Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Bibliography


Etruscans


Roman Monarchy


The Rise of the Republic


The Fall of the Republic



The Roman Empire

The Roman Empire

Dates: 31 BC to 476 AD

Government and Politics

  • 27 BC to 68 AD: Julian-Claudian Dynasty
    • Octavian/Augustus
      • Created the Praetorian Guard (bodyguards for the emperor and his family)
      • System for controlling provinces of the empire
        • Gave citizenship to the people in the provinces
      • Made a more uniform tax system
      • Encouraged religion
    • Tiberius-strict and practical with the economy
    • Caligula-used money for extravagant games and entertainment, assassinated
    • Claudius
      • Centralized the government
      • Took control of the treasury
      • Expanded the civil service
      • Proponent of public works
      • Developed Ostia as the port of Rome
      • Added Britain and other provinces to the empire
    • Nero
      • Successful army
      • Patron of the arts
      • Rebuilt the city and imperial palace when Rome was destroyed in a fire
      • Took away private estates of the Upper Class
    • Others: Gaba, Otho, Vitellius
  • 68-96 AD: Flavian Dynasty
    • Vespasian, Titus, Domitian
    • Created the Amphitheatrum Falvium (Colosseum)
    • Arch of Titus in Rome
  • 98-180 AD: The Five Good Emperors
    • Nerva-tradition of finding someone to take place after death
    • Trajan-increased power of the Senate, increased public works, expanded the empire
    • Hadrian-consolidated empires, built walls in Scotland/Rhine River to hold in barbarians
    • Antonius-just, tranquil empire
    • Aurelius-ruled well in times of barbaric uprisings
  • 3rd Century Crisis
    • Pressures of invasion, civil war, plague, economic despression
    • 20-25 people claimed the title of Empire
    • Empire split into three states
    • Diocletian split the empire into a tetrarchy, created successors
    • After this, the empire just began to crumble
Social, Cultural and Religious Trends
  • Julius Caesar was the first to claim to be a direct descendant of Aeneas, the son of Venus
  • Emperors accepted divine honors before their deaths
    • Required sacrificial rituals
  • Christians refused to worship the emperor as a god
  • Religious strife and turmoil until Constantine made Christianity an acceptable part of Roman religion
  • 392 AD-Emperor Theodosius I banned practice of pagan religions in Rome, Christianity became the official religion
Major Events and Persons
  • AD 284-Diocletian divided the Roman empire into two
  • AD 307 to AD 337-Constantine moved the capital to Constantinople, which was in the Eastern Empire and far away from the Western Empire
  • AD 410-leader of the Visigoths captured Rome, and territory in Spain, France, Africa and England fell to the tribes
  • AD 455-Rome attacked by Vandals
  • AD 476-last Roman emperor, Romulus Augustus, was removed from power
Major External Factors


  • Threats from tribes in northern Europe
  • Starting in AD 190-attacked by tribes, civil wars in the empire, respect for Roman law dwindled
    • The Goths wanted to move into the Roman empire for a better climate
  • Disease and plagues were rampant throughout the population
  • Attacked by the Huns, Germans, and other tribes



Ruins of Ancient Rome

The Fall of the Roman Republic

Dates: 130 - 30 BC

Government and Politics


  • 133 BC- Tiberius Gracchus-held Office of the Tribune
    • Proposed to distribute land to the poor
    • Did not consult Senate first, went straight to the people
    • Although land bill was passed, at the next election, he was murdered
  • 123 BC-Gaius Gracchus elected to the tribunate
    • Introduced state-subsidized corn rations
    • Murdered
  • Gaius Marius
    • Held consulship for seven times
    • Conflict with Sukka (Roman warlord)
  • 82 BC-Sulla declared himself dictator
    • Intended to give a leading politician short term powers in an emergency
    • Held position for 2 years, put 1000+ political opponents to death
  • The First Triumvirate
    • Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus (Pompey)-had the support of traditionalists (fled)
    • Crassus-killed by Romans
    • Julius Caesar-promoted radical policies, last survivor
  • 48 BC - Pompey was dead, Caesar was now the first emperor of Rome
    • Cancellation of debts, settlement of landless veteran soldiers
    • Murdered by senators
  • 31 BC - Octavian defeats Antony in a battle near Actium
Social, Cultural and Religious Trends
  • Small farmers came to Rome for employment and cultural benefits, bad living conditions
  • Thousands of slaves imported to work in artisan labor
  • 60% of urban population were slaves/had slave origins
  • Roman aristocracy-senators and wealthy knights-conspicuous consumption to demonstrate high rank
  • Knights became a powerful social group
  • Developed a slave agricultural economy in Italy and Sicily to produce wine and oil for export

Major Events and Persons
  • 136-130 BC: slave revolt seized control of Sicily
  • 105 BC: slave revolt caused chaos in Italy and Sicily
  • 72 BC-Spartacus led a large army through Italy undefeated until they met Crassus in 70 BC

Major External Factors
  • Overseas conquest-too much wealth too quickly for equitable distribution
  • Rome became an Imperial capital
  • 2nd Century BC-Spain and Lusitania rebelled constantly
  • 176 BC-Corsica and Sardinia revolted, resulted in 89,000 enslaved Sardinians
  • 88 BC-80,000 Romans, Italians, families, slave staffs massacred in Asia
First Triumvirate


The Rise of the Roman Republic

Dates: 300 - 130 BC

Government and Politics

  • 3 Branches of Government
    1. Consuls = monarchial branch
      • Two consuls
      • Held office for a year
      • Had supreme civil and military authority
      • Safeguards-1 year term period, the veto of the other consul, co-consulship
    2. Sentate = aristocratic branch
      • Advisory branch chosen by the kings and then the consuls/censors
      • 300 citizens
    3. Assembly = democratic branch
      • All members of the army
      • Elected consuls
      • Assembly of Tribes
        • Composed of all citizens
        • Decided on laws and issues of war and peace

Social, Cultural and Religious Trends

  • Class Differences
    • Patricians-upper class, noble/wealthy landowners, had luxury and leisure time
    • Plebeians-lower class (everyone in Rome except the nobility), wore shabby clothing, worked all the time, poor living conditions
    • Class distinction based on birth
    • Plebeians and Patricians could not marry initially
  • Religion
    • Public religious system-protected/enhanced the community of the Romans
    • Romans attempted to get the goodwill of the gods
    • Believed their military success was due to great cultivation of the gods
    • Relied on the correct performance of rituals in both private and public
  • Much of the culture was devised from Greek culture

Major Events and Persons

  • Punic Wars
    • Causes: both the Romans and Carthaginians wanted to control the lands and seas of the Mediterranean
    1. 264 BC-241 BC (victory to Rome, Carthage signed a peace treaty)
      • Battle of Agrigentum (Romans won on land)
      • Roman Navy beat the Carthage Navy
    2. 218 BC-201 BC (victory to Rome, Carthage Empire loses a lot of control)
      • Hannibal (Carthage) took men and elephants through the Alps, surprised the Romans
        • Battle of the Trebia
        • Battle of Lake Trasimene
        • Battle of Cannae
      • Romans cut off supplies, counter-attacked at Carthage
      • Romans beat Hannibal at the Battle of Zama
    3. 149 BC-146 BC (victory to Rome, Carthage left with no control and no military)
      • Romans beseiged Carthage, Carthage handed over weapons and prisoners
      • Unorganized Roman siege, so Carthage could make weaponry and defend walls
      • Romans destroyed the city, sold off 50,000 survivors




Major External Factors

  • Threats from abroad
  • Tarentum = Greek city-state, had a treaty with Rome
    • Denied access to Roman fleets into the Bay of Tarantum
  • Rome sent troops by sea to occupy Thurri 
    • Tarentum considered this a breach of the treaty
      • Sunk the Roman fleet, expelled the garrison
  • Rome declared war
  • Tarentum asked King Pyrrus of Epirus for assistance
  • Pyrrhus wanted to invade Italy-for expansion and the fertile soil
  • Romans deterred him by using ox-drawn wagons to distract the elephants
  • Rome attacked the elephants on their sides with spears
  • Rome was determined to be the master of the Italian Peninsula, thus beginning expansion and the Republic
Changes in Roman Territory

The Roman Monarchy

Dates: 753 BC-510 BC

1. 753 BC - 715 BC: Romulus

  • Considered the founder of Rome
  • Killed twin brother Remus for control of the city
  • Allowed exiles, refugees, homicides and runaway slaves to populate empire
  • Stole Sabine women to compensate for shortage of women
  • Created class distinctions-the 100 advisers (patres) were the forefathers of the patrician class
2. 715 BC - 674 BC: Numa Pompilus
  • Created the religious structure of Rome (became official state religion)
  • Began offices: pontifices, vestals, flamines
  • Introduced land reforms
  • Worked on the calendar-added Januarius and Februarius (now a solar calendar); days of commerce and days of religion
3. 674 BC - 642 BC: Tullius Hostilius
  • Declared war against Albans (reason: cattle raiding)
    • Pit 2 sets of 3 brothers against one another
  • Increase Roman influence in Latium
  • Plague of Rome during his reign
  • Tullius fell ill, tried to make a sacrifice to Jupiter but failed and was killed by a thunderbolt

4. 642 BC - 616 BC: Ancus Martius
  • Built the Pons Sublicius-a bridge at the foot of Aventine Hill across the Tiber River
  • Opened a trading route via Salaria
  • Built a prison
  • Established the Port of Ostia (mouth of the Tiber River)

5. 616 BC - 578 BC: Tarquinius Priscus

  • Obtained the throne by fraud
  • Introduced the culture of the Etruscans to Rome
  • Laid out the Circus Maximus, instituted games
  • Built sewers, began construction of the temple of Jupiter
  • War against the Sabines, subjugated Latium
  • Increased # of senators to 300, doubled number of knights
  • Assassinated by the sons of Ancus Martius
6. 578 BC - 534 BC: Servius Tullius

  • Victory of Veii
  • Built the Servian City Wall-enlarged the city boundaries to include all 7 hills
  • Organized assembly into centuriae
  • Replaced bartering with coinage
  • Created the first census
  • Created the caste system-assigned citizens to social classes based on wealth
7. 534 BC - 510 BC: Tarquinius Superbus
  • Haughty ruler
  • Constructed the Cloaca Maxima
  • Attempted to set up pure totalitarianism/depotism
  • Deprived lower class of arms, forced them to build (like slaves)
  • His son was guilty of the rape of Lucretia
  • End of the monarchy-died in exile
Romulus and Remus


Monday, April 15, 2013

The Etruscan Influence on Rome

Dates: Not really sure, but there is evidence from as early as 1000 BC. The civilization really began in 800 BC. They flourished from about 700 to 400 BC, when they were subordinated to the Romans.

Government and Politics

  • Essentially a theocracy
  • Met annually at the shrine of Voltumna-discussed military/political affairs
  • 12 states-somewhat divided, not obligated to provide aid to one another
  • Great seafarers, wealthy miners (iron, copper, tin, lead, silver)
  • Collapse-Rome attacked the individual cities, eventually leading to Rome closing in on them
Social, Cultural and Religious Trends
  • Spoke a non-Indo-European language
  • Education-curricula included religious laws, theology and encyclopaedic knowledge
  • Believed in continued activity by the dead after death
    • Tomb-built like a house, frescoed walls with daily life scenes or important moments of the deceased
  • Etruscan temples-house statues of Etruscan gods
  • Believed in predestination-could be postponed by praying, but inevitable
    • Somewhat predicted their own deaths
  • Believed destiny was determined by numerous gods
  • Had many gods and goddesses
Major Events and Persons
  • 539 BC-Etruscans + Carthaginians remove Greeks from Corsica
  • 535 BC-Battle of Alalia-Carthaginian navy + Etruscans defeat Greek ships off Corsica
  • 475 BC -Celts defeat Etruscans (Ticino River)
  • 400 BC-Celts enter Italy, settle in Po Valley, Etruscan power declines
  • 396 BC-Battle of Melpum-Celts defeat Etruscan army, settle all over Po Valley
  • 396 BC-Rome captures Veii from Etruscans
  • 391 BC-Senones take Clusium from Etruscans
  • 298-290 BC-3rd Samnite War-Rome wins, peace with Etruscans
  • 283 BC-Romans defeat Etruscans AND Celts (Lake Vadimonis)
  • 225 BC-Celts defeat Romans at Faesulae, overrun Etruria
Major External Factors
  • Engaged in a series of wars with Rome
  • Alliance with Carthage against Greece
  • Dominated the sea
  • Traded copper and iron 
Etruscan Temple

Etruscan Mural

Etruscan Territory