from village to empire. legend abandoned on the tiber river and raised by a she- wolf, the twin sons...
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From Village to Empire
LegendAbandoned on the Tiber River and raised by a She-
Wolf, the twin sons of the god Mars and a Latin princess decide to build a city near this spot.
Developed because of strategic location
Fertile soil important to the agriculture
Built among seven hills along a bend in the Tiber River
The Seven Hills of Rome east of the Tiber form the heart of Rome. The Seven Hills of early Rome – the Cermalus, Cispius, Fagutal, Oppius, Palatium, Sucusa and Velia – figured prominently in Roman mythology, religion, and politics. The original city was held by tradition to have been founded by Romulus on the Palatine Hill. The other six are now the Aventine, the Capitoline , the Quirinal , the Viminal , the Esquiline and the Caelian.
The hills of Rome were of great strategic importance because of their height and position. They have gradually been cut away and built over although they are still evident to the expert eye.
Midway between the Alps and Italy’s southern tip
Located midpoint in the Mediterranean Sea
“Not without reason did gods and men choose this spot for the site of our city…the riverbrings us produce from the inland regions and sea-borne commerce from abroad, the seaItself, 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” – LIVY, The Early History Of Rome
Three groups inhabited the region and battle for control: Latins Greeks Etruscans
Skilled metal workers and engineers
System of writing Architecture
• Greeks settle between 750 and 600 B.C
• Settle along southern coast and Sicily
• Develop prosperous and commercial activity
• Teach Romans to grow olives and grapes
• Romans borrow religious ideas
The Early Romans accept an Etruscan monarchy
Under this leadership Rome grows from swamp village to a major city
Tarquin the Proud is the last king of Rome
Tarquin the Proud was a harsh tyrant
Driven from Rome in 509 B.C. by wealthy landowners who resented his heritage
Romans declare they will never be ruled by a king again
• The Latin term res publica (from which comes the word “republic”) is usually translated as “state” or “commonwealth”.
• At no time was Rome a democracy (that is, rule by the people) in the Greek, or true, sense. Its society was rigidly divided by legal status (free or enslaved) and by class.
• Free men or women were further classified, for example, according to whether they were so by birth or by release from slavery, were Roman citizens or Latins, or were independent or answerable to a guardian or other person in authority.
PATRICIANS PLEBIANS
WOMEN SLAVES
Women could not partake in government decisions, office or voting
Slaves made up 1/3 of population
Slave mostly war captives who were soley owned by citizens and had no rights
PATRICIANS VS. PLEBIANS
• Patricians inherited their power and social status
• Ancestry gave patricians authority
• Plebeians were citizens w/ rights to vote
• Barred from holding office
• Tribunes were finally developed to protect the rights of plebeians from unfair patricians
•Rome claim a balanced government•Consuls (leaders) were limited in power•Limited terms•Senate represented Aristocrats of society•Senators were in office for life (continuity)•Major influence•Centuriate / Tribune Assemblies•Tribal Assembly represented the Plebeians and made laws for the common people•In times of crisis, a Dictator assumed absolute power for six months
•A plebeian named Terentilius proposed in 462 BC that an official legal code should be published, so that plebeians could not be surprised and would know the law.
•Like most other early codes of law, they combine strict and rigorous penalties with equally strict and rigorous procedural forms.
Senatus Populusque Romanus
All citizens required to serve in the army – Citizen Soldier
Military units = Legions (5,000)
Legions divided into smaller groups of 80 = Century
Organization/fighting skills were key to Rome’s rise to greatness
Daily training: swimming, running, jumping, fencing and javelin throwing
To secure public office, ten years of service was required
Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus (519 BC) was an ancient Roman political figure, serving as consul in 460 BC and Roman dictator in 458 BC and 439 BC
Cincinnatus was regarded by the Romans as one of the heroes of early Rome and as a model of Roman virtue and simplicity
After defeating Rome’s enemies, Cincinnatus resigns his office and goes back to being a farmer
Fight to control Italian penninsula
Conquer the Etruscans, the Latins and the Greek City-States in the south
Good diplomacy with those conquered – Citizenship and rights
Good location = Good Trade Built infrastructure to
support trade War with Carthage: The
Punic Wars
The main cause of the Punic Wars was the clash of interests between the existing Carthaginian Empire and the expanding Roman Republic.
The Romans were initially interested in expansion via Sicily
At the start of the first Punic War, Carthage was the dominant power of the Western Mediterranean
By the end of the third war, after more than a hundred years and the deaths of many hundreds of thousands of soldiers from both sides, Rome had conquered Carthage's empire and razed the city, becoming the most powerful state of the Western Mediterranean.
Hannibal was a master strategist who knew that the Roman cavalry was, as a rule, weak and vulnerable. He therefore enlisted superior cavalry into his armies, with devastating effect on the Roman legions.
Hannibal surprised the Romans in 218 BC by directly invading Italy after traversing the alps with, most famously, two dozen African war elephants
Although Hannibal surprised the Romans and thoroughly beat them on the battlefields of Italy, he could not invade the crucial city of Rome itself, thus making him unable to draw the war to a decisive close.
Rome’s victories in the Punic Wars give it dominance in the Mediterranean world
Rome conquers the eastern half
Rome’s empire expands from Spain and Britain to Asia Minor
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