Transcript Revision 1
Revision 1 - Rome
Vigils were fire fighters. Originally a job given
to slaves it was made a full-time job on AD6.
They patrolled the streets at night preventing
fires but they did sometimes stop criminals.
Aediles were officials that checked that market
traders were fair. They also made sure the
streets were clean.
The Urban Cohorts were the
army. A group of soldiers were
usually camped outside Rome
to protect the city from invasion.
If needed they could be used to
quell riots.
The Praetorian Guard were the
emperors bodyguard.
Other Roman citizens sometimes
used slaves as bodyguards.
If you thought that you had
been wronged. For instance
if you suspected someone
from stealing from you or if
you caught them in the act,
you had to catch them
yourself. If you knew who
they were you could
summon them to court.
At the Circus Maximus 4 teams of
chariot racers would compete. Quite
often the supporters of different
teams would fight in the street.
A Roman Magistrate called an Aedile would
fine you if you didn’t keep the street outside
your house clean. Aediles would also fine
people selling mouldy bread or underweight
goods.
Christians tended to be thrown to the lions in the Gladiators area. They
were hated for not believing the Roman religion of many gods. They
were also sometimes crucified.
Spartacus was a Roman gladiator and slave
who escaped and lead an army of 70,000
slaves against the Roman army.
Boudicca was a British tribal chief who
complained to the Romans. She was raped
for complaining so she raised an army and
attacked the Roman army.
Any Romans who committed Patricide (killing their father) were executed. They
were stripped naked and whipped until their blood flowed. They then had to
crawl into a sack with a monkey, a snake, a rooster and a dog. The sack was
tied up and thrown into the river tiber.
This was because men, particularly fathers were considered to be more
important. Fathers even had to right to kill deformed babies when they
were born.
Nobles sentenced to execution could opt for exile
instead of being killed.
Citizens tended to be executed for crimes such as
murder, arson, rebellion, stealing from temples or trying
to kill the emperor.
Burning a temple
would get you killed
by being burnt at the
stake.
Smaller crimes such as petty theft might be punished by a fine,
being whipped or having property confiscated.
Some punishments however
were very violent.
•Limbs were amputated
•Molten lead poured down
throat
•Crucifixion
•Thrown to beasts.
•Forced to fight as a gladiator
•Death by 1000 cuts.
The Romans only used prisons for
people that were awaiting trial
A slaves punishment was quite often up
to the master. They could be killed for
many crimes. If one slave in a household
tried to kill the master, all the slaves
could be killed. Slaves could be beaten
and whipped harshly for nothing.
Rebels were normally crucified.
This is what happened to the army
of Spartacus. 5000 crucifixes lined
the main road into Rome. This was
to show other people what
happened if you protested in Rome.
Other rebels such as Boudicca had their
armies wiped out. Boudicca was also
raped for protesting.
If you protested against Rome, you were
executed.
The Twelve Tables were the 1st Roman laws. They listed the various
things that were against the law. They were very detailed and included
laws on marriage, housing and property as well as crime.
Women had virtually no rights
They entertained their husbands
Justinian rewrote the laws into volumns. This is how laws are
kept today.
If you were a victim of theft, you
had to summon the thief to the
magistrates.
Only serious cases had juries.
Juries were sometimes corrupt
and jurors were often drunk.
The following principles were the basis for
all Roman Law and are also the basis for all
modern British law
• The accused is innocent until proven guilty
• Anyone can bring a case to court
• The defendant has the right to present
evidence.