Chapter 6 - Ancient Rome and Early Christianity
apostle
12 men taught directly by Jesus. First called disciples and later called apostles
Twelve Tables
A group of ten officials began writing down Rome's laws. The laws were carved tablets and hung in the Forum. They became the basis for later Roman law and established the idea that all free citizens had a right to the protection of the law.
TIBERIUS GRACCHUS quoted in Plutarch, The Lives of Noble Greeks and Romans
After warriors return from battle, they have nothing left of their former lives, so are forced to live on the streets.
What aspects of Roman Culture influenced future civilizations?
Architecture, government, language, laws, literature, philosophy
Augustus lifestyle
Augustus was the most powerful ruler of the mightiest empire of the ancient world. Yet, amid the pomp of Rome, he lived a simple and frugal life. His home was modest by Roman standards. His favorite meal was the usual food of a common laborer. Augustus was also a very religious and family-oriented man. He held to a strict moral code. He had his only child, Julia, exiled from Rome for not being faithful in her marriage.
Caligula
Bad Emperor • 37-41 • Mentally disturbed
Nero
Bad Emperor • 54-68 • Good administrator but vicious • Murdered many • Persecuted Christians
Domitian
Bad Emperor • 81-96 • Ruled dictatorially • Feared treason everywhere and executed many
Hannibal
Carthaginian General who was the mastermind behind the second Punic War with Rome. Cannae was greatest victory.
The Jewish Diaspora
Centuries of Jewish exile followed the destruction of their temple and the fall of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. This period is called the Diaspora, from the Greek word for "dispersal." Jews fled to many parts of the world, including Europe. In the 1100s, many European Jews were expelled from their homes. Some moved to Turkey, Palestine, and Syria. Others went to Poland and neighboring areas. The statelessness of the Jews did not end until the creation of Israel in 1948.
Name the three parts of government under the Roman Republic
Consul, Senate, Tribune
Constantine
Emperor of Rome who adopted the Christian faith and stopped the persecution of Christians (280-337).
How did Rome treat different sections of its conquered territories?
Gave them all rights except for voting rights
Hadrian
Good Emperor • 117-138 • Consolidated earlier conquests • Reorganized the bureaucracy
Antoninus Pius
Good Emperor • 138-161 • Reign largely a period of peace and prosperity
Marcus Aurelias
Good Emperor • 161-180 • Brought empire to height of economic prosperity • Defeated invaders • Wrote philosophy
Nerva
Good Emperor • 96-98 • Began custom of adopting heir
Trajan
Good Emperor • 98-117 • Empire reached its greatest extent • Undertook vast building program • Enlarged social welfare
How did Augustus change the Roman government?
He set up civil services
Alaric
In 408, this King led the Visigoths across the Alps to Rome, they stormed and plundered it
Julius Caesar's death
In 44 B.C., on March 15, Caesar prepared to go to speak to the Senate, unaware that important senators plotted his death. When Caesar arrived at the Senate chamber, he sat in his chair. Soon the plotters encircled him, took knives hidden in their togas, and stabbed him 23 times. They were led by Gaius Cassius and Caesar's friend Marcus Brutus. Caesar's last words were "You, too, Brutus?"
heresy
In Christianity, disagreements about beliefs which appeared to contradict the teachings
Immediate Cause of Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Invasion by Germanic tribes and by Huns
How did Rome's population fare during the golden age of Pax Romana?
It flourished
Pompeii
Mt. Vesuvius erupted in AD 79, killing about 2,000. Best example of frescoes, large, bright murals found here
Augustus
Octavian was his given name. He was Caesar's grand nephew and adopted son. Ruled with Mark Antony and Lepidus until rivalries developed. Fought against Antony and Cleopatra. Became the unchallenged ruler of Rome and changed his name to this
Peter
Peter, leader of the apostles, who helped spread Jesus' teachings over Palestine and Syria
Scipio
Roman general who attacked Carthage.
LIVY, The Early History of Rome
The placement of Rome was perfect because of the different geographical factors around.
St. Jerome
This early Church leader did not live to see the empire's end, but he vividly describes his feelings after a major event in Rome's decline—the attack and plunder of the city by Visigoths in 410.
Luke
This quote from Jesus explains in depth "Do for others just what you want them to do for you."
The First Romans
Three groups inhabited the region and eventually battled for control. They were the Latins, the Greeks, and the Etruscans. The Latins built the original settlement at Rome, a cluster of wooden huts atop one of its seven hills.
Gladiator Games
Thumbs up or thumbs down—that is how a match often ended for a gladiator When one of the combatants fell, the organizer of the games usually determined his fate. A thumbs up sign from him meant that the fighter would live. Thumbs down meant his death. The crowd usually played a key role in these life-and-death decisions. If the masses liked the fallen gladiator, he most likely would live to fight another day. If not, he was doomed.
TACITUS, Annals
Torquatus Silanus was able to obtain followers by bribing them with gifts. When Nero found out, he captured all of Silanus' friends, so that when Torquatus saw, he slit his wrists to kill himself. When asked by the public, Nero said that he would have shown Torquatus to be innocent out of merciful feelings, as a dictator would do to please his people.
How did the apostle Paul encourage the spread of Christianity?
Travel and taught and he wrote influential letters, called Epistles, to groups of believers. In his teaching, he stressed that Jesus was the son of God who died for people's sins. He also declared that Christianity should welcome all converts, Jew or Gentile (non-Jew).
Constantinople
When Byzantium became capital instead of Rome, massive walls protected it. It was filled with imperial buildings and renamed this
Hannibal
When he was only a boy of nine, his father, Hamilcar Barca, a general in Carthage's army, made him swear that he would always hate Rome and seek to destroy it. After his defeat at the battle of Zama and Carthage's loss in the Second Punic War, he took refuge among Rome's enemies. He fought against Roman forces as an ally of the kings of Syria and Bithynia. When Roman agents came for him in Bithynia on the Black Sea in Anatolia in 183 B.C., he committed suicide rather than submit to Rome.
What were Diocletian's motives?
While Diocletian shared authority, he kept overall control. He took the eastern half for himself and appointed a co-ruler for the West. His half of the empire, the East, included most of the empire's great cities and trade centers and was far wealthier than the West.
What do you think of Diocletian's decision to divide the empire in two parts? Was it wise?
Yes. The empire had grown too large and too complex for one ruler.
Tacitus
a Roman historian who is known for presenting the facts accurately. He was concerned about the Roman's lack of morality
civil war
a conflict between two political groups within the same country
republic
a form of government in which power is in the hands of representatives and leaders are elected by the people
legion
a military unit of the ancient Roman army, made up of about 5,000 foot soldiers and a group of soldiers on horseback
Pax Romana
a period of peace and prosperity throughout the Roman Empire lasting from 27 BC to AD 180
AUGUSTINE, The City of God
a quote by St. Augustine stating that the people who live by man's standards will go to hell but the people who live by God's will live forever with God.
bishop
also a priest, supervised several local churches. designation arose as church developed a governing structure
Paul
apostle Paul, not one of the original 12, had enormous influence on Christianity's development. Named Saul and persecuted the Jews until his road to Damascus incident
mosaic
art consisting of a design made of small pieces of colored stone or glass
Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus
attempted to help Rome's poor and proposed such reforms as limiting the size of estates and giving land to the poor. The brothers made enemies of numerous senators, who felt threatened by their ideas. Both met violent deaths
Diocletian 284 AD
became emperor who restored order to Rome and increased its strength. Governed as an absolute ruler and limited personal freedoms. Also created a tetrarchy in which there were 2 main leaders and 2 co-rulers.
Jesus
both Jew and a Roman citizen. born around 6 to 4 BC Many believed he was the long awaited Messiah. taught apostles. town to town ministry ignoring wealth and status. Crucified
Attila
chieftain who united the Huns. With 100,000 soldiers, he terrorized the kingdom
circ-
circle, around - circumference, circumnavigate, circus
Why did so much Roman culture have a Greek flavor?
conquered greece and had a great respect for Greek philosophy, architecture, and literature
aqueduct
designed by Roman engineers to bring water into cities and towns
What type of person do you think became a martyr?
devout true-believers
Diaspora
dispersal of Jews from their homeland
inflation
drastic drop in the value of money coupled with a rise in prices
Julius Caesar
elected as consul in 60 BC to rule Rome. Served in a triumvirate with wealthy Crassus and popular general Pompey. Appointed self governor of Gaul. In military served along soldiers and endured their hardships. Governed as an absolute ruler. Assassinated by the Senate
patr-
father - patriarch, patrician, patriotic
pope
father or head of the Christian church
mercenary
foreign soldiers who fought for money
What was the most significant reform the emperor Diocletian made?
he divided the empire into the Greek- speaking East (Greece, Anatolia, Syria, and Egypt) and the Latin-speaking West (Italy, Gaul, Britain, and Spain)
capt-, capit-
head - capital, captain, caption, decapitate
patrician
in ancient Rome, a member of the wealthy, privileged upper class
dictator
in ancient Rome, a political leader given absolute power to make laws and command the army for a limited time
tribune
in ancient Rome, an official elected by the plebeians to protect their rights
plebeian
in ancient Rome, one of the common farmers, artisans and merchants who made up most of the population
gladiator
in ancient Rome, one of the professional fighters who engaged in battles to the death in public arenas
senate
in ancient Rome, the supreme governing body, originally made up only of aristocrats
triumvirate
in ancient Rome, three leaders sharing control of the government
consul
in the Roman republic, one of the two powerful officials elected each year to command the army and direct the government
Greco-Roman culture
mixing of elements of Greek, Hellenistic and Roman culture
cent-
one hundred - centipede, centurion, centimeter
gen-
origin, birth - generate, generation, gene
What were the results of Diocletian's decision?
plans for orderly succession failed. Civil war broke out immediately.
Virgil
poet who spent ten years writing the most famous work of Latin literature, the Aeneid, the epic of the legendary Aeneas. which praised Rome and its virtues. It was modeled after the Greek epics of Homer
dict-
say, speak - dictionary, dictator, dictation
Why did the Western Roman Empire fall?
social disorder; inflation; invasions; disloyalty to Rome; lack of patriotism; population decrease; attacks from the huns
Stoicism
the philosophy of the Greek teacher Zeno, was especially influential and encouraged virtue, duty, moderation, and endurance.
Why did the Roman Empire persecute Christians?
they refused to worship Roman gods. This refusal was seen as opposition to Roman rule. Some Roman rulers also used Christians as scapegoats for political and economic troubles.t.
spec-, spic-
to see, to look - inspect, respect, spectacle
Romulus and Remus
two twins who according to legend founded the city of Rome in 753 BC. According to legend, they were twin sons of the god Mars and a Latin princess. The twins were abandoned on the Tiber River as infants and raised by a she-wolf. The twins then decided to build a city near the spot.
Rome's Geography Rome
was built on seven rolling hills at a curve on the Tiber River, near the center of the Italian peninsula. It was midway between the Alps and Italy's southern tip. Rome also was near the midpoint of the Mediterranean Sea.
Contributing Social factors to Fall of the Western Roman Empire
• Decline in interest in public affairs • Low confidence in empire • Disloyalty, lack of patriotism, corruption • Contrast between rich and poor • Decline in population due to disease and food shortage
Pompeii after Vesuvius
• Of the 10,000 to 20,000 people who lived in there, only 2,000 bodies have been uncovered. •About three-fourths of the city has been excavated.
Contributing Political factors to Fall of the Western Roman Empire
• Political office seen as burden, not reward • Military interference in politics • Civil war and unrest • Division of empire • Moving of capital to Byzantium
Contributing Economic factors to Fall of the Western Roman Empire
• Poor harvests • Disruption of trade • No more war plunder • Gold and silver drain • Inflation • Crushing tax burden • Widening gap between rich and poor and increasingly impoverished Western Empire
Contributing Military factors to Fall of the Western Roman Empire
• Threat from northern European tribes • Low funds for defense • Problems recruiting Roman citizens; recruiting of non- Romans • Decline of patriotism and loyalty among soldiers