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Roman Expansion Survival or Greed? 493 – 133 BC

Roman Expansion

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Survival or Greed? 493 – 133 BC. Roman Expansion. The Struggle of the Orders 494 – 287 BCE. Early Roman society consisted of two classes: Patricians and Plebeians… 494 BCE – Office of the Tribune created 460 BCE – Voting: residence replaced wealth - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Roman Expansion

Roman Expansion

Survival or Greed? 493 – 133 BC

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The Struggle of the Orders 494 – 287 BCE

Early Roman society consisted of two classes: Patricians and Plebeians…

• 494 BCE – Office of the Tribune created• 460 BCE – Voting: residence replaced wealth• 450 BCE – Twelve Tables• 445 BCE – Lex Canuleia-marriage• 367 BCE – Licinian-Sextian Rogation-consuls• 287 BCE – Lex Hortensia- Plebeian Council

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Roman Expansion

• 493 BCE – Battle of Lake Regillus/Latin League• 396 BCE – Battle of Veii/Etruscans• 390 BCE – first & only setback – Gauls seige on Rome • 350 BCE - Romans bounced back- rebuilt the Servian Wall

and remodeled the army

• 340- 290 BCE The Latin Wars/Roman Federation• 282-270 BCE defeated Greeks/Tarentum & Epirus

• By 264 BCE, 5 major world powers: Syria, Egypt,

Macedonia, Carthage and Rome

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By 264 BCE, 5 major world powers: Syria, Egypt, Macedonia, Carthage and Rome

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How was it possible for Rome to conquer so much so quickly? • First, the strong and balanced government had the

total support of the Roman people. • Second, some defeated peoples (Latins) were treated

as friends and, in several cases, made citizens. • Third, Rome's army was highly disciplined and

experienced by years of warfare. • Fourth, Romans greatly valued military success. In

fact, military success was needed if a man hoped to advance in the Roman government.

• Fifth, wars brought a lot of money and treasure. Valuables seized from the enemy made the government, as well as individual leaders, wealthy. Prisoners from the conquered lands became slaves.

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The Punic Wars

• Three wars against Carthage started in 264 BCE and ended with Rome an international superpower in 146 BCE.

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The Punic Wars, 264-146 BCE

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The first Punic War… • The first war started over the Sicilian city of Mesina

• Fighting between 264 and 241 BCE ended in defeat for the Carthaginian admiral Hamilcar.

• Sicily, Sardinia and Corsica became Roman territories

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Hannibal Barca

247–183 BCE

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Hannibal and the Second Punic War, 219- 202 BCE

• Started over control of a city in Spain

• Hannibal’s army of 50,000 men, 12,000 horses and 37 war elephants crossed the Alps in 15 days

• Hannibal hoped for support from the Gauls and other Latin people

• Battle of Cannae 216 BCE ended with 60,000 Romans dead.

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Hannibal’s army of 50,000 men and 37 war elephants crossed the Alps

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Battle of Cannae, 215 BCE - 60,000 dead. Rome’s future looked very bleak!

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Publius Cornelius Scipio

Rome sent an army under Scipio to Carthage, forcing Hannibal to return to Carthage to protect his homeland

Scipio Africanus

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The 3rd Punic War, 149-146 BCE

• A one-sided affair!

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The legacy of wars…• Farms had been ravaged and remained

unproductive• Citizen-soldiers returned after prolonged

absence to find their families on the brink of bankruptcy

• Growth of Patrician latifundia (slave plantations)

• Growing slave population drove down wages

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Further consequences of expansion…

• The Hellenization of Rome

• Rise of a business class

• Immense wealth –a taste for luxury

• Most benefits of expansion went to the wealthy, patrician class

• Serious economic dislocations for the common people was under way

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Problems for the small, independent, self-sufficient farmer…

• The increase in the slave population displaced the common farmers…

• In debt, without prospects for work, ruined farmers joined the ranks of unemployed in Rome…

• By 150BCE -a revolution was brewing!

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Any Questions?