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SSWH3: THE STUDENT WILL EXAMINE THE POLITICAL, PHILOSOPHICAL, AND CULTURAL INTERACTION OF CLASSICAL MEDITERRANEAN SOCIETIES FROM 700BCE TO 400 CE A. COMPARE THE ORIGINS AND STRUCTURE OF THE GREEK POLIS, THE ROMAN REPUBLIC, AND THE ROMAN EMPIRE C. ANALYZE THE CONTRIBUTIONS OF HELLENISTIC AND ROMAN CULTURE; INCLUDE LAW, GENDER, AND SCIENCE Rome: Republic

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Rome: Republic. SSWH3: The student will examine the political, philosophical, and cultural interaction of classical Mediterranean societies from 700BCE to 400 CE Compare the origins and structure of the Greek polis, the Roman Republic, and the Roman Empire - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Rome: Republic

S S W H 3 : T H E S T U D E N T W I L L E X A M I N E T H E P O L I T I C A L , P H I L O S O P H I C A L , A N D C U LT U R A L I N T E R A C T I O N O F

C L A S S I C A L M E D I T E R R A N E A N S O C I E T I E S F R O M 7 0 0 B C E T O 4 0 0 C E

A. C O M PA R E T H E O R I G I N S A N D S T R U C T U R E O F T H E G R E E K P O L I S , T H E R O M A N R E P U B L I C , A N D T H E R O M A N

E M P I R EC . A N A LY Z E T H E C O N T R I B U T I O N S O F H E L L E N I S T I C A N D

R O M A N C U LT U R E ; I N C L U D E L A W, G E N D E R , A N D S C I E N C E

Rome: Republic

Page 2: Rome: Republic

Rome Geography

Italy

Tiber River

The Alps

Mediterranean

Page 3: Rome: Republic

Early Republic

Latin & Etruscan immigrants est. Rome in 1000 BCE

Initially kings ruledBuilt Forum

Open air; center of public life (gov’t, law, business)

Citizens drive out last king

Declare gov’t a democratic republic Citizens vote for leaders Citizens were free-born

men

Page 4: Rome: Republic

Social Classes in Rome

Patricians Wealthy Owned land Made laws

Plebeians Artisans, farmers,

commoners/everybody else (majority)

Could vote Could not hold office

Page 5: Rome: Republic

Rebellion & Government Changes

Plebeians rebelPatricians give them more

power

Plebeian Accomplishments:Tribune – elected

representative who protect the rights of plebeians from unfair patrician officials

Twelve Tables – written law code (all free citizens had a right to the protection of the law)

Page 6: Rome: Republic

Government

Consul – 2 Rule army, directed

gov’t 1 year term, veto

power Senate – 300

Legislative (made laws)

Assemblies – Lots Voice of people

Dictator – 1 Absolute power Consuls choose 6 month term during

times of crisis

Page 7: Rome: Republic

Rise & Fall of the Roman Empire

S S W H 3 T H E S T U D E N T W I L L E X A M I N E T H E P O L I T I C A L , P H I L O S O P H I C A L , A N D C U L T U R A L I N T E R A C T I O N O F C L A S S I C A L M E D I T E R R A N E A N S O C I E T I E S F R O M

7 0 0 B C E T O 4 0 0 C E . A . C O M P A R E T H E O R I G I N S A N D S T R U C T U R E O F T H E G R E E K P O L I S , T H E

R O M A N R E P U B L I C , A N D T H E R O M A N E M P I R E . B . I D E N T I F Y T H E I D E A S A N D I M P A C T O F I M P O R T A N T I N D I V I D U A L S ; I N C L U D E

S O C R A T E S , P L A T O , A N D A R I S T O T L E A N D D E S C R I B E T H E D I F F U S I O N O F G R E E K C U L T U R E B Y A R I S T O T L E ’ S P U P I L A L E X A N D E R T H E G R E A T A N D T H E I M P A C T O F

J U L I U S A N D A U G U S T U S C A E S A R . E . A N A L Y Z E T H E F A C T O R S T H A T L E D T O T H E C O L L A P S E O F T H E W E S T E R N

R O M A N E M P I R E .

Page 8: Rome: Republic

Collapse of the Republic

Why does the republic collapse? Large size of territory Economic Turmoil

Gap between rich & poor Rich land owners lived on

estates & used slave labor Small farmers couldn’t compete sell land homeless

Military Upheaval Generals take power & pay poor

to work as soldiers Soldiers loyal to generals instead

of Republic

Page 9: Rome: Republic

Julius Caesar

Military geniusConsul for 1 yearConquers Gaul (France)People & troops love himPompey (political rival)

jealousCaesar marches to Rome w/

his armyPompey flees & is later

defeated44 B.C.E. declares himself

dictator for life

Page 10: Rome: Republic

Caesar’s Reforms

Expanded Senate Increased pay for

soldiers Started colonies Created jobs Citizenship

Photo: Brutus & Cassius plot

Caesar’s assassination in

the Roman Forum

Page 11: Rome: Republic

After Julius Caesar’s Death…

Civil war breaks outTriumvirate (rule of three):

Octavian (Caesar’s grandson) Mark Antony (general) Lepidus (politician)

Triumvirate fight with each other for power: Octavian is victorious

Page 12: Rome: Republic

Octavian & Empire

Becomes “Augustus” – exalted one; Rome’s first emperor

27 B.C.E. – 180 C.E. “Pax Romana” = Roman peace

Set up a civil service – paid workers to manage gov’t affairs

Page 13: Rome: Republic

“Pax Romana” Ends180 C.E. after

Marcus Aurelius

Rulers cannot handle Empire’s size

Page 14: Rome: Republic

Century of Crisis

Foreign invasion trade affected inflation (rising prices)

Soil over-farmed famine

Military not loyal Mercenaries (foreign soldiers who were paid) no loyalty to Rome

Page 15: Rome: Republic

Emperors Try Reform

Diocletian 248 C.E.Limits freedomDoubles militaryControls inflationDivides the Empire:

East – spoke Greek West – spoke Latin

Constantine 330 C.E. Moves capital to

Byzantine (East) Names capital after self

– Constantinople Ends persecution of

Christians in empire

Page 16: Rome: Republic

Eastern & Western Roman Empire

Page 17: Rome: Republic

West Collapses

Why? Invasions:

Huns invade Germanic homelands

Germanic tribes move south

Sack and overtake Rome

Last Roman emperor ousted by the Germanic tribes in 476 A.D.

Page 18: Rome: Republic

Eastern Empire Survives

Byzantine (Byzantium)

Preserves Greek/Roman culture

Lasts until 1453 when Ottoman Turks take over

Page 19: Rome: Republic

The Spread of Christianity