The Roman Republic

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The Roman Republic

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The Roman Republic. Today’s Goal. Describe the origins, development, and characteristics of the Roman Republic . LIVY, The Early History of Rome. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Roman Republic

Page 1: The Roman Republic

The Roman Republic

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Today’s Goal• Describe the origins,

development, and characteristics of the Roman Republic

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LIVY, The Early History of Rome

“Not without reason did gods and men choose this spot for the site of our city – the [salubrious] hills, the river to bring us produce from the inland regions and sea-borne commerce from abroad, the sea itself, near enough for convenience yet not so near as to bring danger from foreign fleets, our situation in the very heart of Italy – all these advantages make it of all places in the world the best for a city destined to grow great."

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Geography & Location• Central peninsula

of Mediterranean Sea– Island of Sicily

• Fertile land!• Tiber River

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Legendary Origins• Romulus & Remus

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Legendary Origins• Told in Virgil’s Aeneid– Links the founding of Rome to the Trojan

warrior Aeneas who flees from a burning Troy

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Historical Origins of Rome• Latins – Palatine Hill

• Greeks–Mythology–Writing

• Etruscans–Metalwork– Sculpture– Road building– Arch

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Examples of Etruscan art

Note the Greek alphabet

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Romans borrowedEtruscan buildingtechniques.

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The Last Monarch• King Tarquinius Superbus =

Tarquin the Proud• Tyrant driven from

power• res republica

(“public affairs”) Republic

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Conflict of the Orders• Senatus Populusque Romanus =

“Senate and the Roman People”• Patricians

- Wealthy landowners- Most power

• Plebeians- Commoners- Most of population

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Conflict of the Orders• Tribunes = elected to

protect rights of plebeians• Twelve Tables

written law code• Citizenship = all adult

male landowners

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Twelve Tables (excerpts)• If a thief was a freeman, he was flogged & handed to

person from whom he stole to repay the damage• If a thief were a slave, flogged then thrown to his

death off the Tarpeian Rock (cliff)• No burials or cremations within city walls• Maintenance of roads was responsibility of property

owner• Marriage between plebeians and patricians no longer

forbidden• Permitted to remove branch from neighbor’s tree if

overhung into one’s property• Theft of crops was death penalty by clubbing• For slander there was death penalty by clubbing• Levels of punishment varied by status of person• Laws distinguished between intentional and

accidental killing• Father had right to kill his deformed child

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Roman Forum

Public meeting place and the heart of Roman political life

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Two Consuls

Commanded Army

Limited power

Veto each other

1 year term

(once/10 years)

Gov’t of Roman

Republic

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Gov’t of Roman

Republic

Senate (Curiae)

– 300

members

Foreign,

financial

policies

Elected for life

Advises consuls

Patricians &

plebeians

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Gov’t of Roman

Republic Centuriate

Assembly

– both patricians

& plebeians

Citizen-soldiers elected for life

Selects consuls, makes laws

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Gov’t of Roman

Republic

Tribal Assem

bly Elects tribune

s, makes laws

Citizens

elected yearly

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Gov’t of Roman

RepublicDictator – Elected in times of crisis

Absolute

power to

make laws

Command Army Chosen

by consuls

for 6 mo. term

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Magistrates• 8 praetors – judges • 2 censors – census of citizens,

tax assessments• 4 aediles - supervised public

places, public games, and the grain supply

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Appian Way

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Rome’s Balanced Government

Consuls = a monarchy +Assemblies = a democracy +Senate = an aristocracy = Rome’s balanced government

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Roman Army• All land-owning citizens required to

serve • Legions = large military units of ~6,000

infantry- Supported by cavalry (equites)

• Centuries = smaller units of 100 infantry – 60 centuries make up a legion

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Typical Formation of Legions

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Family Life in the Roman Republic• Pater familias – led religious ceremonies,

total life and death authority• Women had no legal protection• Children obeyed authority• Slaves were treated well

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Life in Roman Republic• The Roman villa– Countryside– Hypocaust (“heat from below”)– Atriums, garden– Al fresco dining

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• The uncomfortable toga.• Easy to make – no sewing – no

buttonholes• Large wool blanket 18 X 7 ft.• Symbol of Roman citizenship• Young boy wore a white toga with

a purple band around the border• Age 16 a boy and his family would

go to the forum where he would register as a full citizen and wear a white toga

• The toga was worn at the theater, in court, for religious ceremonies, and on any formal occasion

• At death, his body is wrapped in a toga, marking him as a Roman citizen

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Rome Gains Control of Italy

• Romans defeat Etruscans & Latins• Samnite Wars – gained central Italy• Romans vs. Greeks

- Pyrrhus (king of Epirus) – “Pyrrhic victory”- Rome defeats Greeks

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Treatment of Conquered Territory

• Nearby Latins = full citizens of Rome• Farther territories = rights of citizenship except

the vote• Allies of Rome = freedom to go about their

business, BUT supplied troops, could not make treaties

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Punic Wars - Rome v. Carthage, 264-146 BC

• 1st Punic War – Rome beats Carthage, gains Sicily• 2nd Punic War – Hannibal of Carthage marches

through Spain, Alps to attack Rome – Would Roman allies

defect? NO• 3rd Punic War – Roman

general Scipio – Hannibal defeated in

N. Africa– Carthage burned

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The Corvus (Latin for “raven” or “crow”)

• Crane/plank on a Roman ship that turned naval battle into a land battle

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Rome dominates Mediterranean by 70 BC

• East – conquered Macedonia, Greece, & Anatolia

• West – as far as Spain• Republic dominates the . . . “known

world”