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Published byDominic Warren Modified over 9 years ago
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Warm -up Copy HW Grab a red textbook Please turn to the page in your notebook called “Daily Life in the Roman Empire” Please complete the 4 “Preview” Questions
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Essential Questions How does where you live affect how you live? How do culture and technology reflect values? How can societies use what they have learned from the past?
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Daily Life in the Roman Empire Please turn to page 365 in your RED textbook I need some volunteers to read section 35.1
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Differences between the rich and poor Please read page 366 and complete the chart in your notes Rich bought luxury items that came from around the empire. decorated their houses with statues and fountains Poor lived in dangerous neighborhoods worked on small farms or on estates owned by the rich
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Law and Order Rich Romans: treated more leniently by the law, police patrolled their neighborhoods Poor Romans: suffered harsher punishments, lived in dangerous neighborhoods All Romans: could accuse someone of a crime, law applied to all citizens
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Family Life Rich Romans: men held political positions and provided for the family women ran households and trained slaves Poor Romans: both husband and wife had to work to provide for family All Romans: paterfamilias ruled family only kept healthy babies, held ceremonies to celebrate a boy becoming a man and getting married
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Food & Drink Rich Romans: had kitchens, ate meat, bread, mice, parrots, jellyfish, snails, and dates for dinner Poor Romans: cooked on small grills, ate fish, asparagus, figs, and bread for dinner All Romans: got food from thermopolia (fast-food places), drank water and water with honey, andate garum
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Housing Rich Romans: large houses made of stone and marble, indoor pools, kitchens, fancy dining rooms Poor Romans: small apartments made of wood, no kitchens, cooked on small grills; apartments were noisy, dirty, and filled with disease All Romans: fire was a danger
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Education Rich Romans: tutored by fathers or slaves and then sent to school; learned Latin, Greek, math, science, literature, music, public speaking Poor Romans: usually worked rather than go to school, learned a trade All Romans: boys may have had some education at home; most girls did not
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Recreation Rich Romans: attended plays and musical performances, threw fancy dinner parties, sat on cushions in the shade at the Circus Maximus Poor Romans: sat on wooden benches at the Circus Maximus All Romans: went to festivals and public baths, watched gladiator contests and chariot races
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Closure On a separate piece of paper, write a dialogue between a rich Roman and a poor Roman that might have taken place in 100 C.E. Your dialogue must be written as if two people were talking to each other. Begin with these opening lines: Rich Roman: “Life is great in the Roman Empire!” Poor Roman: “Not for all of us! What’s so good about your daily life?” Rich Roman: “Rome is an amazing place if you have money. For example,...” describe at least four aspects of life from a rich Roman’s perspective. describe at least four aspects of life from a poor Roman’s perspective. be free of spelling and grammatical errors.
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