  22. The Roman Empire • 3 million square miles • 70 million people • 1 million in Rome itself • 90% of people farm • Massive trade network using roads

  23. “Bread and Circuses” • Huge gaps between rich and poor continue to grow • Government provides free entertainment to distract the poor from their problems • GLADIATORS – PROFESSIONAL FIGHTERS –fought to the death to entertain the masses.

  24. Unit 3: Ancient Rome Factors in the Decline of Rome

  25. Political • Political office seen as burden, not reward • Military interference in politics • Civil war and unrest • Division of empire by DIOCLETIAN – THE ROMAN EMPEROR WHO SPLIT ROME EAST AND WEST IN LATE 200s • Moving of capital to Byzantium (renamed CONSTANTINOPLE – THE NEW CAPITAL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE – 330 AD)

  26. Social • Decline in interest in public affairs • Low confidence in empire • Disloyalty, lack of patriotism, corruption • Contrast between rich and poor

  27. Economic • Poor harvests • Disruption of trade • No more war plunder • Gold and silver drain • INFLATION - A RISE IN THE PRICE OF GOODS, COUPLED WITH A DECLINE IN THE VALUE OF MONEY

  28. Economic Cont. • High taxes • Widening gap between rich and poor, especially in the West.

  29. Military • Threat from northern European tribes • Low funds for defense • Problems recruiting Roman soldiers; recruiting of MERCENARIES – FOREIGN SOLDIERS WHO FOUGHT FOR MONEY

  30. Military Cont. • Decline of patriotism and loyalty among soldiers

  31. Immediate Cause • Invasion of and destruction of Rome by ‘barbarians’

More Related