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By: Mark A. Gonzalez & Susan Pojer Bradenton Christian School

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1 By: Mark A. Gonzalez & Susan Pojer Bradenton Christian School
Ancient and Classical Rome By: Mark A. Gonzalez & Susan Pojer Bradenton Christian School Bradenton, Florida

2 The Geography of Rome

3 The History of Ancient Italy

4 Italy in 750 BC

5 Influence of the Etruscans
Writing-never been deciphered Religion The Arch

6 The Mythical Founding of Rome: Romulus & Remus
According to legend, their mother was Rhea Silvia conceived the twins by the god Mars. Once the twins were born, they were abandoned to die in the Tiber river. They were saved by a series of miraculous interventions: the river carried them to safety, a she-wolf found and suckled them, and a woodpecker fed them. A shepherd and his wife found them and fostered them to manhood as simple shepherds. The twins, still ignorant of their true origins, proved to be natural leaders. Each acquired many followers. When they discovered the truth of their birth and chose to found a new city. In a power struggle, Romulus eventually killed Remus and the city was named “Rome” somewhere between BC.

7 The Roman Republic: 509 BC - 27 BC

8 Republican Government
2 Consuls (Rulers of Rome) Senate (Representative body for patricians-land owning noblemen) General Assembly (Representative body for plebeians (90% of pop.)-all other free men) More stable than Greek direct democracy Structure of our US Govt modeled on this Roman Republic model

9 The Twelve Tables of Rome, 450 BC
Providing political and social rights for the plebeians. Codified law similar to Hammurabi’s Innocent until proven guilty Eventually applied to all conquered areas Established “Rule of Law” in Rome est. the lawyer profession-Cicero-the First great lawyer

10 The Roman Forum

11 Rome’s Early Road System-built by the Roman army

12 Roman Roads: The Appian Way

13 Roman Aqueducts

14 The Roman Colosseum

15 The Colosseum Interior and the the hypogeum below

16 The Punic Wars Rome vs. Carthaginian Empire

17 Hannibal’s Route (218-201 BC)
Rome’s conflicts w/ the Carthaginians-Punic wars Hannibal destroyed many towns and villages almost conquered Rome Romans eventually burned Carthage to the ground---Rome became the only power in the Mediterranean

18 Reforms after the Punic Wars
Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus the poor should be given grain and small plots of free land. Military Reformer Gaius Marius recruited an army from the poor and homeless. professional standing army.

19 Collapse of the Republic
Large influx of slaves-not enough jobs for poor Romans (plebians) on the farms moved to cities Led to overcrowding in the cities Roman currency became devalued high inflation Political Leaders fought amongst themselves—power of the Senate weakened Power transferred to the Consul of 3 men-also called the 1st Triumvirate

20 The First Triumvirate 1. Julius Caesar 2. Marcus Crassus
3. Gaius Pompey

21 Collapse of the Republic: Senate v. Caesar’s followers
Julius Caesar Pompey

22 Crossing the Rubicon River, 49 BC-a point of no return…
Crossing the Rubicon River, 49 BC-a point of no return….Julius Caesar symbolically began the Roman Empire “The Die is Cast!”

23 Crossing the Rubicon River

24 “Beware the Ides of March!”-warned a seer 44 BC-Julius Assassinated!

25

26 The Second Triumvirate
1. Octavian Augustus 2. Marc Antony 3. Marcus Lepidus

27 The Roman Empire: 27 BC CE (AD)

28 Octavian Augustus: Rome’s First Emperor
Also known as Caesar Augustus The emperor at the time of Jesus’ birth Rome—the capital of Western world Est. rule of law, common coinage, civil service and secure travel for merchants Pax Romana (Roman Peace)-220 years of stability Conquered peoples could maintain cultural identity

29 The First Roman Dynasty

30 Pax Romana: 27 BC –180 AD

31 The Greatest Extent of the Roman Empire – 14 AD

32 The Rise of Christianity

33 St. Paul: Christian Apostle to the Gentiles
Gospel spread by Paul and Jesus’ disciples Grace through faith and salvation open to all who believe attracted many especially the poor and women 2nd major monotheistic religion Spread throughout the entire empire by the 3rd century

34 The Spread of Christianity

35 Imperial Roman Road System-allowed for the easy spread of the gospel

36 Nero and the Great Persecution
Romans saw the new religion as a threat to its paganism and power Emperor Nero began to persecute Christians Open killings in Rome’s Colosseum Failed to stop the spread of the gospel

37 Nero and the Great Persecution

38

39 SPREAD OF CHRISTIANITY IN ASIA

40

41 The Empire in Crisis: 3rd c

42 The Empire in Crisis: 3rd c
2 Major Reasons for Collapse of the Roman Empire: Internal-bad leaders, too big of an empire to manage External- the Huns, Vandals and invasion of the Germanic tribes Emp. Diocletian divided the empire to introduce economic reforms Co-emperor w/ Constantine for a while

43 Diocletian Splits the Empire in Two: 294 CE

44 Constantine: 312 – 337 AD Rose to power 306 AD as co-emperor, full control of the east by 322 set up full control of the empire at Constantinople Christianity as the official religion of the empire---try to unify (Edict of Milan, 391 AD

45 Constantinople: “The 2nd Rome” (Founded in 330)

46 Interregional Trade Networks

47 Roman to Asia Trade Routes overland converged at Constantinople
Sea routes to Indian Ocean From central Asia-stirrups, rice, citrus, silk and spices from Asia, gold from Africa

48 Barbarian Invasions: 4c-5c

49 Attila the Hun: “The Scourge of God”
Led the nomadic Huns-from China to Germany Both Romans and Germanic tribes resisted him Attacked Rome His victory showed the superiority of horsemen in warfare- the Greeks , Romans and Germanic tribes preferred infantry

50 The Center of Power shifts to Byzantium: The Eastern Roman Empire

51 The Byzantine Empire During the Reign of Justinian

52 The Byzantine Emperor Justinian

53 The Legacy of Rome Republic Government—US Constitution Roman Law
Latin Language Roman Catholic Church City Planning Roman Military Tactics still used Romanesque Architectural Style Roman Engineering Aqueducts Sewage systems Dams Cement Arch


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