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Rome and Han China 753 B.C.E.-600 C.E

Rome and Han China 753 B.C.E.-600 C.E. Eliza, Keyasa, Ashley and Jordan. The Roman Empire included all lands surrounding. Mediterranean Sea as well as portions of Continental Europe and Middle East. The Han Empire included the Pacific Ocean to Central Asia.

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Rome and Han China 753 B.C.E.-600 C.E

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  1. Rome and Han China753 B.C.E.-600 C.E Eliza, Keyasa, Ashley and Jordan

  2. The Roman Empire included all lands surrounding. Mediterranean Sea as well as portions of Continental Europe and Middle East. The Han Empire included the Pacific Ocean to Central Asia. These were the largest Empires the world had ever. Still centralized location better than earlier empires. Neither empire influenced each other. Roman and Han Empires

  3. Roman Empire Land and Resources • Hills and Mountains • Apennine Range runs length like spine separating western and western coastal plains • Etruria was rich in iron and other metals • Hills provided timber and fuel • Coastal plains and river valleys had fertile volcanic soil and sustained a much larger population than was possible in Greece. • Tiber River

  4. Roman Empire Social Economic • Land was a basis of wealth, social status and political privileges. • Women were under jurisdiction of men. First under their father, then her husband and his family. • Plebians: hardworking class (majority of population). • The merging of several hilltop communities to later become Roman Forum. (Civic center 600 B.C.E.). Roman Forum then Roman Forum now

  5. Roman Empire Interaction • Traded on the Silk Road with the Chinese • Depended on Egypt and Sicily for grains • Prisoners of war were slaves • Economy depended on trade and slave labor

  6. Roman Empire Politics • Council of Elders: head of wealthy families made up senatorial class • Roman Senate: officials elected annually by free males • Patron/Client Relationship • Tribunes: elected by the lower class; had veto power in patricians (elite, wealthy, landowners) decisions

  7. Fall of Roman Republic • The Fall of the Republic was more than a single man or event. • It was a culmination of several individual actions or achievements, coupled with social conditions that weighed heavily on Roman society. • Massive and rapid expansion from Rome's foundation created monumental holes in the political and governing ability of the Senate. • Periods of stability were mixed in with those of near collapse. • Beginning with the Punic Wars and Roman conquest outside of Italy, followed by massive importation of slaves, the face of Roman life was changing far more rapidly than the governing body could deal with.

  8. The Roman Principate31 B.C.E. to 330 C.E. • Period after the fall of Roman Republic • Founded by Augustus • Augustus: 23 September 63 BC – 19 August AD 14) is considered the first emperor of the Roman Empire, which he ruled alone from 27 BC until his death in 14 AD

  9. The Roman Principate Social Economic • Equites: class of well-to-do merchants and land owners that become the new core of the Roman Empire • Pax Romana, or Roman Peace, was intended for the spreading of Romanization (spread of Latin language and Roman way of life)

  10. Politics Emperors were chosen by the senate Technology Aqueducts Architecture Concrete Religion Worshipped emperors rather than gods Third Century Crisis Political and economic problems with the empire Diocletian imposed radical changes that helped Roman get out of the crisis. Rise of Christianity Jesus Although his message was proving popular, the claim of his disciples that Jesus was the son of God offended many people. What’s more, his ideas were revolutionary and threatened to undermine thousands of years of social tradition. The Roman Principate Aqueduct

  11. Christian patriarch (Constantine and his mother studded the city with churches) In 324 B.C.E. Constantine transferred the capital from Rome to Byzantium, which was renamed Constantinople. The name Byzantine was derived from Constantinople’s original name. The Byzantine Empire

  12. The Byzantine Empire was the name of the eastern portion of the Roman Empire Strategic geographical significance between the Black Sea and The Mediterranean Sea Most of the trade was done between Asia, Europe and North Africa, passed through the empire which made it wealthy. Diocletian split the Empire into two, creating Eastern and Western He believed the republic was too large to govern, so it was put under different rulers Western was Catholic and Eastern was Eastern Orthodox The split persevered Roman and Greek cultures and also helped interact with the rest of the world Justinian ruled the Byzantine Empire The Byzantine Empire: Split Empire

  13. The Byzantine Empire: Collapse • The Empire collapsed because of the invasion of the Ottomans • Following a number of civil disputes in the Byzantine Empire, the Ottomans subjugated the Byzantines as vassals in attempts to relieve this vassal status culminated in the Fall of Constantinople.

  14. Imperial China: The Qin Empire221 B.C.E.-206 B.C.E. • In the second half of the third century, the Qin conquered its rivals and created China’s first empire. • The Qin were one of the warring states in China • Well known for the Terracotta Army

  15. The Qin Empire • Shi Huangdi was the founder of the Qin Empire • The Qin were a warring state that conquered its rivals and became China’s first Empire • Ruled in a Legalist way and were determined to eliminate rival centers or authority • Financial exploitation demanded forced labor • When Shi Huangdi died, a series of rebellions broke out, but the dynasty was finally brought down • Abolished slavery Shi Huangdi

  16. The Qin Empire • Built thousands of miles of roads and canals • Imposed standard weight, measure, money, uniform law, and a common written language Qin Shi Huang

  17. The Han Empire206 B.C.E. to 220 B.C.E. • Chang’an was China’s first capital city • It was an ancient power from which the Zhou and Qin dynasties emerged from-Western Han Capital

  18. The Han Empire • Gentry: educated men with valued expertise who served as local officials and made the governement more efficient • The father was the authority figure in the household • Common people lived in alleys • The Elite had multistory houses, fine silks, horse drawn carriages and leisure time

  19. Politics Mandate of Heaven Emperor was the link between family and ancestors and had many wives Central government run by prime ministers Civil service director Nine ministers taking on military, legal, economic and religious responsibilities Religion Emperor had divinity Rituals emphasizing the worship of Heaven Environment Ring of hills Fertile plain Technology Military expansion Elegant banquets and entertainment Interaction Silk was a major export The Han Empire

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