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World History: The Earth and its Peoples Chapter 5 An Age of Empires: Rome and Han China 753 B.C.E. - 330 C.E.

World History: The Earth and its Peoples

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World History: The Earth and its Peoples. Chapter 5 An Age of Empires: Rome and Han China 753 B.C.E. - 330 C.E. Objectives. Explain how the Roman and Han Empires came into being. Be able to describe the sources of their stability or instability. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

World History:The Earth and its Peoples

Chapter 5An Age of Empires:

Rome and Han China753 B.C.E. - 330 C.E.

Page 2: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Objectives

• Explain how the Roman and Han Empires came into being.

• Be able to describe the sources of their stability or instability.

• Discuss the benefits and liabilities that these empires bring to the rulers and their subjects

Page 3: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Rome and Han China

Common Characteristics

• largest empires world had seen• greater central control than earlier empires• greater cultural impact• remarkable stability

Page 4: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Rome’s Mediterranean Empire

Crossroads• Italian peninsula• Europe and Africa

Natural Resources• ample, arable land

– volcanic soil• timber and minerals• navigable riversSupport of a large population

Page 5: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

A Republic of Farmers

Inhabitation by 1000 BCE– Romulus 753 BCE

• Seven Hills– original Latins– Etruscans immigrants 700 BCE

• Economy– agriculture and land

• Politics– “Council of Elders”– seven kings of Rome

• 753 - 507 BCE

Page 6: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

A Republic of Farmers

• Roman Republic - 507-31 BCE– ruled by assemblies of wealthy

male citizens• Roman Senate

– real center of power; made laws– served for life– consuls

Society• multi-generational family

– paterfamilias• oldest-living male

• hierarchical– patron/client relationship– mutual benefits and obligations

Page 7: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

A Republic of Farmers

Women• child in eyes of the law• more freedom than Greeks• influence over husbands / son

Religion• polytheistic

– numina - invisible shapeless forces controlling nature

– pax deorum• peace with the gods

– diffusion with Greek gods

Page 8: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Roman Expansion

Early Roman Republic - 500 BC• Rome as ‘city-state’

– aggression or self-defense?• friction

– pastoral tribes / agriculturalists– Romans serves as ‘protectors’

• Roman loyalty - 290 BCE– privileges of citizenship to

conquered– military service

• Carthage Wars - 264-202 BC– control of western

Mediterranean Sea

Page 9: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Punic Wars: Rome - Carthage

Page 10: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Roman Expansion

Eastern Mediterranean• Hellenistic (200-30 BCE)

– Egypt and Greece

Interior• Gaul (59-51 BCE)

– Celts– Gaius Julius Caesar

Administration• considerable autonomy to

cooperative local elites– provincial governor from Senate

• inadequate and corrupt

Caesar

Page 11: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Caesar’s Empire

Page 12: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

The Failure of the Republic

Forces• military service for farmers

– decline of independent farms• unemployment

– decline in soldiers• mercenaries

• war wealth of upper classes– rise in latifundia; cash crops

• slave labor– loss of food supply

• Civil War - 88 BCE - 31 BCE– allegiance to generals, not state

Page 13: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

The Failure of the Republic

Octavian - 63 - 14 BCE– ends civil wars by 31 BCE– military dictator

• offensive to defensive– Augustus

• Roman Principate– “first among equals”

• equites– wealthy merchants / landowners– civil service

• Good Emperors– line of succession

Page 14: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

An Urban Empire

Pax Romana– “Roman peace”– safety and stability

Importance of trade– support for emperor & govt– rich interior provinces

• Gaul and Egypt

Romanization– spread of Latin language /

Roman ways• citizenship

– Before 212 CE: military service– After 212 CE: all free males

Page 15: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Rome: 14 - 117 C.E.

Page 16: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

The Rise of Christianity

Judea– Jewish homeland– Roman control by 6 CE

• Jesus– personal faith and spirituality

• Paul - (45 - 58 C.E.)– Jesus as Messiah (“anointed

one”– benefits of citizenship to preach

Disloyalty to Rome– refusal to worship emperor

Page 17: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Spread of Christianity

Page 18: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Roman Technology

Aqueducts– road system– water conduits using gravity– arches– domes

• concrete

“Third-century crisis”– 235 - 284 C.E.– frequent change of rulers

• coin devaluation– permeable frontiers

• loss of trade revenues– exodus from city to country

Aqueducts

Page 19: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Roman Transformation

Diocletian (284 - 305 C.E.)– government regulation

• prices and vocations

Constantine (306 - 337 C.E)– reunites entire empire– conversion to Christianity– Rome to Byzantium

• Constantinople

Page 20: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Diocletian’s Empire

Page 21: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Origins of Imperial China, 221 BCE - 220 CE

Warring-States Period• 1st empire under Qin

– Shi Huangdi (221-206 BCE)• Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 CE)

Resources• agriculture

– free peasant taxes• human labor

– public works projects– military service

Page 22: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Hierarchy, Obedience, & Belief

Family– all generations; ancestors

• Values– Confucianism– obedience and proper conduct

• Women– three submissions

• parents, husband, son– live with husband’s family

• Nature– nature spirits– feng shui

Page 23: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Qin Dynasty

Qin - 221 - 206 B.C.E.– Imperial Age

• Shi Huangdi– “First Emperor”– totalitarianism

• primogeniture– outlawed sole land inheritance– abolished slavery

• standardization– coins, law code, writing– roads, canals, walls– unification of civilization

Page 24: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

The Long Reign of the Han

Han - 206 BCE - 220 CE– replaces Qin

• Legalism reform– Confucianism social order– Mandate of Heaven

• Chang’an– capital of Early Han

• model of urban planning• alignment with gentry

– class below aristocrats• efficient and responsive

– Confucian guide to government• civil service

• Daoism– popular among commoners

Page 25: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Han Dynasty

Page 26: World History: The Earth and its Peoples

Technology and Trade

Metallurgy– poured versus pounded

• Military– crossbow and cavalry

• watermill– grindstone

• horse collarTrade

– silk as leading exportFall of Han

– reform failure; corruption– nomad attacks; hungry peasants