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ANCIENT ROME & THE RISE OF CHRISTIANITY Roman Culture & Achievements
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How did advances in arts, learning, and the law show the Romans’ high regard for cultural and political achievements? Through war and conquest, Roman generals carried the achievements of Roman civilization to distant lands. Yet the resulting civilization was not simply Roman. It blended Greek, Hellenistic, and Roman achievements.
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The Romans admired and adapted ideas from Greek culture. Travel during the Pax Romana spread this new tradition. The blending of Greek, Hellenistic, and Roman traditions produced Greco-Roman civilization.
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Virgil’s epic poem The Aeneid describes how the Greek hero Aeneas escaped from Troy to found Rome. Virgil’s goal in writing the poem was to increase patriotism and help unite Rome after years of civil war. The poem stressed the cultural links between Rome and Greece.
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Stoicism stressed duty, acceptance of one’s fate, and concern for the well-being of all people. Emperor Marcus Aurelius became a noted Stoic philosopher and writer. Romans were impressed by the Hellenistic philosophy of Stoicism.
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Many poets satirized Roman Society. Horace used wit to attack human folly. Livy recounted tales of heroes such as Cincinnatus. Martial was so biting he had to use a fictitious name to protect himself. Tacitus wrote of the loss of liberty after the fall of the Republic. Historians often stressed patriotic virtue.
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Roman art and architecture were adapted from Etruscan and Greek roots. Artists and sculptures stressed realism and sought to focus on the subject’s character and expression. Some sculpture was highly idealistic, portraying traits of power, grace, or strength.
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Romans used art to beautify their homes. Mosaics were created from small bits of stone or glass. In A.D. 79, a volcano, Mt. Vesuvius, erupted, burying Pompeii in ash and trapping residents, but preserving their homes and artwork.
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Immense palaces, temples, and stadiums were monuments to Roman power. Architects improved on structural devices such as columns and arches. Using concrete enabled them to build strong structures with domes. Roman architecture stressed grandeur. The dome of the Pantheon in Rome
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Engineers built roads, bridges, and harbors throughout the empire. These structures were so solidly built that many were still in use long after the empire fell. Romans excelled at engineering, the practical application of science.
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Eleven aqueducts brought water from the surrounding hills into the city of Rome. The water supplied large public baths. Wealthy Romans had water piped into their homes.
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Roman scientists are generally remembered for recording rather than creating new advances in science. GalenPtolemyPliny the Elder Compiled an encyclopedia of all known medical knowledge that was used for centuries. Looked at the work of earlier astronomers. He suggested the Earth was the center of the universe, an error accepted for 1,500 years. Compiled volumes on geography, zoology, and botany.
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Rome’s greatest legacy was its commitment to justice and the rule of law. A single, written legal code covered citizens and noncitizens alike. However, penalties varied according to social class. Lower- class defendants often received harsher treatment.
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An accused person is presumed innocent until proven guilty. A defendant has a right to face his accuser and offer a defense. Clear evidence must be offered to prove guilt. Judges are required to interpret laws fairly. Rome’s commitment to law is a legacy still followed in the modern United States. Many Roman principles became part of the modern American legal code.
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Terms & People Virgil – poet who wrote the epic poem The Aeneid satirize – to make fun of mosaic – picture made from chips of colored stone or glass engineering – the application of science and mathematics to develop useful structures and machines aqueduct – stone structure that carried water from the hills to the cities Ptolemy – astronomer-mathematician who proposed a theory that the Earth was at the center of the universe
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