Introduction to Rome`s early expansion
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Transcript Introduction to Rome`s early expansion
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Early Roman Conquest
The Punic Wars
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Periods of Roman History
Roman Origins (1000-509 BCE)
Earliest settlements on Palatine Hill
753 – Romulus & Remus founding myth
Roman Republic (509-31 BCE)
Etruscan kings overthrown
Republic: a state in which supreme power is held by the people
and their elected representatives
The Punic Wars (264-133 BCE)
Roman Empire (31 BCE – 476 CE)
Began when Octavian defeated Antony & Cleopatra
Note: Rome/Romans does not refer to just the city, but the entire empire of
this civilization and the people who inhabited the regions they conquered
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Rome’s First Conquests
While
the Romans were developing their form of
government, they also expanded along the Italian
peninsula
Often
turned to military conquest than peaceful
diplomacy
Destroyed
BCE)
remaining Etruscan town of Veii (396
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The Invasion by the Gauls
390
BCE – Gauls captured
city of Rome
Heroic
deed by wealthy
Roman women – secured the
funds for a negotiated
ransom
290s
BCE – Rome dominated
the Italian peninsula as far
South as Magna Graecia
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The Roman Army
Greek phalanx Roman maniples
60-120 men (maniple) – commanded by a centurion
Allowed for power and versatility, could maneuvre independently
6000 men (legion) – had to hold its formation, main unit
600 men (cohort) – flexibility of the maniples, replaced
maniples at times
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Pyrrhus Invades Italy
280 BCE – Southern Greek citystates in Italy felt threatened by
Rome
Enlisted King of Epirus
20 war elephants & 2 successful
battles
Romans rebounded and
pursued their conquests
Controlled all of Italian
peninsula except the Po Valley
(to the North)
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The Roman Federation
Conquered communities
Degrees of privilege
Roman citizenship
Protection of Roman law, some could
vote, intermarriages with Romans
allowed
Liable to provide troops
How do you control a large territory
without having to demolish or transform
the conqueror’s own institutions?
This system expanded the manpower
available to Rome
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The Punic Wars
Rome unified Italian peninsula
Carthage controlled cities in northern Africa, parts of
Spain, islands of Corsica and Sardinia, and much of Sicily
Leading naval power
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First Punic War (264-241 BCE)
Sicily – under siege from Carthage
Romans sent a force to assist the town of Messana in Sicily
Led to a battle for control of the whole island of Sicily
Romans refused to accept defeat – they were victorious!
Carthage abandoned Sicily and it became the first Roman
province
238 BCE - Sardinia rebelled against Carthaginian control and
Rome seized it and Corsica to form the second Roman
province
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Second Punic War (219-202 BCE)
Carthage tries to build an empire in southern
Spain as compensation for its losses
Saguntum – town in Spain, Rome promised to
protect led to the outbreak of the most critical
Punic war
219 BCE – Hannibal (Carthage) seized
Saguntum
Wanted to bring the war home to Rome
and conquer it
218 BCE – He led his army across the
Alps with 37 elephants
216 BCE – Victorious over the Romans
at Cannae
Allies remained faithful to Rome, and Hannibal
didn’t have the manpower
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Third Punic War (149-146 BCE)
Rome made an alliance
with Numidia (west of
Carthage)
Numidia plundered the
territory of Carthage to the
point of armed resistance
Marcus Cato persuades
Rome to declare war
146 BCE – city captured,
Roman province named
Africa
133 BCE – Spain conquered
by Rome (Carthage
territory now destroyed)