Chapter 6 Flashcards

1
Q

What was Rome originally started as?

A

A city-state.

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2
Q

What form of government did the early city-state adopt?

A

A monarchy. They had a king.

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3
Q

What two periods of history does the Rome have?

A

The Republic and The Empire

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4
Q

What did the Romans borrow from the Etruscans?

A

Agricultural methods, political skills, how to create street plans for cities, how to build masonry arches, how to create public sanitation systems, and military techniques.

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5
Q

What did the Romans borrow from the Greeks?

A

Greek gods and goddess, the concept of a phonetic alphabet, and Greek philosophy and culture.

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6
Q

What two sides were in a class struggle during the Roman Republic era?

A

The Patricians and the Plebians.

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7
Q

What is the class struggle formally called?

A

The Struggle of the Orders.

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8
Q

Who were the Patricians?

A

Families who long possessed political, economic, and military power.

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9
Q

Who were the Plebians?

A

The commoners who boasted of little power, little wealth, and did not hail from long established families.

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10
Q

What approach to politics did Rome take after ending the kingship?

A

A pragmatic one. It made a series of compromises between the Plebians and Patricians.

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11
Q

Who possessed executive power in the Roman Republic and how were they chosen?

A

Two consuls. Elected by a body of male citizens.

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12
Q

What was the Senate? What was its purpose? How many people made up the Senate? How were its members chosen and for how long did they serve?

A

The Senate was the body created to advise the consuls. It was made up of around 300 leading patrician members chosen by the consuls and appointed for life.

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13
Q

How did the Plebians go about gaining more rights and privileges in Roman society?

A

By threatening to secede from Rome and found their own city-state. This would deprive Rome of labor, taxes, and military services.

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14
Q

What was the initial Roman written law called?

A

The Twelve Tables.

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15
Q

What office did the Patricians create to avoid having to make Plebians eligible for consul?

A

Tribute.

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16
Q

What did a tribute do?

A

Could protect any plebian being wronged by a Patrician.

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17
Q

In what year did Senators have to win public election?

A

200 B.C.

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18
Q

What was the basic unit of Roman society?

A

The family.

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19
Q

What was the father of a Roman family known as?

A

Pater Familias.

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20
Q

How often were adoptions and why did they happen?

A

Adoptions were frequent and strategic. Powerful figures identified young men to be their heirs and adopted them.

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21
Q

Who was Rome’s greatest playwright?

A

Plautus.

22
Q

What themes did Plautus’ plays cover?

A

The pains of love, drunkenness and womanizing.

23
Q

What did Roman religion say about personal ethics?

A

They were irrelevant to the gods.

24
Q

What was Roman religion built on?

A

A “Contractual Paradigm”. If a person did the rituals properly he would be favored and if he did the rituals badly he would be punished.

25
Q

What were the household gods that represented the family’s ancestors named?

A

Lares and Penates.

26
Q

What were plaster death masks of deceased family members called?

A

Imagines.

27
Q

What was the moral code of the Romans called and what did it entail?

A

Mos Maiorum. Following the way of the elders or the way things were done by your forefathers.

28
Q

How was Roman creativity expressed?

A

Through highly practical architectural projects such as the aqueducts.

29
Q

What kind of army did Rome have?

A

A professional army.

30
Q

What did the Romans do to defeated city-states and conquered peoples?

A

Converted them from enemies to allies by incorporating them into Rome. People would pay tribute to Rome and Rome would protect them and afford them some measure of self-government.

31
Q

What series of wars turned Rome into a world superpower?

A

The Punic Wars.

32
Q

How many Wars were fought in the Punic Wars?

A

Three.

33
Q

When Rome triumphed over Carthage, did Rome incorporate it into the Roman Republic?

A

No. It looted and sacked the city and sold its inhabitants into slavery.

34
Q

What other great Empire did Rome incorporate into its Republic?

A

The Greek city-states.

35
Q

What happened to agriculture during the Punic Wars and afterwards as a result of the wars?

A

Farms were either destroyed or abandoned by soldiers fighting the war. The lack of farmland, because it was bought up by the wealthy, caused a mass migration to the cities.

36
Q

What were the large plantations owned by the wealthy called?

A

Latifundia.

37
Q

How much of the population of Rome were slaves?

A

About 1/3.

38
Q

Who led the most famous slave revolt?

A

Spartacus.

39
Q

How did Senators keep the mobs of Rome happy when the people there had no land?

A

By creating extensive social welfare programs and providing entertainment. They took the bread and circuses approach.

40
Q

Who created a use for the unemployed masses in Rome and how did he do this?

A

Marius. By eliminating the property requirement for military service.

41
Q

Where Marius’s soldier loyal to the Republic or to Marius?

A

Marius, since it was Marius who promised them wealth and plunder.

42
Q

Who started a civil war in Rome against Marius?

A

Sulla.

43
Q

Who proposed key reforms to try and restore virtue to Rome?

A

The Gracchus Brothers.

44
Q

Who formed the triumvirate that transitioned Rome from a Republic to an Empire?

A

Julius Ceasar, Pompey, and Crassus.

45
Q

What grew Julius Ceasar’s fame in Rome?

A

His conquests in Gaul and military victories achieved in that campaign.

46
Q

Who tried to stop Ceasar when he returned to Rome with his army?

A

Pompey.

47
Q

What reforms did Ceasar undertake as Emporer?

A

The Gracchus Brothers land reform, gave Roman citizenship to the people in Spain and Gaul, eliminated petty corruption, and built splendid roads and buildings that created jobs.

48
Q

When was Julius Ceasar assassinated?

A

The Ides of March, March 15, 44 BC.

49
Q

Who won the resulting civil war to gain control of Rome?

A

Octavian (Later Augustus Ceasar.)

50
Q

When did Rome prosper and when did Rome start to fall?

A

Rome prospered when leaders put the common good ahead of their own self-interest. However, when leaders used power to improve their own social and economic standing, the Republic started to fall.