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Part 4 Notes: The Fall of the Republic

Part 4 Notes: The Fall of the Republic. After the Punic Wars. Rome becomes the superpower of the Western Mediterranean Sea after the Punic Wars Seen by other countries & societies as powerful, wealthy Had many problems internally, even though they were recognized as a major power.

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Part 4 Notes: The Fall of the Republic

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  1. Part 4 Notes: The Fall of the Republic

  2. After the Punic Wars • Rome becomes the superpower of the Western Mediterranean Sea after the Punic Wars • Seen by other countries & societies as powerful, wealthy • Had many problems internally, even though they were recognized as a major power.

  3. Major Internal Problems, 100 B.C. • Patricians still owned much of the land, still had the most important gov’t jobs & directed the military/wars. • Many plebeians were resentful of the gap between the two social classes/strikes & conflict happens between the 2 classes • The situation became worse by 100 b.c., when many small farmers began to lose their land b/c of heavy debt & poverty.

  4. Plebian Farming Crisis 1. The Small Farmers: Extreme debt & poverty were caused by farms that were neglected (while men were forced to fight in wars) or destroyed by Hannibal’s troops 2. The Large Farmers: Large farms, like plantations, were called latifundia. Small farmers could not compete the large estate farms nor could they jobs b/c slaves did the work. These large farms were Patrician owned.

  5. Result of Farming Crisis • Small farmers moved to the cities for work: found very little job options because of slaves. • Tiberius & Gaius Gracchus: two Senators (brothers) who advocated for the plebian farmers in the Senate. • They proposed land reform (change) in order to help out small plebeian farmers • Tiberius was murdered in 133 BC; seen as the first event in the beginning of the end of the Roman Republic. Gaius in 123 BC. • Were murdered by other Senators; no one did anything about it & the gov’t stayed the same.

  6. The Military Crisis: General Marius 1. General Marius took it upon himself to help fix his soldier shortage & give poor men jobs 2. His solution to the farming crisis: **To enlist previous farmers as paid soldiers with the promise of land and a paycheck. Land given from the new provinces/territories being conquered by generals like Marius. 3. As a result, these men end up being loyal to their general, not Rome. It will divide Rome and cause a civil war. This tradition of paid soldiers by generals will last until 27 BC.

  7. Civil War in Rome • Rome ends up in a series of civil wars for the next 50 years. • Different powerful Roman generals battle for power. • By 60b.c., 3 generals formed an alliance: Crassus, Pompey, & Julius Caesar

  8. Political Differences 1. Two divisions in Roman politics had developed: • Optimates—those that favored the interest of the wealthy • Populares—those that favored the interest of the masses 2. Pompey was an Optimate 3. Caesar was a Populare

  9. Julius Caesar

  10. Julius Caesar

  11. Portrait of Ancient Rome

  12. Remains of Rome

  13. Roman Senate

  14. First Triumvirate • The three men end up forming a triumvirate: political alliance of 3 people • The alliance was called the First Triumvirate • All 3 men had very loyal armies in remote areas: Caesar-modern France (Gaul), Pompey-Spain, Crassus-Syria • Caesar had become a hero to Rome’s lower classes • Senators & others feared Julius Caesar’s popularity

  15. Julius Caesar

  16. Pompey

  17. Crassus

  18. The Beginning of the End • In 53b.c., Crassus was killed in battle • The Senate ordered both Pompey & Caesar to give up their armies & return home. • Caesar knew the Senate favored Pompey over him, so he was faced with a hard choice: 1. Obey the Senate & risk death/prison at the hands of his rivals, 2. Return to Rome with his army & risk civil war

  19. Caesar decided: he kept his loyal army & returned to Rome • He marched into Italy by crossing the river Rubicon, today the word is used a sign of “point of no return” or not turning back. • Pompey tried to stop him, but Caesar was the better general with good soldiers • Caesar destroyed Pompey’s army by 48 b.c.

  20. Caesar as dictator • In 45 b.c, Caesar declared himself dictator, for life. This broke with the traditional role of dictator in Rome • He strengthened his power with the people by making reforms to Rome • 1. Change the tax system, better for the poor • 2. Gave land to the poor in overseas colonies • 3. Started building projects for jobs (not slaves)

  21. Many Romans favored & supported Caesar • Many government officials & politicians—especially the Senate—loathed him; they felt he wanted to be king with total power • On March 15, 44 b.c., Caesar was stabbed to death at least 23 times during a Senate meeting. Some of these men Caesar thought were his allies. This day is known in history as the Ides of March (March 15th in Latin)

  22. Ides of March

  23. Brutus

  24. Brutus Suicide

  25. After Caesar’s Death • Civil war followed the death of Caesar • One side were the men & their allies who killed Caesar, the others were Caesar’s generals- Antony & Lepidus- and Caesar’s grandnephew, Octavian • The 3 defeated Caesar’s assassins & created the 2nd Triumvirate • Octavian—In Caesar’s will, he named Octavian his heir & adopted son

  26. The Creation of the Roman Empire • The 3 men starting arguing almost immediately & the defeat of Caesar’s enemies • Lepidus retired, which left Antony & Octavian • Antony fell in love with an Egyptian queen named Cleopatra & formed an alliance with her • Octavian used this to declare war against Antony

  27. In 31b.c. at the Battle of Actium, Octavian crushed the army/navy of Antony. • Result: as Octavian approached Egypt, the couple committed suicide • Octavian was now the only ruler of the broken Roman Republic.

  28. End of Democracy, Road to an Empire • Octavian knew the people didn’t want a king, but improvements in the gov’t. • Therefore, he did not make himself a dictator for life, saw what had happened Caesar • Octavian announced in 27 BC, that the gov’t would be restored with changes • Octavian restored order, brought peace, & needed supplies back to Rome. • He also created a professional Roman army, which stopped the loyalty issue & future wars b/t generals

  29. Augustus: the 1st Roman Emperor • Octavian knew the republic had become too weak, corrupt & not centralized enough to solve Rome’s problems. • He gave some power to the Senate, but slowly & carefully kept the majority of power for himself • Octavian named his self “imperator” which in English is emperor, also meant revered in Latin. He was approved by the Senate in 27 BC • His name was changed to Augustus, & from this point the Roman Empire was born

  30. Augustus

  31. Vocabulary 1. Julius Caesar (person, 5w’s) 2. 1st Triumvirate 3. Rubicon 4. Ides of March 5. Octavian (person 5w’s) 6. Antony 7. 2nd Triumvirate 8. The Roman Empire

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