Rome Spreads its Power
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Transcript Rome Spreads its Power
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Assignment
Who is your best friend? Why is this
person important to you?
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Early Rome
The Legend of Rome
Twin brothers
Remus
Romulus
Abandoned along the Tiber River
Raised by a She-Wolf
The Beginnings of Rome
Founded along the Tiber River.
Fertile soil
Settlers arrived between 1000-500 BC
3 groups
Latins
Greeks
Etruscans
Three Periods in Roman History
Age of Kings- 753-506 B.C.
Age of the Republic- 506-30 B.C.
Age of the Roman Empire- 30 B.C.- A.D.
476
The Early Republic
600 BC
An Etruscan becomes King
Tarquin the Proud
Formed a Republic
A form of government in which power rests with
citizens who have the power to vote to select their
leaders
Class Struggles
Patricians
The aristocratic landowners who held most of
the power.
Plebeians
The common farmers, artisans, and
merchants who made up the majority of the
population.
Roman Government
Twelve Tables
Established all Roman citizens had the
protection of the law
Written down in stone (literally)
Consuls
2 Consuls
One controlled the Government
One controlled the army
Term only 1 year long
Tribunes
The Senate
Elected official who represented the plebeians
Aristocratic Branch
Assemblies
Democratic Branch
Centuriate
Tribal
Dictator
Elected during times of crisis
Legion
5,000 heavily armed foot soldiers
Government of Conquered Lands
1.
2.
Full Citizenship
Partial Citizenship
3.
No voting
Allies
Rome’s Commercial Network
Easy access to the Mediterranean Sea
Traded with other areas to get what they
lacked.
Their trading also interfered with other
civilizations at the time
Carthage
War with Carthage
Known as the Punic Wars
Rome and Carthage go to war in 264 BC
War lasted till 146 BC
The Punic Wars were divided into 3
separate wars:
1st Punic War
Over Sicily
Very fertile soil
Rome wins
Gained its first province overseas.
2nd Punic War
Hannibal
Carthaginian General
Gathered 50,000 infantrymen, 9,000 cavalry,
and 60 elephants and crossed the alps
Intent on capturing Rome
Cannae 216 BC
Hannibal’s greatest victory
Never captured Rome
Roman general Scipio attacks Carthage
Hannibal retreats back to Carthage to defend
it
Hannibal loses at Zama in 202 BC
3rd Punic War (149-146 BC)
Carthage was not a threat any longer
Romans still bitter
Carthage began to flourish once again
Cato the Elder urged for the destruction of
Carthage
Sent troops over and they burned the city
Result of conquering Carthage
Rome now controlled the Mediterranean
Macedonia
Greece
Parts of Anatolia