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ROME |
Regional Studies ●
atlasofworldhistory.com |
Rome founded [753]. Two villages, one
Latin and the other Sabine, joined to form a single community [753]. A Latin ruled for one year and a Sabine ruled
during the following year.
Romulus and Remus. According to legend Romulus and Remus were twin sons of the god Mars. Their parents
abandoned them, a wolf raised them, and they founded the city of Rome.
Etruscan kings [616]. The Romans selected
an Etruscan as king. During 100 years of
Etruscan leadership, the Romans built a bridge across the Tiber River, a temple
to Jupiter, and the city's public square, the Roman forum.
Republic [509]. After the son of
Rome's Etruscan king assaulted a Roman woman [Lucretia],
the Romans expelled the king. They wrote
a constitution and formed a republic, the form of government where citizens
elect representatives who enact laws. The
Romans allowed only landowners to vote. Their representatives met as the
Senate.
Class Struggles [494]. The landowners grew
richer, but Rome's laborers and farmers remained poor. When the workers [plebians]
complained that they had no voice in the government, the landowners gave them
the right to send petitions [plebiscites] to the Senate to ask for changes in
the law. Still unhappy, the workers
formed an army [494]. The landowners
avoided a civil war by allowing the workers to elect representatives who met as
the Assembly [493]. The workers remained
angry. The Senate tried to end the workers' discontent by enacting civil rights
laws [450, Laws of the Twelve Tables].
Celts burn Rome [390]. Celts burned Rome
[390]. The Romans rebuilt the city and
surrounded it with a wall [378, Servian Wall].
Treaty with Carthage [348]. Rome signed a
treaty with Carthage [348]. Rome agreed not to enter most Carthaginian ports.
Carthage agreed not to attack Roman cities.
Capua joins Rome [343]. The city of Capua
signed a treaty with Rome [343]. The Samnites, who lived between Rome and Capua, felt threatened
and attacked. They failed to stop Rome
and Capua from uniting [343/341, First Samnite War]. Nearby cities, afraid of Rome's growing
power, broke agreements with Rome. The Romans attacked and claimed the cities
as Roman possessions [Latin War, 340/337]. Rome gave their citizens privileges
[Latin Rights], but not the right to vote.
Takes Central Italy [328]. Rome occupied a
city near the Samnites [Fregellae],
provoking wars that lasted 30 years [328/304 and 298/290, Samnite
Wars]. Rome defeated the Samnites and took central Italy.
Takes South Italy [282]. Rome broke a treaty
with Tarentum, a Greek colony in southern Italy, by sending a fleet into the
city's harbor. Tarentum attacked the
Romans, but lost. Rome took control of
southern Italy.
Pyrrhic Victory. A
Greek king [Pyrrhus of Epirus] helped Tarentum defeat the Roman army in one of
the battles of their war [279, Ausculum]. Although he won the battle, the Greek king's
army suffered great losses. He
complained, 'With another victory like this I shall lose the war.' We still call costly situations, 'Pyrrhic
victories'.
Takes Islands [264]. A city in Sicily
[Messina] asked Rome to remove Carthaginians from the island. Carthage had a powerful navy and three times
as many citizens as Rome. The Romans,
most of whom were farmers, built a fleet of ships, defeated Carthage's navy
[241], and took control of large Mediterranean islands [241, Sicily; 238,
Sardinia; 227, Corsica].
Takes Spain [218]. A Carthaginian army
[led by Hannibal] marched from Spain to Italy and defeated a Roman army [216,
Cannae]. Southern Italy defected to Carthage.
The Romans avoided fighting the strong Carthaginian army in Italy.
Instead, the Romans attacked Spain [206, 205] and then Carthage [202, Zama]. Rome won, took Spain, and demanded that
Carthage agree not make war without Rome's permission [Second Punic War,
218/201]. The Romans recovered southern
Italy and confiscated the lands of southerners who had supported Carthage.
Takes Asia Minor [202]. Cities in Greece
asked Rome to protect them from Macedon.
Rome defeated Macedon [196] and declared the Greek cities independent. Rome took Asia Minor from the Seleucids
because they had helped Macedon [190, Magnesia]. Twenty five years after being defeated by
Rome Macedon attacked the Romans [171]. Rome defeated Macedon again [168] and
took home so much treasure that the Romans cancelled the city's taxes.
Cement. The
Romans were the first to use cement [about 200] which enabled them to build
larger and stronger structures. They made cement by mixing volcanic ash, lime,
stones, and water.
New Year's Day. The
Romans wanted to install a new government early to put down an uprising [153].
They changed the first day of the year from March 1 to January
1.
Takes North Africa [149]. After Numidia
attacked Carthage repeatedly, Carthage attacked Numidia [150]. This violated an agreement
between Carthage and Rome. The Romans
surrounded Carthage for three years, burned the city, sold many of its citizens
as slaves, and took control of the region near Carthage [Third Punic War,
149/146].
Land reforms fail [146]. Many Romans lost
their jobs because landowners purchased slaves. Some Roman leaders in the Assembly wanted to
help the poor by taking land from large estates and giving it to needy farmers. Two land reform efforts failed and supporters
were killed [133, 121, Gracchi brothers].
Overhead
Aqueduct. Early
aqueducts carried water along the ground.
Rome's first overhead aqueduct [144, Aqua Marcia] used arches to carry
water high above ground and to deliver it to hilly sections of the city.
Reorganize army [120]. West Germans and
Celts defeated a Roman army [113]. Rebels
overthrew the king of Numidia. Rome
declared war, but the senate refused to pay for troops [107]. An army commander [Marius] recruited his own
men, the first Roman soldiers who were not landowners. He took Numidia and returned a hero [105]. The West Germans and Celts defeated the
Romans again [105]. The commander who won in Numidia reorganized the Roman army
into smaller, faster units and defeated the West Germans and Celts [102 and
101].
Civil War [100]. The senate refused
to reduce the price of food or to help the poor own land. Cities in Italy
seceded and formed a new republic, 'Italia' [91/88, War of the Allies]. Rome offered citizenship to cities that
remained its allies. This offer helped
to end the rebellion.
Dictator [84]. Rebels took power in
Rome while the Roman army was in Asia Minor.
The army returned and defeated the rebels [82, Colline
Gate]. The Romans decided that they
needed a strong leader for times of rebellion and war. They created a new position, dictator, and
gave the dictator special power and authority. The first dictator [Sulla, the
general who defeated the rebels] helped the landowners increase their wealth. Slaves rebelled and fought for more than a
year [73/71, under Spartacus].
Triumvirate [66]. A general [Crassus]
motivated his soldiers by promising to pay them with land. They won victories in Armenia [66], Syria [65],
and Jerusalem [64], but the Senate refused to give the soldiers land. The general formed a secret agreement with
two other leaders to support each other.
One of the three, Julius Caesar, won victories in France [58], returned
as a hero, and accepted the title 'dictator'. He weakened the senate by
enlarging it to 900 members.
Leap Year [46]. The 355-day Roman
year had become out of sync with the seasons. Winter was occurring when it should have been
autumn. Julius Caesar extended the year
46 BCE to 445 days and changed subsequent years to 365 days. He added an extra day every fourth year, but
not February 29th. The Romans celebrated February 23, the day before a holiday,
twice in a leap year.
Second Triumvirate [44]. Senators, afraid
that Julius Caesar would become king, had him killed
[44]. Before his death Caesar had named
Octavian, an 18 year old relative, as his successor. Octavian was too weak to rule and joined two
other leaders in a second triumvirate. One of the three attacked Parthia [36,
Mark Antony], was defeated, and asked Egypt's ruler [Cleopatra] for help. Octavian considered this treason and annexed
Egypt [31, Actium].
Augustus Caesar [31]. Octavian was given
the title, Augustus, which means 'revered one' [27]. He improved Rome's economy, reorganized the
army, established more secure borders, reduced corruption by paying salaries to
tax collectors, established police and fire departments, and ruled for 44
years.
Pax Romana. Augustus closed the doors of the temple of
the god Janus [29].
The doors of this temple were opened during wartime and closed during peacetime. The Mediterranean region, ruled for the first
time by a single state, experienced 200 years of peace [Pax
Romana].
Emperor. The
Senate gave Augustus [27] new powers and the title, 'emperor', which means 'commander-in-chief'. Augustus established Rome's first permanent
army.
Aeneid. The epic poem, the Aeneid [19], tells the story of Rome. Aeneas, the epic's hero, escaped from the
battle of Troy, traveled to Italy, and established the town that became the
parent city of Rome.
Loss to East Germans [9 CE]. Rome was extending
its northern border when East Germans [Marcomanni/Bavarians]
defeated the Roman army [9 CE]. Rome
pulled its border back to the Rhine River and stopped expanding northward.
Family Emperors [14]. The four emperors
who succeeded Augustus were his relatives.
All four were weak emperors with few successes. Jews, angry that Romans ruled their land,
seized control of Jerusalem [66].
Flavian Emperors [69]. A political
rebellion in Spain [68] led to a power struggle with four emperors holding
power in one year [69]. The Romans ended
a rebellion by destroying Jerusalem [70]. Some Jews continued to fight the Romans for
several years [74, Masada]. The 'Arch of
Titus' [81] celebrates the Roman victory at Jerusalem.
Vesuvius
volcano. The volcano, Mount Vesuvius, erupted [79] and
buried the cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum under ash.
Colosseum. The Colosseum was
completed at Rome [80]. Attractions at
this stadium included chariot races and fights to the death between gladiators,
between animals, and between men and animals.
Adopted Emperors [96]. An emperor was
assassinated before naming a successor. The Senate appointed one and encouraged him to
train a successor. The next emperors,
'the five good emperors', each trained a talented candidate. Rome added Dacia [107] and built defensive
walls along the German border and in Britain.
Takes Armenia [114]. Rome and Parthia
argued over who should rule Armenia. Rome
took Armenia and Parthian lands in Mesopotamia.
The war was so expensive that three years later Rome abandoned the land
it had won. Rome stopped adding new
territory. As a result the number of new slaves declined and the prices of
goods increased.
Rome expels Jews [135]. Jews rebelled [132/135] because the Romans
built a temple to their god, Jupiter, in Jerusalem. The Romans forced many Jews
to leave Jerusalem [Jewish diaspora].
Defeats Parthia [155].
After Parthia took part of Syria from Rome [155], Rome attacked Parthia
and took Armenia and Syria [162/166]. The
Roman soldiers carried back a plague that caused widespread deaths [166/167]. The economy suffered. Rome's leaders reduced the amount of silver
used in coins [170] and hurt the economy even more.
Military emperors [193]. An emperor's
personal guards [Praetorian Guards] murdered him because he reduced their pay. Military leaders fought each other to become
emperor and six emperors ruled in one year [193]. Subsequent emperors needed the support of the
military. They increased taxes in order
to pay the soldiers and expand the army.
They built expensive monuments and tried to pay for them by reducing the
amount of silver in coins. This led to higher
prices and economic decline.
Persia attacks [230]. Six years after
taking power from the Parthians, Persians invaded
Syria and Mesopotamia [230]. A Roman
emperor led a counterattack, but was murdered by his own soldiers because he
spent money which was for their salary [235].
In the next 50 years 22 emperors ruled [barracks emperors]. Only one
died a natural death. Prices and taxes
were high. Another plague [252] weakened
Rome's economy.
Millennium. Romans
celebrated this year as the 1000th year since their city was founded [753 BCE].
Many events were held in the Colosseum.
Loses half its land [260]. Persia kidnapped
the Roman emperor during treaty negotiations [260, Valerian] and held him until
he died. Rome lost nearly half of its territory within seven years. France, Spain, and Britain broke away [260,
Gallic Empire]. Syria, Egypt, and part
of Asia Minor also became independent [260, Palmyra]. The West German Alemanni
took land near present-day Switzerland [263].
Recovers lost land [270]. Rome withdrew from
Dacia and moved troops to other places [272].
Then, Rome recovered most of the land it had lost with victories in
Syria [272, Palmyra] and France [273, Chalons].
Regional emperors [284]. Army officers murdered
seven emperors in ten years. Stability returned when a strong leader
[Diocletian] ruled for 22 years. He weakened other leaders by dividing
provinces to make them smaller. He also
enacted laws which forbid military leaders from holding civil power. He appointed a co-emperor [286] and then two
regional emperors [293]. None of the
four used Rome as a capital city. Rome
fought another war with Persia over Armenia [296] and needed new taxes to pay
for Rome's army. The emperor froze
prices. A black market developed and the
price freeze failed.
Religion of
Mithras. The emperor encouraged the worship of Mithras [303, Diocletian]. Mithraism, a form of Zoroastrianism, began in
Persia. Soldiers who had been fighting
against the Persians brought the religion to Rome 200 years earlier. Mithraism and Christianity share several
similar beliefs. In both religions the
founder was born to a virgin and ascended into heaven. Unlike Christians who do not sacrifice
animals, followers of Mithras used the blood of cattle and birds to purify
themselves.
Constantinople [306]. Constantine, the
son of one of the four regional emperors, succeeded his father as ruler of
Britain and Gaul [306]. He defeated his rivals [312, Milvian
Bridge; 323, Adrianople] and ruled alone.
Constantine permitted members of all religions to worship freely [313,
Edict of Milan]. Constantine moved the
capital from Rome to Byzantium [330]. He called the city 'New Rome', but it
became known as Constantinople.
Christmas.
Early Christians did not celebrate the day of Christ's birth. Instead, they honored the day three wise men
[magi] visited the infant and brought him gifts [Epiphany]. About the year 336 Roman Christians began to
celebrate December 25th as Christmas, the birthday of Christ.
Empire divided [337]. Constantine left
the empire to his three sons [337]. They
divided it and fought with each other. The
emperors from Milan and Constantinople joined forces against Persia and both
died in battle [359]. Persia took
Armenia [371].
Goths admitted [375]. The Turkic Huns, who
had left their Central Asian homeland, attacked the Ostrogoths
in southern Russia [376]. Rome helped
the Visigoths escape from the Huns by allowing the Visigoths to enter Roman
territory. The Visigoths promised to
help defend Rome's border and expected food and supplies. When they didn't receive aid, they rebelled
and killed an emperor who tried to drive them away
[378, Adrianople].
United for the last time [379]. The Roman army
murdered thousands of rioters [390, Thessalonica] and the pope ordered the
emperor [Theodosius] to do public penance. The emperor performed the penance [390,
Milan]. This was the first time that a
Roman emperor submitted to a religious authority. After the emperor at Rome died, leaders
appointed a successor without consulting the emperor at Constantinople. Angry,
he sent his army to Italy, removed the 'pretender', and became the last emperor
to rule the entire empire. He died four
months later and his two sons divided the empire [395, East Rome and West
Rome].
Raids and attacks [395]. Visigoths attacked
the Balkans [395] and Italy [395] where the Roman army defeated them [402]. The western emperor moved his government from
Rome to Ravenna because it was stronger and safer [402]. Vandals and other East Germans crossed the
frozen Rhine River [406] and attacked cities and farms in France and Spain. Visigoths threatened the city of Rome and
forced its citizens to pay a ransom of gold and silver [408].
Visigoth homeland [410]. The emperor at
Ravenna refused to give the Visigoths land in the Balkans. The Visigoths asked the Romans to help depose
the emperor. When the Romans refused,
the Visigoths sacked Rome [410]. The
emperor at Ravenna recalled all of his troops from Britain and moved them
closer [410]. He asked the Visigoths to
help stop Vandal raids. As a reward for
their help, the emperor gave the Visigoths land in France [419, Toulouse]. The Vandals moved to Spain and then North
Africa [428]. They took control of a kingdom of Africa's northern coastline,
seized a fleet of ships, and used them for piracy.
Huns atttack [430]. The Huns forced the
emperor at Constantinople to pay a yearly tribute in return for peace [430].
When a new emperor stopped paying the tribute [450], the Huns attacked Italy
and France. A large army of Romans and
Visigoths opposed them and they withdrew [451, Cataulanian
Fields]. During the following year they
threatened Rome. The Pope met the Hun
leader outside the city and may have paid a ransom. The Huns did not attack the city. Vandals sailed from North Africa and sacked
Rome [455].
Ostrogoth kingdom [455]. An army leader at
Ravenna [Orestes] named his son emperor. A military officer [Odoacer] forced the child
ruler to abdicate and set himself in power as king. The emperor at Constantinople asked the Ostrogoths to expel the rebel king and gave them one third
of Italy as a reward [488].
Franks expand [507]. The West German
Franks, who were Roman Christians, attacked the East German Visigoths, who were
Arian Christians [507]. The Visigoths
abandoned their kingdom in France and formed a new kingdom in Spain.
Byzantium strong [527]. Justinian, emperor
at Constantinople, paid gold to Persia to end a war and then used his troops to
rebuild the Roman Empire. He recovered
North Africa from the Vandals [532], Italy from the Ostrogoths
[552], and part of Spain [554]. The
leaders at Rome no longer played a powerful role. The West German Franks and
Byzantium assumed the leading roles as successors to Rome.
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