Roman Empire
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Transcript Roman Empire
ROMAN EMPIRE
By: Gabe Sander and Jordan Stack
THE RISE OF ROME:
ETRUSCANS
Rome is believed to be founded
in 753 B.C.E by Romulus
Etruscan civilization dominates
regions with Etruscan kings
ruling Rome.
In 509 B.C.E the Etruscan kings
were overthrown and Roman
Republic was established.
THE RISE OF ROME:
THE REPUBLIC
Government:
Had many branches and levels
II. Two consuls were head, unless in war a
Dictator was appointed
III. Senate, at first was made up of aristocrats,
but then became elected officials.
I.
THE RISE OF ROME:
FALL OF THE REPUBLIC
Caesar crosses the Rubicon- 49 B.C.E
Caesar is murdered by the Roman Senate-
44B.C.E
Gaius Octavian named Augustus and is
officially the first Emperor of Rome- 27
B.C.E
TIME
Augusta becomes first emperor of Rome in
27 B.C.E
Diocletian splits the empire in two- 284 C.E
Julius Nepos, the last emperor dies- 480 C.E
LOCATION
Stretched from what is now Spain to
Mesopotamia, most of Great Britain and
Northern Africa
Consists of 2.2 million square miles
Engulfed the Mediterranean Sea
CENTRALIZED GOVERNMENT
Emperor ruled from Rome
Senate was pretty much a club for rich
aristocrats
LEGAL SYSTEMS AND BUREAUCRACIES
Rome was split into three types of Provinces:
Provinces with at least one legion ruled by
Senatorial Governor
II. Provinces that were difficult but did not
require full legion were ruled by Equestrians
Governors
III. The Egyptian province was it’s own case as it
was the personal property of the Emperor
I.
FORTIFICATIONS, WALLS, AND ROADS
Roads: Built to move military units around, 8
to 40 feet wide
Forts: Strategic Point, hold 800 men
Wall: Hadrian’s Wall, 73 miles long, 3.6
meters tall. 8 feet wide.
NEW GROUPS OF MILITARY
Soldiers were Roman Citizens
Came form all over the empire
Citizen Legions were drawn from non-
citizens or conquered people
TRADE
Infrastructure:
Sea routes covered the Mediterranean and
Black Seas
II. Roman roads covered the empire helping
trade
III. Most important port was Ostia as it was
the nearest major port to Rome
I.
TRADE
Currency:
First traded goods
II. Then lumps of metal, know as aes rude, that had to
be weighed
III. 269 B.C.E silver coins were introduced
I.
Name
as
dupondius
sestertius
Metal
bronze
bronze or copper
metal alloy
denarius
silver alloy
aureus
gold
Values
-2 asses
4 asses or 2 dupondii
16 asses, 8 dupondii or 4
sestertii
400 asses, 200 dupondii, 100
sestertii or 25 denarii
CITIES
Rome center of religion and political power
Rome was home of the Emperor who was
head of government and Pontifex Maximus
Rome and Ostia were large centers of trade
SLAVERY
Worked on farms, as laborers, carpenters,
and blacksmiths
Managed shops when owners left
Some treated like children of their owners
FAMILY LIFE
Punished if not married by 15-16
No public schools, children went private
schools, if they went at all
Rich people usually lived in a town house called
a domus. Many of them also had
a country house called a villa. But most people
living in towns and cities
rented an apartment called a cenaculum
THE FALL OF ROME:
INTERIOR
Inflation: Less gold was being brought in
from conquest so less coins were gold
making them less valuable
Military Spending: Large sums of money
when spent to hold off Barbarians
Civil War: Allowed Barbarians to come into
Italy
THE FALL OF ROME:
EXTERIOR
Barbarians:
Conquest of new territories on the border of
the old territory
II. Adoption of agriculture in order to feed more
people from the existing
territory
III. Clearance of forest to provide more pasture
for the tribal livestock
I.
CITATION
Castles. N.p., n.d. Google. Web. 7 Sept. 2011. <http://www.castles.me.uk/roman-architecture.htm>.
Heaton, Chris. UNRV History. Ed. Chris Heaton. N.p., n.d. Google. Web. 3 Sept. 2011. <http://www.unrv.com/>.
History Learning Cite. Ask.com, n.d. Google. Web. 11 Sept. 2011.
<http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/a_history_of_ancient_rome.htm>.
Images of a Roman Fort Along the Danube. Web. 11 Sept. 2011. <sketchucation.com/images-of-a-roman-fortalong-the-danube/>.
Mediterranean Powers 800-600 B.C.. Map. . Google. Web. 6 Sept. 2011.
<http://www.google.com/imgres?q=map+of+rome+during+the+etruscan&um=1&hl=en&safe=active&sa=N&rls
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Scaruffi, Peiro. "A Timeline of the Roman Empire." Piero Scaruffi's Knowledge Base. 1999. Web. 06 Sept. 2011.
<http://www.scaruffi.com/politics/romans.html>.
"Slavery In Ancient Rome." Slavery In Ancient Rome. Rich East High School, 21
Mar. 2000. Web. 11 Sept. 2011.
<http://www.richeast.org/htwm/Greeks/Romans/slavery/slavery2.html"The Roman Empire Map." Map. The
Ancient Rome . Web. 31 Aug. 2011. <http://www.roman-empire-map.askricktoday.com/>.
Taylor, Tim. Roman Roads. Google. Web. 7 Sept. 2011. <http://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/EnglandHistory/RomanRoads.htm>.
CITATIONS- CONT.
The Roman Army Page. N.p., 7 Oct. 2002. Google. Web. 11 Sept. 2011.
http://members.tripod.com/s_van_dorst/legio.html.
Walsh, J. "Roman Currency." Mores. N.p., 2001. Google. Web. 8 Sept. 2011.
Watkins, Thayer. "The Economic History of the Western Roman Empire: The
Invasion of the Western Roman Empire by Barbarian Tribes." San José State
University - Powering
Silicon Valley. Web. 11 Sept. 2011.
<http://www.sjsu.edu/faculty/watkins/barbarians.htm>.<http://dl.ket.org/latin
lit/mores/currency/currency.htm>.
Zweifel, Chris. Hadrian's Wall. 2002. Google. Web. 11 Sept. 2011.
<http://www1.american.edu/ted/ice/hadrian.htm>.