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Published byBridget Shonda Harrington Modified over 9 years ago
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Rome
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Early history- Rome expands Legendary founding 753 B.C. Controlled all Italy 268 B.C. Roman-Punic Wars with Carthage: 264-241, 218- 201, 149-146 B.C. Following third Roman-Punic war, annexed Carthaginian territory (N. Africa, Spain) Conquered Greece (2nd Cent. B.C.) Gaul (56-49 B.C.), Egypt (30 B.C.) Britain (43 A.D.) Empire begins 29 B.C.
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Rome Expands
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Roman Science and Technology Little theoretical science or innovation (Lucretius- atoms) Encyclopedists (Pliny) Architectural virtuosity City planning - water, lead pipes, sewage, fire protection Bridges and aqueducts Law and administration Concrete (if a society can only introduce one invention, it could do no better than this.) Codex form of books Water mills (late in Empire)
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Fall of Rome
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Summary of Events First invasions, 3rd century A.D. Christianity legal early 4th century, state religion late 4th cent. Empire split 4th century - Eastern half endures as Byzantine Empire to 1453 Last emperor (by then only a puppet) deposed 476 A.D. One late Emperor, Majorian (457-461) attempted to reverse trends but failed
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Roman Empire Splits, 395 A.D.
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Fall of Rome
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Possible Hypotheses for the collapse of Rome Lack of innovation. Best indicator, the total lack of interest in geography. Slavery. The attitude that any services could be bought, and therefore Romans need not bother with practical matters. Religious cultism and mysticism Lead poisoning? (not from lead pipe but from lead-based ceramic glazes)
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Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 1782 Edward Gibbon suggested four reasons for fall of Rome: “Immoderate greatness”--growth of bureaucracy and military Wealth and luxury Barbarian invasions (cause or symptom?) Spread of Christianity
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Gibbon's errors Too rosy a view of 2nd century A.D. conditions Cultural biases (against Byzantines and monasticism) Pushed notion of "decline" too far Despite his errors, Gibbon's work has endured as few works of history have
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An Alternate View of the Fall of Rome Americans often idealize ancient Rome We are impressed by its monuments. It's the first ancient state that looks like a modern nation-state on the scale of the U.S. Latin was used as the intellectual language of Europe until recent times Many "religious" films about the life of Christ are actually films about Rome with a pious veneer.
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Reality Check: Rome was a stagnant, corrupt, brutal and petty society Not once did the local populace ever rise up to oppose the barbarian invaders.
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Rome and the early U.S: Two Choices
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The U.S. - 1787 Governed by a weak federation under the Articles of Confederation Its one great act under this government was the Northwest Ordinance Provided for division of new territories into additional States Admission of new States incorporated into Constitution Hence no distinction whatever between original States and later States.
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Rome - 200 B.C. Rome acquires Spain from Carthage after the Second Roman-Punic War Same question as faced by the Early U.S.: what to do with the new lands? Rome decides to exploit the new territories as source of revenue and slaves.
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Results of Rome’s Choice Non-stop guerrilla war in Spain for over 300 years. Rome abandons its traditional citizen army for a permanent standing army. Conscripted soldiers frequently became dispossessed while serving in Spain Rome's erratic but real progress toward equality reverses. Power and wealth re- concentrate in the hands of the upper class.
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For next 170 years, Rome experiences increasing civil unrest, ever-bloodier conflicts and civil wars, a military coup by Julius Caesar, then dictatorship under the Emperors.
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Conclusion: Like a baby born with AIDS, the Roman Empire was infected at birth with the disease that eventually killed it.
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