This lesson looks at the beginnings of the
Roman Republic as well as its later crises that led, in part, to the
Roman Empire.
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Below is the outline of the slides used in the lesson:
Rome, Part 1—The Roman Republic
Remember Your Skills
Periodization: What are the differences between
Periods 1 and 2 of World History?
SPICE: Social, Political,
Interactions with the
Environment, Cultural, Economic Characteristics of
Civilizations (YOU CATEGORIZE NOW!!!)
Compare and
Contrast: This civilization with that civilization
Continuity and Change: This is like comparing and contrasting over time. If it is the same across time, it's a continuity. If it changed from one time period to another, well, it's a change
...
Republic and
Empire
Republic has the root word "public"
Republics are all democracies of one form of another, and they are generally made up of one people (the changes to the racial, religious, ethnic, and political characteristics of the
American republic over the past century have changed how we think about this definition)
Empires have a ruler (emperor) who is above the law and can change it single-handedly
Empires are like kingdoms, but they are formed through the conquest of multiple other peoples and states
The
Origins of the Roman Republic
Indo-European people who migrated into the
Italian Peninsula beginning in 1000BCE
Limited contacts with the
Greeks
Ruled by the
Etruscans who absorbed and controlled the immigrants
Origins of the Roman Republic
Around 510
BCE,
Roman aristocrats (who were ethnically different from their rulers, the Etruscans) rebelled and took control of the lands around Rome
Adopted a king-less political structure—a res publica (republic)
Characteristics of the Roman Republic
Senate: elected by wealthy landowners and aristocrats
Tribunes: elected by the lower classes (the plebeians); could challenge the actions of the Senate
Consuls: also elected by the upper-classes to one-year terms; governed the Senate
Twelve Tables of Roman Law
Patronage
Patronage: Wealthy and upper-class men gave money and support to lower-class men who worked for and were loyal to them
Aka: Clientage—as in the lower classes are the clients of the upper
Manhood and the
Roman Army
The best way for a man to rise in the Roman system was as a solder—gain land, slaves, plunder
Manhood was proven by military success
Consuls only had a year in office to gain glory as war leader (honors that went to a man's family and clients)
Carthage and the
Punic Wars
Carthage was a
Phoenecian kingdom in
North Africa with holdings in
Spain
Rome felt threatened by Carthage (the reasons are suspect)
The Punic Wars began in 264BCE and were a true existential war for both sides
Hannibal's assault on Rome
Roman victory brought with it almost genocidal revenge on Carthage
Roman Expansionism
Roman manhood and virtue
Conquest of Spain and the atrocities there
Conquest of
Macedon and
Greece following the collapse of the
Antigonids
Protectorate placed over
Ptolemaic Egypt
Slavery in the Roman
Economy
Crises and the
Failure of the Republic
Gracchus
Brothers:
Tiberius and
Gaius tried to limit the power and size of large estates and expand citizenship
Marius, a general, began to use plebeians and non-citizens in his very successful army, provoking a civil war against the Senate's general,
Sulla
Crises and the Failure of the Republic
The quest for glory and rule climaxed in the
Roman Civil War of 49BCE when
Julius Caesar defeated
Pompey, became "
Consul for
Life" (aka
Dictator), and, in effect, first emperor of Rome
The
Assassination of Caesar
The assassination of
Caesar in 44BCE led to another civil war between Caesar's nephew
Octavian and Caesar's general
Marc Antony, husband of the Ptolemaic
Queen Cleopatara
Octavian's victory made him the first true emperor of Rome,
Caesar Augustus
Lesson CompletePart 2—Roman EmpirePart 3—Rome and
Christianity
- published: 11 Feb 2014
- views: 791