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Roman Civilization

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Page 1: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Civilization

Page 2: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Life in Ancient Rome

Page 3: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Culture

• Greek statues, buildings, and ideas• difference

Page 4: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

What was Roman Art Like?

• Greek style statues• Greek style porches and rows of columns

– Adding arches and domes• Roman firsts

– Make full use of the arch– concrete

• Colosseum• Parthenon

Page 5: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Aqueducts and buildings

Page 6: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Literature

• Based mostly on Greek writings• Virgil• Horace • Ovid• Catullus• Seneca • Plautus and Terence

Page 7: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 8: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Science and Engineering

• Galen• Ptolemy• Roads• Aqueducts

Page 9: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 10: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Volcanic ash , lime, and water

Page 11: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Daily Life in Rome

• Rome – 1 of largest cities in world• Forum• Wealthy – houses• Poor – apartment

buildings• Bread and circuses

Page 12: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

How was the Forum important to the ancient Romans?

Page 13: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 14: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

List some pros and cons of holding sports figures up as

heroes and the responsibilities that

major sports figures have to the public.

Page 15: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 16: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

What was Family Life like?

• Large families• Father – head

– paterfamilias• Becoming a man

Page 17: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 18: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 19: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 20: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Women in Rome• Some rights• Not full citizens• Freedoms• Couldn’t sit with men• Empress Livia

Page 21: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Treatment of Enslaved People

• Grew with conquered lands• 40% by 100 B.C.• Jobs• Greeks• Life• Revolt• Spartacus

Page 22: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Religion

• Gods and goddesses• Roman emperors• Altars • Philosophy

Page 23: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 24: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 25: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Review

1. What were some of Ptolemy’s scientific achievements?

2. How were the Roman and Greek religions similar?

3. Explain the importance of the language of the Romans.

4. Describe the education of Roman children.

Page 26: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Greek Art Roman Art

Greek Architecture Roman Architecture

Page 27: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Greek Art Roman Art

Sculptors tried to show an ideal image.

Sculptors made realistic statues.

Greek Architecture Roman Architecture

Used porches and colonnadesBorrowed Greek styles; used the arch, vault, dome, and concrete

Page 28: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

The Fall of Rome

Page 29: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

The Decline of Rome

• Marcus Aurelius• Commodus• Severans

Page 30: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 31: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Political and Social Problems

• 22 different emperors• Corruption• Talented people

refused to serve in gov’t

• Fewer – honoring the old ideals

of duty, courage, and honesty.

– Attending schools

• Large # enslaved

Page 32: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 33: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Economic and Military Problems

• Grew less crops• Businesses closed• Leave jobs and serve

in army• Plague• Inflation

• Law and order broke down

• Roman soldiers and invaders seized crops and destroyed fields.

Page 34: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 35: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Inflation

• Less gold in coins• Make extra coins• Pay for more things• People find out.• Barter

Page 36: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Write a journal entry describing life in a Roman city during the 200s A.D.

(React to at least one of the political, social, economic, and military problems that

led to disorder and decline.)

Page 37: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

How do the social, economic, and political

problems of Ancient Rome compare to the current problems in the USA?

Page 38: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Invasion

• Germanic tribes – W• Persian – E• Couldn’t enlist and pay Roman soldiers• Used Germanic warriors – not loyal

Page 39: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Diocletian’s Reforms

• AD 284 – emperor• Reforms• Divided empire into 4 parts• Set prices of goods• Workers

Page 40: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Constantine

• Emperor – AD 312• Orders• Byzantium• Hippodrome• Constantinople

Page 41: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Empire after Constantine• Theodosius• Western and Eastern Roman Empire

Page 42: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Invasion of Rome

• Germanic groups• Huns• Visigoths• Battle of Adrianople

Page 43: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 44: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 45: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 46: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Visigoths invading RomeWhat leader did the Visigoths overthrow to take control of Rome?

Page 47: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

More Germanic tribes

• Rhine River froze• Alaric• Rome’s capture• Vandals• Vandalism

Page 48: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

The fall of Rome

• Odoacer• Romulus Augustulus• Theodoric• Western Roman Empire fades• Byzantine Empire

Page 49: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

The Legacy of Rome

• Language• Ideas about gov’t• USA system of laws• Buildings• Peace and order allowed Christian religion

to spread.

Page 50: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 51: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Ideas and Government Today

• 1st written laws (Twelve Tables)• All people are equal under the law.• Judges decide fairly.• Innocent till proven guilty• Republic made of equal citizens is best

form of gov’t.• Republic works best if citizens do their

duty, participate in gov’t, and work to make their society even better.

Page 52: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

First Twenty Roman Numerals

I = 1

II = 2

III = 3

IV = 4

V = 5

VI = 6

VII = 7

VIII = 8

IX = 9

X = 10

XI = 11

XII = 12

XIII = 13

XIV = 14

XV = 15

XVI = 16

XVII = 17

XVIII = 18

XIX = 19

XX = 20

Page 53: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Numerals by 10’s

X = 10

XX = 20

XXX = 30

XL = 40

L = 50

•LX = 60

•LXX = 70

•LXXX = 80

•XC = 90

•C = 100

Page 54: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Numerals by 100’s

C = 100

CC = 200

CCC = 300

CD = 400

C = 500

•DC = 600

•DCC = 700

•DCCC = 800

•CM = 900

•M = 1,000

Page 55: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

“My Dear Cousin Loves eXtra Vitamins”:

Roman

Numeral:Translated:

My M 1,000

Dear D 500

Cousin C 100

Loves L 50

eXtra X 10

Vitamins V 5

Page 56: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Tricky Numbers

You would think that the Roman Numeral for 4 would be IIII.

But, it is IV.

When a smaller number is in front of a larger number such as IV you subtract only those numbers.

I-V=

5-1=

4

Page 57: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Tricky Numbers

IX=

10-1=

9

XIX=

10+10-

1=

19

XLIV=

50-10+5-

1=

44

XCIX=

100-10+10-

1

99

Page 58: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Translating

What is the Roman numeral translation for CMIV?

For this you have to add the numbers.

CM+IV=

900+4=

904

Page 59: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Translating

What is the translation for MCDLXXX?

First break apart and add.

M+CD+LXXX=

1000+400+80=

1480

Page 60: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Question:

What is the translation for CLIV?A. 1515

B. 154

C. 2525

D. 254

Page 61: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Question:

What is the translation for CDXX?A. 1520

B. 150

C. 520

D. 420

Page 62: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Influence on Culture• Latin alphabet• Latin phrases used by doctors, scientists,

and lawyers.• Literature: Virgil, Horace, Livy, and Tactius• Buildings• Concrete• Architectural styles

Page 63: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Christianity

• 1 of major religions in the world• Adopted Christianity in 300s• Helped it grow and spread

Page 64: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Review

1. What social problems helped cause the empire’s decline?

2. Why did the Roman government use Germanic warriors in its army?

3. How did inflation affect Rome?

4. Who were the Visigoths, and how did they contribute to the fall of the empire?

5. Give examples of Roman ideas in language and architecture that exist today.

Page 65: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Write a paragraph discussing whether or not you agree with the following statement: The United

States owes more to Roman culture than to any other

civilization that has ever existed. (Support your answer with reasons and evidence

from the text, power point, or discussion.)

Page 66: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Legacies

Page 67: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Roman Legacies

Rule of law

Christianity

Roman architectural

styles

languages

Page 68: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

The Byzantine Empire

Page 69: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Rise of the Byzantines

• Byzantine or Eastern Roman Empire• 500s – high point• Italy – west• Egypt – south• Arabia – east

Page 70: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Importance of Constantinople

• Capital of Byzantine Empire• 1 of world’s greatest cities• Location• Trade routes

Page 71: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 72: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Influence of Greek Culture

• 1st followed Roman ways• “New Rome”• Honored Greek past• Egyptians and Slavs• Persians• 500 – 1200 AD = 1 of the world’s richest

and most advanced empires

Page 73: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

1. Located in eastern Mediterranean only

2. Spain, North Africa

Page 74: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Emperor Justinian

• 527 A.D. – 565 A.D.• Policies made empire

strong• Strong leader• Controlled military,

made laws, and was supreme judge

• Theodora

Page 75: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 76: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Read the following information and write at least five things you might

reflect on as you read this information.

In A.D. 532 Theodora helped save Justinian’s throne. Angry taxpayers threatened to

overthrow Justinian and stormed the palace. Justinian’s advisers urged him to leave

Constantinople. Theodora, however, told him to stay and fight. Justinian took Theodora’s

advice. He stayed in the city and crushed the uprising.

Page 77: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Justinian’s Conquests

• General Belisarius

• Controlled most of Italy, northern Africa, and Persia

Page 78: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Justinian’s Law Code

• Tribonian• Justinian Code

Page 79: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Byzantine Civilization• Lasted 1,000 years• Constantinople –

largest/richest city in

Europe• Highly educated and

creative• Gave a new methods

in arts• Spread Christianity

to people in Eastern Europe

Page 80: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Importance of Trade

• Center of trade between Europe and Asia• Asia – spices, gems, metals, and cloth• Merchants – furs, farm goods, honey, and

enslaved people• Very Rich

Page 81: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Byzantine Art and Architecture

• Hagia Sophia• Mosaics

Page 82: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 83: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference
Page 84: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Byzantine Women

• Family – center of social life• Importance of marriage and family• Divorces• Regent

Page 85: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Byzantine Education

• Learning – highly respected• Gov’t supported • Boys• Tutors• Girls • Authors

Page 86: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Review1. What is a mosaic, and where were mosaics

found in the Byzantine Empire?

2. How did silk weaving develop in the Byzantine Empire?

3. What were some of the trade items that were exchanged between merchants in Constantinople?

4. Why were divorces difficult to get in the Byzantine Empire?

5. What important service did Byzantine writers provide to the rest of the world?

Page 87: Roman Civilization. Life in Ancient Rome Roman Culture Greek statues, buildings, and ideas difference

Which civilization do you think was the most

advanced --- that of the Greeks, the Romans, or the

Byzantines? Why?