Chapter 25 & 26 Social History Flashcards

1
Q

What was the alliance between 3 leaders called?

A

The Triumvirate

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2
Q

Who were part of the alliance?

A

Caesar, Pompey, Crassus

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3
Q

When was the alliance formed?

A

60BC

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4
Q

When did Caesar become consul?

A

59BC

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5
Q

Why was the senate unable to oppose the alliance?

A

The alliance was supported by
- the army
- the knights
- the people

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6
Q

How long did Caesar fight in Gaul?

A

A decade.

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7
Q

What sources do we have of these battles and who wrote these sources?

A

Caesar wrote them himself.

He wrote the seven books of his Commentaries of the War in Gaul

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8
Q

When did Caesar invade Britain?

A

55 and 54 BC

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9
Q

Did Caesar manage to conquer Britain?

A

No

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10
Q

What happened to Crassus?

A

He was killed in Parthia

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11
Q

When did Crassus die?

A

53BC

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12
Q

Who did Pompey become more aligned to?

A

The Senate

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13
Q

What did Caesar do on the 10th January 49 BC and what was the effect of this?

A

He brought his army from Gaul to Italy. He technically had declared a civil war.

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14
Q

What did Caesar say after one hour of solitary thought?

A

“iacta alea est!” (The die is cast!)

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15
Q

Where did most of the senate and Pompey go?

A

Across the Adriatic to Greece

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16
Q

Where did Caesar win victories in 48 BC?

A

Pharsalus in Greece

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17
Q

What happened to Pompey?

A

Pompey fled to Egypt but was stabbed to death.

18
Q

What was the origin of “veni, vidi, vici”?

A

When he polished off his opponents in Asia very quickly.

19
Q

Who did Caesar have a notorious love affair?

A

Cleopatra the Queen of Egypt

20
Q

When did Caesar become dictator?

A

First in 49 BC and then for life in 45 BC

21
Q

Why was Caesar’s life Dictatorship unusual?

A

Normally dictators only 6 months to solve a specific crisis.

22
Q

Who lead the conspirators to the assassination of Caesar?

A

Marcus Brutus and Gaius Cassius

23
Q

Which two men sought to avenge Caesar?

A

Marcus Antonius a friend and Octavian his great nephew

24
Q

What event usually marked the end of a girl’s childhood?

A

On the eve of their marriage

25
Q

What were the Lares?

A

Household Gods

26
Q

When would a boy be considered an adult.

A

Whenever the son and father agreed to in his teen years.

27
Q

On what day would the boy adulthood ceremony take place?

A

17 March, the festival of Liber and Liberia

28
Q

What would a boy lay before the Lares?

A

His childhood toga

and leather collar with its amulet from a freedman’s son

29
Q

What was the difference between a child’s toga and the toga of a man?

A

Boy’s toga was purple bordered whereas an adult’s toga had white

30
Q

What happened at the tablularium?

A

He was registered as a full citizen and enrolled in his tribe, one of the voting groups of ancient Rome

31
Q

Who would help upper-class youth learn about government and public administration?

A

By guidance by his father or some other distinguished individual

32
Q

Who did Cicero’s father send him to? What did Cicero learn from him?

A

To the lawyer Quintus Mucius Scaevola. Cicero learnt all his epigrammatic remarks.

33
Q

Who was a rhetor?

A

A rhetoric teacher.

34
Q

Who had the sophists been?

A

The travelling teachers of the Greek world.

35
Q

What was involved in the subject of rhetoric?

A

Learning how to argue a case clearly and elegantly

36
Q

How would students go about learning rhetoric?

A

They would participate in debates, often on imaginary law cases.

37
Q

Why was public speaking so important in Roman politics?

A

Only was of communicating back in the day.

38
Q

What would controversiae (debates) involve?

A

Abstract/General themes such as “Should one marry?”

Particular themes related to a situation such as “Should I cross the Alps to invade Italy?”

39
Q

Heliodorus is described by Quintus as ‘Graecōrum longē doctissimus’. What does this mean?

A

by far the most learned of the greeks

40
Q

At this time in Rome, what culture or nationality did most rhētores come from?

A

Greek Nationality

41
Q

What different courses of life might follow the study of rhetoric for upper-class Romans?

A

A career of politcs or study philosophy as Quintus is to do.