Roman Civilizations
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Roman Civilizations
Geography
Italy is centrally located in the Mediterranean
Sea
Rome is in the center of Italy
More open land
Mountains are less rugged
Broad, fertile plains
Early settlers
Latins migrated to Italy around 800 B.C.
Twin Brother Romulus and Remus founded
the city
Son of a Latin woman and the war god Mars
Gave Rome a divine origin
Shared their land with Greeks and the
Etruscans
Romans soon drove out the Etruscan leader
and formed their own republic around 509
B.C.
New form of Government, res publica, or
republic
Government that belongs to the people
Prevent one person from gaining too much power
New political structure
Senate
300 members
All patricians, or landholding upper class
Served for life
Strongly influenced the republic’s laws
Consuls
Each year two consuls were nominated by the
senate
Ran the business of the government and
commanded the army
Could only serve one term
Had to have approval of the other consul
Dictator
Only needed in a time of war
Could only rule for 6 months, then had to give up power
Plebeians
Farmers, merchants, artisans, and traders
Made up bulk of population
Fought for their right to influence government
Gained the right to elect their own officials
Tribunes
Could veto any law that they felt harmed the plebeians
Eventually they were able to be consuls and senators
Roman Society
Family
Male was head of household
Enforced strict discipline and demanded respect for
his authority
Wives were not allowed to administer their own
affairs
Supposed to be loving, dutiful, dignified, and strong
Women
Roles changed over time
Could own property and run businesses
Some even had strong political influence
Children
All children were educated
Some hired tutors
Religion
Believed in many Gods and Goddesses
Adapted from the Greek religion
Zeus=Jupiter
Calendar was full of feasts that honored gods and
goddesses to ensure divine favor for the city
Army
As the political and social systems grew, the
armies grew as well
Rome conquered many Greek and Etruscan city
states and soon controlled most of Italy
Loyal, well-trained army
Legions had 5,000 citizen-soldiers
Volunteers who provided their own weapons
Soldiers were rewarded with the spoils of victory
Enemies
Once Rome conquered new land, they treated
their enemies fairly
Gave them rights and let them keep their own
culture
Roads
Built all-weather roads to link territories
Roads connected trade and Roman ideals all
throughout Italy
United Italy under Roman rule