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1
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2
The Foundations of Rome
  • Preview
  • Starting Points Map Italy and the Mediterranean
  • Main Idea / Reading Focus
  • Roman Civilization Develops
  • Quick Facts Etruscan Influences
  • Rome Becomes a Republic
  • Quick Facts Checks and Balances in the Roman
    Government
  • The Republic Expands
  • Faces of History Two Commanders of the Punic Wars

3
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4
The Foundations of Rome
Main Idea From a small town on the banks of an
Italian river, Rome grew to control the entire
Mediterranean region.
  • Reading Focus
  • Where and how did Roman civilization develop?
  • What led to Romes becoming a republic?
  • What were the major events in Romes expansion?

5
Roman Civilization Develops
All roads lead to Rome. Rome was not built in
a day. When in Rome . . . How did Rome win
such a place in modern popular culture?
6
The Etruscans
  • Rome first ruled by Latin Kings
  • Came under Etruscan rule, 600 BC
  • Etruscans came from northern Italy
  • Evidence found at cemeteries indicates Etruscans
    great metalworkers, jewelers
  • Etruscan culture heavily influenced by Greeks
  • Etruscans had great influence on Roman society

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8
Summarize What advantages did Romes location
give the city?
Answer(s) protected by mountains sea provided
protection and transportation had rich soil,
pleasant climate located on major trade routes
Tiber River provided easy access to the sea
9
Rome Becomes a Republic
  • Etruscan Rule Ends
  • Etruscans ruled Rome until about 509 BC
  • Romans revolted, threw out last of kings, setup
    new type of government
  • Republicelected officials governed state
  • Patricians
  • In early days, heads of a few aristocratic
    families, patricians, elected officials
  • Patrician families controlled all
    societypolitics, religion, economics, military
  • Maintained power through patronage system
  • Plebeians
  • From beginning, common people, plebeians,
    challenged patricians for power
  • Invaders threatened 494 BC plebeians refused to
    fight until changes made
  • Patricians knew they would have no army, expanded
    plebeian rights

10
  • Plebeian Council
  • After receiving new rights, plebeians formed own
    assembly, Plebeian Council, to oversee affairs
    and protect interests
  • Gained right to elect officials known as tribunes
  • Tribunes jobprotect against unjust treatment by
    patrician officials
  • Gained right to vetoban laws that seemed
    harmful, unjust
  • Laws
  • 450 BC, plebeians forced patricians to have all
    laws written down
  • Laws displayed in Roman Forum, central square, on
    12 large bronze tablets
  • Because laws were posted, patrician judges could
    not make decisions based on own opinions or
    secret laws
  • One new law banned marriage between patricians
    and plebeians

11
Republican Government
12
Governing Details
  • Consuls
  • When last king thrown out, his place taken by two
    magistrates called consuls
  • Elected for one year chief executives, army
    commanders
  • Censors
  • Next most important after consuls
  • Recorded wealth, residence of population
  • Filled vacancies in Senate
  • Praetors
  • Primarily judges, could act for consuls if
    consuls away at war
  • After terms ended, given military commands,
    appointed provisional governors
  • Constraints
  • Government worked well because of system of
    checks, balances
  • Each part could impose certain constraints on
    others

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14
Life in the Republic
During the days of the Roman Republic, Rome was a
thriving and vibrant city. At its heart was the
Forum, the public square and site of the most
important government buildings and temples.
15
Agrarian Roots
  • Despite bustling nature of city, Romans prided
    themselves on connection with soil
  • Farming, landownership the noblest ways to make
    money
  • Senators forbidden to participate in any career
    that did not involve land, could not engage in
    commerce

16
Draw Conclusions Why do you think the Romans
established a republic?
Answer(s) possible answerThey wanted a system
of laws to keep peace within their expanding
empire.
17
The Republic Expands
  • Growth
  • As Romes government changed, the Roman
    population continued to grow
  • Rome needed more land for expanding population
  • Began to settle surplus population on land
    acquired by conquering neighbors
  • Military Might
  • Successful expansion not possible without
    powerful army
  • All Roman men between ages 17 and 46 with minimum
    amount of property required to serve in army
    during times of war
  • Roman Army
  • Organized into units called legions, backbone of
    which were centurions
  • Centurions noncommissioned officers who each
    commanded 100 men
  • Army highly disciplined, well-trained force,
    could fight in all types of terrain

18
  • The Conquest of Italy
  • 265 BC, Romans had defeated Etruscans and Greek
    cities in Southern Italy
  • Romans imposed two strict conditions on subject
    peoplesubjects had to provide troops for Roman
    army, abandon any dealings with foreign nations
  • Other than those conditions, Rome rarely
    interfered with domestic affairs of people it
    conquered
  • Sicily
  • Once in control of Italy, Rome turned attention
    to Sicily, large island to south of Italian
    Peninsula
  • In Sicily, Rome came into conflict with Carthage,
    powerful North African trading city
  • Conflict grew into series of three wars
  • Punic Wars raged for nearly 80 years

19
The Punic Wars
Violence between Rome and Carthage broke out in
264 BC. Because the First Punic War was fought
mostly at sea, Carthages powerful navy dominated
the early fighting. Soon, however, the Romans
built a navy of their own and were able to defeat
Carthage.
The Romans had defeated Carthage, but it did not
destroy the city as many citizens had wanted.
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Carthage Falls
  • Huge losses of Second Punic War remained in
    memories of many Romans
  • 149 BC Rome decided to destroy old enemy once and
    for all
  • Declared war on Carthage for third time
  • After siege of three years, Carthage fell
  • Romans enslaved entire population, completely
    destroyed city
  • They banned any people from living there

22
The Conquest of Greece
  • Punic Wars raged in western republic Rome
    involved in politics of eastern Mediterranean
  • Hellenistic kingdoms of Macedonia, Persia, and
    Egypt fought constantly Greek city-states feared
    being conquered
  • City-states sought alliance with Rome

23
Sequence How did Rome come to dominate the
Mediterranean world?
Answer(s) by conquering its Mediterranean
neighbors, including Carthage and Greece
24
From Republic to Empire
  • Preview
  • Main Idea / Reading Focus
  • Problems in the Late Republic
  • Rome Becomes an Empire
  • Map The Roman Empire
  • The Pax Romana

25
From Republic to Empire
Main Idea Governmental and social problems led to
the end of the Roman Republic and the creation of
a new form of government.
  • Reading Focus
  • What problems did leaders face in the late Roman
    Republic?
  • How did Rome become an empire?
  • What helped tie the Roman empire together during
    the Pax Romana?

26
Problems in the Late Republic
By the mid-100s BC, Rome had no rival anywhere in
the Mediterranean world. However, the
responsibilities of running their vast holdings
stretched the Roman political system to its
limits.
27
The Military in Politics
  • 107 BC, social unrest reached new level
  • General Gaius Marius elected consul
  • Eliminated property restrictions
  • Accepted anyone who wanted to join army
  • Armies, private forces devoted to general
  • Poor hoped to share plunder at end of war
  • Ruthless generals realized loyalty of troops
    could be used as political tool

28
Social and Civil Wars
29
Summarize What challenges faced Rome in the late
Republic?
Answer(s) slave revolts, social unrest, the
Social War, and a civil war in which Sulla became
dictator
30
Rome Becomes an Empire
Sulla paved the way for major changes in Romes
government. The end of the Republic resulted from
the ambitions of a few individuals.
31
  • The Second Triumvirate
  • Caesars murder did not save the Republic
  • 43 BC, Second Triumvirate took powerCaesars
    adopted son, Octavian loyal officer Marc Antony
    high priest Lepidus
  • Lepidus pushed aside Antony, Octavian agreed to
    govern half the empire each, Octavian in west,
    Antony in East
  • Civil War
  • Civil war between Octavian, Antony broke out
  • Octavian defeated Antony and his ally, Egypts
    Queen Cleopatra
  • Cleopatra, Antony committed suicide Octavian
    alone controlled Rome
  • Republic effectively dead new period in Roman
    history beginning

32
From Octavian to Augustus
  • Octavian Takes Power
  • Octavian faced task of restoring order in empire
  • Had no intention of establishing dictatorship
    when he took power
  • New Political Order
  • Octavian decided it impossible to return Rome to
    republican form of government
  • Created new political order, known today as the
    empire
  • Principate
  • Octavian careful to avoid title of king or
    emperor
  • Called himself princeps, first citizen
  • Government called Principate
  • New Title
  • 27 BC, Senate gave Octavian title Augustus, the
    revered one
  • Title a religious honor able to wear laurel and
    oak leaf crown

33
The Augustan Age
  • New Imperial Government
  • Augustus head of state more than 40 years, made
    smooth transition to new imperial government with
    power divided between him and Senate
  • Most financial, administrative matters under
    Augustuss control
  • Foreign Affairs
  • Started program to bring peace to west,
    particularly to Gaul, Spain
  • Began series of conquests that pushed border
    eastward to Danube River
  • Also took special care of Rome itself
  • Legacy
  • Created police force, fire brigades stockpiled
    food, water
  • Began building program presided over moral,
    religious reforms
  • Great period of cultural creativity great
    writers like Horace, Ovid, Virgil

34
Julio-Claudians and Flavians
  • Augustus died AD 14, empire ruled by Caesars
    relatives for 54 years
  • Julio-Claudian Emperors abilities varied widely
  • Tiberius a good soldier, competent administrator
  • Caligula, brutal, mentally unstable appointed
    favorite horse as consul
  • AD 68, last of Julio-Claudians, Nero committed
    suicide

35
The Good Emperors
  • Empire grew tremendously under Good Emperors
  • Reached limits of expansion under Trajan
  • Added what are now Romania, Armenia, Mesopotamia,
    and the Sinai Peninsula
  • Successor Hadrian thought empire too large
  • Withdrew from almost all eastern additions
  • Built defensive fortifications to guard against
    invasions
  • Built wall 73 miles long in northern Britain

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37
Explain How did Rome grow and change after it
became an empire?
Answer(s) The Roman Empire reached the limits of
its territorial expansion and made developments
in building, government, and culture.
38
The Pax Romana
The period from the beginning of Augusts reign
in 27 BC until the death of the last of the Good
Emperors in AD 180 is often called the Pax
Romanathe Roman Peace. This era was
characterized by stable government, a strong
legal system, widespread trade, and peace.
Empire brought uniformity to the cities of the
Mediterranean world, which were governed in
imitation of Rome.
39
Legal System
  • Laws
  • Roman law unified the empire
  • Laws specified what could, could not be done
    penalties for breaking law
  • Same laws applied to everyone in empire, wherever
    they lived
  • Agriculture
  • Agriculture remained primary occupation
    throughout Pax Romana
  • Most farms, independent with little, no surplus
    to sell
  • Tenant farmers began to replace slaves on large
    farms
  • Manufacturing
  • Manufacturing increased throughout empire
  • Italy, Gaul, Spainartisans made cheap pottery,
    textiles
  • Fine glassware made in eastern cities like
    Alexandria

40
Opportunities for Trade
  • Trade
  • Italy imported grain, meat, raw materials from
    provinces
  • Merchants brought silks, linens, glassware,
    jewelry, furniture from Asia
  • Rome, Alexandria became commercial centers
  • Transportation
  • Commercial activity possible because of empires
    location around Mediterranean and extensive road
    network
  • Ultimately about 50,000 miles of roads bound
    empire together
  • Military and Merchant Routes
  • Most roads built, maintained for military
    purposes
  • Cheaper to transport grain by ship from one end
    of Mediterranean to other than to send it
    overland most goods went by sea

41
Analyze How did government, law, and trade tie
the Roman people together?
Answer(s) The Roman government was the strongest
unifying force, maintaining order, enforcing the
laws, and defending the frontiers. Roman law
provided stability and, with few exceptions, the
same laws applied to everyone in the empire.
Trade provided opportunities for commerce between
people in different parts of the empire.
42
Roman Society and Culture
  • Preview
  • Main Idea / Reading Focus
  • Life in Imperial Rome
  • Quick Facts Roman Society
  • Romes Cultural Legacy

43
Roman Society and Culture
Main Idea The Romans developed a complex society
and pioneered cultural advances that, even today,
affect life all over the world.
  • Reading Focus
  • What social and cultural factors influenced life
    in imperial Rome?
  • What achievements shaped Romes cultural legacy
    to the modern world?

44
Life in Imperial Rome
Images of Rome from movies and stories
Gladiators in combat, temples of marble, soldiers
marching to war. What was life really like?
45
Life for the Poor
  • Nearly 1 million Romans lived in crowded three-
    or four-story apartment buildings
  • Fire a constant threat
  • Torches used for light
  • Charcoal used for cooking
  • To keep poor from rebelling
  • Free food, public entertainment offered
  • Two things interested publicbread, circuses

46
Public Entertainment
  • Entertainments
  • Romans of all classes enjoyed circus, chariot
    races
  • Held in Circus Maximusracetrack could hold
    250,000 spectators
  • Also liked theater, mimes, jugglers, dancers,
    acrobats, clowns
  • Bloody Spectacles
  • Romans enjoyed spectacles in amphitheaters
  • Wild animals battled each other and professional
    fighters
  • Gladiator contests most popular, performed in
    Colosseum for 50,000 people
  • Public Baths
  • Popular places for entertainment
  • Romans well aware of importance of bathing,
    hygiene for health
  • Many public baths had steam rooms, meeting rooms,
    and pools for socializing

47
Family
48
Signs and Augurs
  • Worshipping the gods
  • Romans believed gods sent signs, warnings
  • Came in form of natural phenomena
  • Flight of birds, arrangement of entrails of
    sacrificial animals
  • Paid respect to augurs
  • Priests who specialized in interpreting signs
  • Nothing important undertaken without first
    consulting augurs

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50
Contrast How was life different for rich and
poor citizens in Rome?
Answer(s) Richoften had two homes and spent
time in politics, women's lives controlled by
guardians Poorlived in crowded conditions,
lower-class women had more freedom, often worked
outside the home
51
Romes Cultural Legacy
Although the Western Roman Empire fell in 476,
much of Roman culture continued to influence life
for centuries. In fact, we can still see many of
the legacies of the great empire today.
52
  • Practical Knowledge
  • Romans practical, tried to apply knowledge gained
    from science to planning cities, building water,
    sewage systems, improving farming
  • Roman engineers constructed roads, bridges,
    amphitheaters, public buildings, aqueducts to
    bring water to cities
  • Without aqueducts, cities would not have grown as
    large
  • Concrete
  • Romans developed concrete, with which they built
    amazing structures that still stand today
  • Roman bridges still span French, German, Spanish
    rivers
  • Roads that connected Rome with provinces still
    survive today
  • Added urban plan to every city they conquered
    many still seen today

53
Architecture and Language
  • Locations
  • Many examples still seen throughout southern
    Europe, northern Africa, Southwest Asia
  • Dominant advancesround arch and the vault
  • Advances
  • Arch, vault allowed Romans to construct larger
    buildings than earlier societies
  • Have been used for centuries, still seen in many
    countries
  • Ruins
  • Ruins of buildings inspired generations of
    architects
  • Michelangelo, Thomas Jefferson, others
  • Beyond Latin
  • Romance languages developed from Latin
  • Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian

54
Legacies
  • English
  • English owes much vocabulary to Latin
  • Examples et cetera, veto, curriculum
  • Literature
  • Technique of satire derived from Roman authors
  • For centuries, writers have borrowed from authors
    like Virgil
  • Law
  • Romans used system called civil law, based on
    written code
  • Adopted by many countries in Europe after empire
    fell
  • Civil Law Systems
  • Systems carried to Asian, African, American
    colonies
  • Roman influence still seen in todays legal
    system worldwide

55
Summarize What are some areas in which Romes
influence is still seen?
Answer(s) science, engineering, architecture,
language, literature, and law
56
The Rise of Christianity
  • Preview
  • Main Idea / Reading Focus
  • Christianity and Judaism
  • Jesus of Nazareth
  • The Spread of Christianity
  • Map The Spread of Christianity
  • The Early Christian Church

57
The Rise of Christianity
Main Idea A new religion called Christianity
developed within the Roman Empire and gradually
spread throughout the Roman world.
  • Reading Focus
  • How was Christianity rooted in the teachings of
    Judaism?
  • What were the teachings of Jesus of Nazareth?
  • How did Christianity spread throughout the Roman
    world?
  • What was the early Christian Church like?

58
Christianity and Judaism
59
Judaism in the Roman World
  • Reactions to Roman Rule
  • Judaism had different branches, varying ideas on
    cooperation with Romans
  • Zealots called on fellow Jews to drive Romans
    from Judaea, reestablish Kingdom of Israel
  • Zealots
  • Zealots formed pockets of resistance against
    Romans of Judaea
  • After mass uprising AD 6670, Romans sacked
    Jerusalem, killed thousands of Jews, destroyed
    Second Temple
  • Messianic Prophecies
  • After revolt in 130s, all Jews banned from
    Jerusalem
  • Not all Jews willing to take up arms others
    waited coming of Messiah spiritual leader
    prophesied to restore ancient kingdom, bring
    peace to world

60
Make Generalizations What were two Jewish
reactions to Roman rule?
Answer(s) refused to give up religion Zealots
wanted to rise up against Roman rule
61
Jesus of Nazareth
Against this background, a spiritual leader named
Jesus of Nazareth emerged, teaching people to
prepare for Gods Judgment Day.
62
Death and Resurrection
  • Jesuss popularity, crowds alarmed authorities
    who feared political uprisings
  • Jesus arrested, tried, sentenced to death
  • According to New Testament, after crucifixion
  • Jesus rose from dead
  • Spent 40 days teaching disciples
  • Ascended into heaven
  • Followers believed Resurrection, Ascension
    revealed Jesus as the Messiah

63
Summarize What was the main message of Jesuss
teaching?
Answer(s) Followers must love God above all
else, and love others as they loved themselves.
64
The Spread of Christianity
After Jesuss death, his disciples began teaching
that all people could achieve salvationthe
forgiveness of sins and the promise of
everlasting life.
65
  • Converting the Gentiles
  • Paul believed God sent him to convert non-Jews,
    or Gentiles
  • Paul helped make Christianity broader religion,
    attracted many new followers
  • Helped establish Christian churches throughout
    eastern Mediterranean
  • Pauls epistles, or letters, to those churches
    later became part of the New Testament
  • Roman Christianity
  • Paul found some Jewish customs hindered
    missionary work among non-Jews, dispensed with
    those requirements for Christians
  • Paul emphasized new doctrines that helped
    distinguish Christianity from Judaism
  • Christianity spread message of love, eternal
    life after death found appealing
  • By AD 300, some 10 percent of Roman people were
    Christian

66
Persecution
  • Results
  • As Christianity spread through Roman world, some
    local officials feared Christians conspiring
    against them arrested, killed many Christians
  • Those killed seen by Christians as martyrs,
    people who die for their faith
  • Threat
  • Christians persecuted at local level, but
    large-scale persecution rare during first two
    centuries after Jesuss life
  • Large-scale persecution by Romans grew as rulers
    saw Christianity as threat
  • Imperial Approval
  • Spread of Christianity hastened by conversion of
    emperor Constantine
  • AD 313, Constantine made Christianity legal
    within empire, Edict of Milan
  • By late 300s, polytheism gradually disappeared
    from empire

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68
Find the Main Idea What helped spread
Christianity through the Roman world?
Answer(s) Paul of Tarsus and other disciples
Constantines conversion outlawing of public
non-Christian sacrifices by Theodosius
69
The Early Christian Church
  • Communities
  • Earliest Christian churches not only spiritual
    organizations but close-knit communities
  • Provided all kinds of support for members
  • Complex
  • Support included burial services, food, shelter
  • Christianity grew organization became more
    complex
  • Deepening Faith
  • Ceremonies developed to inspire peoples faith,
    make them feel closer to Jesus
  • One ceremony was Eucharist
  • Ceremonies
  • During Eucharist, people eat bread, drink wine in
    memory of Jesuss death, resurrection
  • With baptism, people are admitted to the faith

70
Expansion of the Church
By about 100, priests who were trained in these
ceremonies became prominent within Christianity.
The authority of the priests was based on the
authority Jesus gave the Apostles. This spiritual
authority distinguished the priests from the
general congregation of the church.
Patriarchs did not recognize the popes supremacy
claims at first, but over time popes gained more
influence within the Christian Church.
71
Summarize How did the Christian Church change as
it grew?
Answer(s) Special ceremonies and rituals
developed priests became a special class within
Christianity bishops had authority over priests
the bishop of Rome became a pope.
72
The Fall of Rome
  • Preview
  • Main Idea / Reading Focus
  • The Empire Weakens
  • Attempts at Reform
  • Invasion and Fall
  • Map Division and Invasion of the Roman Empire
  • Quick Facts Causes and Effects of the Fall of
    Rome
  • Visual Study Guide / Quick Facts
  • Video The Impact of Ancient Rome on the World
    Today

73
The Fall of Rome
Main Idea Events and conditions inside as well
as outside the Roman Empire weakened it and led
to its collapse in the west in the 400s.
  • Reading Focus
  • What problems weakened the empire in the 200s?
  • How did Diocletian and Constantine attempt to
    reform the empire?
  • What caused the invasion and ultimate fall of the
    empire in the 400s?

74
The Empire Weakens
The Roman armys inability to stop the Huns was
one symptom of the weakness that befell the
empire after the end of the Pax Romana.
75
  • Economic Troubles
  • Insecurity of civil wars, invasions affected
    Roman life
  • Robbery, piracy increased travel hazardous
  • Merchants feared to ship goods
  • Military needs required more revenue emperors
    raised taxes
  • Inflation
  • Value of money declined as taxes rose
  • Emperors minted new coins with copper, lead, and
    silver
  • People refused to accept currency at face value
  • Result was dramatic rise in prices, or inflation

76
Analyze What problems faced Rome in the late
200s?
Answer(s) The empire had weak leaders, civil
wars, threats of invasion, and inflation led to a
weak economy. Piracy and robbery made travel
hazardous.
77
Attempts at Reform
The crises of the 200s shattered the Roman world.
Drastic reforms had to be made if the empire were
to survive. Two capable emperors rose to power
and gave the empire another two centuries of life.
78
Economic Reforms
  • Imperial economy came under state direction with
    Diocletian
  • Commercial, manufacturing activities geared
    toward needs of imperial defense
  • New tax system raised more money for government,
    army
  • Reforms drastic, successful
  • Saved empire from immediate economic collapse

79
Constantine
80
Analyze How did Diocletian and Constantine try
to save Rome?
Answer(s) Diocletiantried to make governmental
and economic reforms and build up the army
Constantinemoved capital to the eastern half of
the empire
81
Invasion and Fall
Unfortunately, the reforms of Diocletian and
Constantine did not solve the overwhelming
problems of the empire. During the 300s and 400s,
these problems were only worsened by tribal
peoples increasing pressures on the empires
frontier.
About 370 Huns attacked the Ostrogoths, a
Germanic people living north of the Black Sea.
82
Migrating Tribes
  • Goths
  • Assault on Ostrogoths frightened kinsmen,
    Visigoths
  • Visigoths fled into Roman Empire, Italy
  • Visigoths captured and sacked Rome itself, 410
  • Vandals
  • Other migrating tribes soon attacked Roman Empire
  • Infamous for destroying everything in path
    Vandals attacked Rome in 450s
  • Term vandal came to mean one who causes
    senseless destruction
  • Attila
  • Leader of Huns, led attack on Gaul
  • Roman army allied with Visigoths, defeated Huns,
    451
  • Attila next turned on Rome but Pope Leo I
    persuaded him to leave Italy

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84
Fall of the West
  • Western Empire
  • Despite Huns withdrawal, Western Empire in
    shambles
  • Germanic tribes ruled most of western provinces,
    including Italy
  • Ostrogoths overthrew last emperor
  • Many historians consider this the end of the
    Western Roman Empire
  • Eastern Empire
  • Despite western collapse, Eastern Empire endured
    for several centuries
  • People of Eastern Empire always thought of selves
    as Romans
  • Over time other influences, especially Greek,
    crept into culture
  • As a result of these influences, historians refer
    to the later period of the Eastern Empire by a
    new name, the Byzantine Empire.

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86
Identify Cause and Effect How did invaders
contribute to Romes fall?
Answer(s) The invasion of tribes from Central
Asia caused Germanic tribes to flee into the
Empire, where resistance had been weakened.
87
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89
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90
VideoThe Impact of Ancient Rome on the World
Today
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