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Rome

Rome. Mr. Forgie Room 126. Founding of Rome. Legendary date is April 21, 753 BCE Legend Romulus and Remus twins sons of Mars founded the city after being rescued from the Tiber river by a she-wolf For about 2.5 centuries the Etruscans ruled the city

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Rome

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  1. Rome Mr. Forgie Room 126

  2. Founding of Rome • Legendary date is April 21, 753 BCE • Legend Romulus and Remus twins sons of Mars founded the city after being rescued from the Tiber river by a she-wolf • For about 2.5 centuries the Etruscans ruled the city • As the Etruscans traded throughout the Mediterranean more people immigrated into Rome

  3. Rome - Patricians • 509 BCE wealthy/powerful citizens drove out the Etruscan kings and declared Rome a republic • They kept the class system from the Etruscans and its class conflicts • Only 7-10% of the population (wealthy) were represented in the government • These Patricians were free men with hereditary, wealth or power

  4. Rome-Plebeians • Plebeians were poor people without property or hereditary ties • They lacked property so they could not serve as officers in the military or in the government • Intermarriage was forbidden and they could not serve in any religious office • Plebeians had been somewhat protected by the Etruscan Kings – but that was gone

  5. Class Conflict • The Struggle of the Orders broke out about 15 years after the republic was established • Lasted about 50 years (494-440 BCE) • Plebeians relied on their huge numbers to gain some form of representation • They refused to serve as foot soldiers which weakened Rome • In 451 BCE (10) Patricians codified some current customs into the “Law of the Twelve Tables”

  6. Law of the Twelve Tables • These laws on Ivory actually hurt the plebeians because of the severity of punishment towards the poor. • Debtors were often sold into slavery • If you grazed your animals on land you did not own you were hung • Patricians slowly yielded under pressure from the plebeians and changed many of the laws

  7. Tribunes • Finally the Patricians agreed to give the plebeians some representation in the Senate • Two tribunes were elected by the plebeians and they represented them in the Senate • They did have veto power so they were somewhat effective

  8. Senate • Legislative and Consultative body • They elected a variety of low level Magistrates to administer Rome • Magistrates served for one year and then automatically became Senators • Senate decided policy but also nominated two Consuls (Executives) to govern all of the Roman Empire

  9. Consuls • Consuls, Senators and Magistrates were elected by the Comitia Centuriata (Leaders of the Soldiers) • Once elected they served for one year • Initially only Patricians could be a consul • In 360 BCE the first Plebian Consul was elected • Later in the Empire consuls will begin taking power from the Senate/even appointing some Senators

  10. Early Military • The early empire ruled by armed force • Patrician or Plebeian could be a military leader – but you had to provide your own arms – so usually only wealthy rose in the ranks • Units were divided into 100 men called centuries, which were led by Centurions • Centurions met to elect Senators, important magistrates and consuls

  11. Ruling • All ruling (magistrates and consuls) was done in pairs • This allowed for a checks and balance and helped to avoid a return to the time of the single Etruscan King • Each consul had veto power over the other • In an emergency the Senate could appoint a dictator to serve for 6 months

  12. Military Power • At first they copied the Greek Phalanx but then changed to small units with swords and javelins • They place young troops in front, more tested veterans in the middle and skilled veterans in the back • Early on it had no navy but it captured one from Carthage and copied it – then conquered Carthage • They also used catapults for battering city walls • They were patient and often used time to conquer

  13. Expansion of the Republic • Rome established alliances with nearby city-states and then challenged the Etruscans • After a 6 year siege (396BCE) Rome capture Etruscan city of Veii • Continues to expand with a setback of being sacked by the Celtics in 264 BCE • Rome was now a society geared towards war and will expand for 140 years

  14. Causes of the Punic Wars • Rome vs. Carthage • Carthage located 130 miles across the Mediterranean • Carthage was a major port for the Phoenicians and they controlled North-central coast of Africa and western Mediterranean • Carthage had a main trade route to Spain (Silver) and so they created ports and cities in Sardinia and Sicily (and one on Italy) to protect he route

  15. Map of Rome/Carthage Area

  16. First Punic War (Punici) • Fighting started in Sicily in 264 BCE and lasted until 241 BCE • Rome won and now controlled Sicily – five years later they will take Sardinia and Corsica • This is the first time Rome has provinces outside Italian Peninsula

  17. Second Punic War • Spanish city of Saguntum wanted Carthage out and asked Rome for help • The Romans attacked and defeated by Hannibal (219 BCE) the war will last 20 years • Hannibal now went overland towards Rome • Took Troops/Elephants 1000 miles overland including the Alps destroying northern Roman territory and Rome's armies sent to stop him • Rome’s allies stayed loyal and Rome raised more armies

  18. Second Punic War • Rome recaptured cities and launched a new attack in Spain • Hannibal marched south unable to take the city of Rome • After winning several victories in Spain 211-206 BCE Rome’s General Scipio invades Africa • Hannibal heads home to Carthage to stop him • Scipio will defeat Hannibal at the Battle of Zama (202 BCE) and Carthage became a dependency of Rome • Scipio is renamed Scipio Africanus for his victory

  19. New Wisdom • Policy of Brute Force • The City of Capua (Region of Campania) tried to rebel against Rome (allied with Hannibal) • Rome executes 70 of their Senators, imprisons 300 aristocrats and sold many of their citizens into slavery

  20. Third Punic War • In 149 BCE Rome will respond with New Wisdom against Carthage when Carthage attacks An African ally King Masinissa of Numidia • This is the Third Punic war and lasts until 146 BCE • Rome will completely destroy Carthage – sow salt into the ground and then annex all of Carthage into the Roman Province of Africa

  21. Rome Expands • After the second Punic War Rome attacks the Gaul's in Northern Italy and annexes their territory • It annexes Spain (province)in 197 BCE but treats them so bad they continually revolt • Rome completely destroys Spain in 133 BCE • They then attack Gaul in France and by 121 BCE they annex that area

  22. Expansion – Eastern Mediterranean • After Alexander died his Kingdom was divided into 3 regional kingdoms • Two of the Kingdoms (Macedonia and Syria) controlled by the Seleucid dynasty threatened to attack the third – Egypt (Ptolemaic family) • To take advantage of this turmoil other Greek states asked Rome to intervene and free them from Macedon

  23. Expansion (200 BCE) • King Phillip V rejects Rome's threats and Rome attacks and defeats him • Rome declares those city-states free but they really rule them • Rome then warns Antiochus III of Syria to stay out of Egypt and Europe – he ignores the warning and they take all his land and push him into Syria – making him pay indemnities

  24. Expansion • 168 BCE the son of King Phillip V– Perseus tries to attack Egypt again and Rome defeats him ending the Macedonian monarchy • Greek city-state of Corinth tried to be too independent – even attacked some of Rome’s convoys • Rome uses “new wisdom” and razed the city, sold them into slavery and took their art to Rome • King of Pergamum (part of Asia Minor) bequeathed all of his land to Rome in 133 BCE

  25. Expansion • Pompey the Great will add Syria, most of Asia Minor and Jerusalem about 63 BCE • He will all a Jewish King to rule Judea as a client-monarch • Pompey will use this type of indirect rule by local potentates throughout the east • Pompey will found about 40 cities to create a Roman political influence

  26. Political Rule • Rome offered economic and social support to those it conquered. • It would also offer them various levels of Roman citizenship (Italian Peninsula) to induce residents to support and join its armies • In 91 BCE Marcus Livius Drusus the Younger was elected Tribune and wanted to give all Italian allies full citizenship – Senate rejects idea and Drusus is assassinated and War of the Allies begins (Social War)

  27. Social War • After two years of fighting Rome offers full citizenship to those who remained loyal and those who stopped fighting • Citizenship began to be used as an inducement to loyalty • In annexed land aristocrats were offered partial citizenship

  28. Social Structure • Patron-Client relationship = Strong men offered protection for the weak and the weak offered obedient and services • Patricians offered services to Plebeians (usually legal) the plebian would then pay patrons fines and fees and money for a daughters dowries • A client would present himself periodically to the patron and the patron would give the client a gift • This relationship was codified and a Patron who defrauded the client would be executed • This type of relationship was also characterized by Rome's imperial control over conquered provinces

  29. Roman Family • Father of the family (paterfamilias)had the right of life and death over family members • He controlled occupations, who they married and economics possessions and maintained control even after a daughters marriage • Not a tyrant they were worried about child's well-being

  30. Women • Women’s role was subordinate to men • Free from father after his death • Marriage was arranged • Motherhood was the most important thing • Freeborn women were free from legal control of by father/husband/guardian after bearing three children • Women should be faithful to “one man” • Women committing adultery could be executed – drinking wine could also be punished • Most of these rules applied only to the upper-class

  31. Class Conflict • Imperialism resulted in the rich becoming richer • Small farmers who served in the army often returned home to find their farms sold for debt – they then lived impoverished in a city • The City of Rome reached 1 million by 1st century (CE) and class divisions were very great • Wealthy houses had bathrooms, were spacious and comfortable • Poor lived in unheated houses – no water – dirty –and overcrowded – typhus and fire killed many

  32. Reforms for the Poor • The Gracchi brothers Tiberius and Gaius tried to protect the interests of the plebeians. • Tiberius wanted to give lands to returning soldiers so numerous Senators and their clients clubbed him to death in 133 BCE • Despite the murder redistribution of land did take place • In 123 BCE Gaius was elected tribune and lands from the Punic wars was distributed • He also gave bread doles to the poor

  33. Social Reforms • Gaius was not sensitive to non-Italian poor • He allowed Roman knights to collect taxes from farmers in conquered areas • This allowed them to collect what they were suppose to for Rome and even more for themselves • He often auctioned off these tax collector positions • He and his fellow tribune was also assassinated in 121 BCE and 3000 of his supporters were executed • However the foundation for the end of the empire was laid (Challenge to the Senate)

  34. Dealing with class conflicts • To keep the poor content Rome began the “bread and circuses” • They gave up to 200,000 poor/former soldiers a dole of bread each day • They also provided public religious activities, theater and gladiatorial contests of great cruelty • Public arenas could hold about half of Rome’s population • Hundreds of people and up to 5000 animals could be killed in a single day • Free food and gory spectacle kept the unemployed compliant

  35. Slavery in Rome • Rome needed slaves for farming and to work mineral mines • They filled the need through conquest • Nine years of war conquering Gaul – Julius Caesar had made 500,000 Gaul's slaves • 25% of farm labor was slaves • About 400,000 of 1 million population of the city of Rome was slaves • On Roman proverb stated “Every slave we own is an enemy we harbor”

  36. Slavery • Several revolts/wars occur • Sicily “Great slave war” 70,000 slaves revolt (134-131 BCE) • Sicily again 104-100 BCE • Spartacus Revolt (Gladiator) 73-71 BCE • Many revolts occurred when a foreign army invaded

  37. End of the Republic • General Gaius Marius campaigned to become consul in 107 BC (served 7 times) • He recruited troops that did not own property and would be loyal to him • He gave soldiers land in foreign areas • Now the Armies were dependent on him and not the state • But there was another General named Sulla that also had power

  38. Civil War • Rome needed to fight King of Pontus and decides to send Sulla • Marius wants the glory and transfers the assignment to himself • Sulla gets mad and attacks Rome (83-82) • Sulla takes control of Rome and declares Marius an outlaw and then heads to Greece • Marius not to be outdone joined with another General and seizes control of Rome

  39. Civil War • Sulla-after beating the King in Greece he returns to Rome takes control and declares himself dictator – keeps control for 2 years and then steps down • Twenty years later Julius Caesar, Pompey and Crassus form a triumvirate (alliance of three) • The three competed until Caesars takes control from the other two

  40. Julius Caesar • Born about 100 BCE Caesar had been married to Cornelia, because she was the daughter of Cinna who was Sulla’s enemy • Caesar refused and fled to the Greek Islands and studied philosophy – he returns years later after he was pardoned • Elected magistrate of public games 65 BC he often spent his own money • Elected Chief Priest in 65 BCE • Elected Consul in 59 BCE • Used strong arm tactics to intimidate the Senate and the other Consul

  41. Caesar as a General • After consul (58 BCE) he would take a military force into Gaul • After nine years he has conquered all of Gaul – crossed the Rhine to threaten the Germanic tribes – invaded Britain twice • Returns to Rome rules under triumvirate – until Crassus dies • Pompey dies Pompey dies in Egypt

  42. Caesar Dies • Caesar rules alone until killed in 44 BCE • Had formed Julian Calendar • Extends citizenship • Reorganizes City Government • Caesar selected his sisters grandson to replace him – Gaius Octavian (63-14CE) • Later called Octavian • He avenged Caesars death – killed 300 Senators

  43. Octavian • To avert Civil War Octavian had his sister marry Mark Anthony • In 36 BC Anthony divorces Octavia and marries Cleopatra – but he jointly rules Egypt with her – against the law • Octavian will defeat Anthony/Cleopatra at Actium • Annexes all of Egypt and keeps treasury for himself • By 27 BCE a grateful Senate gives him the title of Augustus (Sacred or Venerable) • He will rule Rome as emperor for 56 years until he dies in 14 CE he was Princep (First Citizen) • This is the Golden Age of Rome – Art – Roads - Literature

  44. Under Augustus (Pax Romano) • Rome became more conservative • Marriage became more equal for the wives • Military became a profession • Roman Empire expands • Annexes Bavaria and Switzerland • Military took control of the government • Failed to conquer central Germany but failed • Built many outposts and cities connected by 50,000 miles of 1st class roads and 200,000 miles of lesser roads

  45. Expansion continued • 40 CE Rome conquers Wales and England and it becomes Britain • Emperor Trajan takes Romania • Hadrian consolidates the Empire – withdraws from Mesopotamia and builds a wall in Britain

  46. Economic Trade • Imperial rule and markets developed and created profit in the provinces • Romans levied taxes and tributes and recruited soldiers from conquered lands • Settled their soldiers on foreign lands • Exploited their political power on provinces • Many Romans thought the empire had lost its soul

  47. Sustaining Rome • The city required huge amounts of grain- Egypt, Sicily , North Africa and Spain • Leather-France, Pottery-Rhineland, Wool-England • To administer military/administrative cities needed – London, Paris, Barcelona etc • People of wealth wanted luxury items – required the trade routes to be secure-this was added during the PaxRomana or Roman Peace (27 BC to 180 AD)

  48. Stoicism • Philosophy borrowed from Greeks (est by Zeno) • World is rational, well ordered and coherent system • Accept without joy or sadness everything that happens

  49. Religion in Imperial Rome • Officially Rome celebrated a religion centralized on the person of emperor-god • Augustus had rebuilt temples and encouraged worship of ancestral gods-Jupiter, Juno and Minerva • Augustus was deified and animal sacrifices were made to him • For the most part as long as a person venerated the emperor and backed the state diverse religious practices were allowed

  50. Mystery Religions • Rituals of initiation that defied rational understanding-orgies, baptisms, dramtic rituals • Mithraism was one such religion- worshiped the Persian sun god Mithras as a mediator between god and man – popular with the military • Rome would not tolerate sects that challenged authority of the empire i.e. Judaism

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