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Chapter 14 The Roman Republic. Section One The Government. At the head of the Roman Republic were two consuls , administrators and military leaders, who were chosen each year. As each had the power to veto , or say no to, the acts of the other, both had to agree before any law was passed.
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Chapter 14 The Roman Republic
Section One The Government
At the head of the Roman Republic were two consuls, administrators and military leaders, who were chosen each year. As each had the power to veto, or say no to, the acts of the other, both had to agree before any law was passed. • Next in importance was the Senate. Three hundred senators were chosen for life to handle daily problems and advise consuls. • Judges, assemblies, and tribunes, or government officials who protected the rights of plebeians, were also part of the Roman government. • In 450 B.C., Roman laws were carved on 12 bronze tablets known as the Twelve Tables and placed in the Forum. • The election of tribunes and recording of laws were the first steps to a more democratic government.
FOCUS QUESTONS • for • The Roman Republic • Where did all roads of the Roman Empire lead? • What was the one outfit worn by common Romans? • In what type of housing did most Romans live? • Where did Romans go to buy goods or listen for news? • What two methods did Romans use for writing?
Section Two Roman Expansion
The Romans worked to protect their republic because they were afraid that the Etruscans would try to get back control of Rome. To protect their new boundaries, the Romans either conquered their neighbors or made alliances with them. • By 146 B.C., Rome ruled most of the Mediterranean world. • The Romans gained territory because their strong army was organized into legions. Each legion contained some 5,000 soldiers called legionaries and was divided into groups of 60 to 120 soldiers. The Romans were mild rulers, and as a result many enemies of Rome became loyal Roman allies.
CAUSE EFFECT Romans were afraid the Etruscans would control Rome Romans crossed the Tiber River and conquered Etruscan cities Romans protected their new boundaries Rome conquered neighbors or made alliances with them Rome conquered neighbors or made alliances with them Romans became the leading power in Rome (and the Mediterranean) The legions were smaller and faster The legion had advantages over the phalanx Roman soldiers spent hours practicing with the double-edged sword and marching Legionaries were well trained Soldiers and supplies could move faster They built roads out of lava The Romans were mild rulers The Romans did not tax people they conquered Romans let conquered people keep their own government and take care of their own affairs Many enemies of Rome became loyal allies
Section Three The Punic Wars
By 264 B.C., the Romans had conquered some Greek city-states in southern Italy, bringing them into contact with the Phoenician city of Carthage. • The Romans felt threatened by the Carthaginians, and they also wanted Sicily’s granaries. In 264 B.C., the Romans and Carthaginians clashed in a war that lasted for 23 years. It was the first of three wars between Rome and Carthage that came to be known as the Punic Wars. • Carthage’s military strength lay in its navy, while Rome’s lay in its army which defeated the Carthaginians. In 241 B.C., the Carthaginians agreed to make peace and left Sicily. • In 218 B.C., the Second Punic War began.The Carthaginians, led by General Hannibal Barca, attacked the Roman army by land from the north. He was unable to capture Rome. Then, the Romans attacked Carthage, and Hannibal was called home to defend it and he lost his first battle.
In 201 B.C., Carthage agreed to pay Rome a huge sum of money and to give up all its territories, including Spain. To prevent Carthage from gaining power, the Romans attacked in 149 B.C., the Third Punic War. In 146 B.C. the Greek city-state of Corinth and some of its allies refused to obey a Roman order. The Romans attacked Corinth and burned it to the ground. Rome became the leading power of the Mediterranean world.
Focus Questions • for • The Punic Wars • Why hadn’t the Romans fought any battles at sea? • What did Carthage have to pay Rome after its defeat in the first Punic War? • Which mountain range did Hannibal cross to invade Rome? • Which battle served as the worst defeat suffered by the Roman legions where 50,000 lost their lives? • What was Scipio’s plan to win the second Punic War? • How did Hannibal die?
Section Four Effects of Conquest
The conquests and the wealth changed Rome’s economy and government. Among the changes were • the replacement of small farms by large estates. • the coming of slavery. • a movement from farms to cities. • The decline of the Roman Republic. • Rome’s conquests brought changes in agriculture. Large estates called latifundias replaced the small farms. Hannibal’s invasion was the main reason for this change. Roman farmers had burned their fields and crops to prevent Hannibal’s soldiers from living off the land. • By the end of the Second Punic War, much of the land was ruined, and small farmers could not afford to restore the land.Patricians and rich business people bought small farms and combined them to make latifundias. • Political unrest grew greater and Rome was no longer politically stable.
Another change in agriculture was in who worked the land. The Romans sent thousands of prisoners to Rome as enslaved people to live and work on latifundias. The farmers who had sold their land could stay and work for the new owner or move to the city. Almost all moved to Rome into crowded apartments with terrible living conditions. Most farmers could not get jobs and got money by selling their votes to politicians. As Rome’s rule spread beyond Italy, the Romans began to demand taxes and enslaved people. Tax contracts were sold to people called publicans who collected taxes from the conquered people. By about 135 B.C., Rome was in a great deal of trouble. The gap between rich and poor and political unrest grew greater and Rome was no longer politically stable.
EFFECTS OF CONQUEST Before After Latifundias Small farms Latifundias produced crops, sheep and cattle for sale at market Small farmers grew wheat for food Romans began to import wheat Romans no longer grew wheat To prevent Hannibal’s men living off the land, Roman farmers burned and ruined their land Roman farmers plowed, seeded and harvested their land Farmers worked the land Slaves lived and worked on latifundias Farmers sold land and worked for new owner of moved to the city Farmers owned their land People lived in crowded wooden apartments under terrible conditions People lived on farms Farmers were able to make a living Businesses were staffed by slaves; farmers could sell their votes Rome controlled Italy Rome conquered the Mediterranean and demanded taxes and slaves from conquered areas Roman business was good Rich Romans wanted luxury goods from Greece and Syria
Section Five Roman Leadership
Over the next 100 years, many different popular leaders–reformers and generals– tried to improve conditions in Rome. • Tiberius Gracchus became a tribune in 133 B.C. and was the first reformer. He wanted to limit the amount of land a person could own. He was killed in a riot staged by the Senate when he ran for a second term as tribune. • In 123 B.C., Tiberius Gracchus’s younger brother, Gaius Gracchus, was elected tribune. When the Senate began to feel threatened by his ideas in 121 B.C. they had him killed. • In 107 B.C., General Gaius Marius, a military hero, became consul. Marius thought he could end Rome’s troubles by setting up a professional army, open to everyone. • Another general, Lucius Cornelius Sulla, was given a military command that Marius wanted. Marius tried to get the assembly to take the command away from Sulla. An angry Sulla marched his army and seized Rome and civil war broke out.When it was over, Sulla made himself dictator, or absolute ruler, of Rome.
When Sulla retired, a new group of generals fought for control of Rome. In 60 B.C., political power passed to a triumvirate, or a group of three persons with equal power. • Julius Caesar finally gained control, after a power struggle, in 48 B.C. In 58 B.C., Caesar was named governor of a Roman province and built up a large, strong loyal army. The Senate ordered him in 50 B.C. to break up his legions and return to Rome.Instead, Caesar entered the city at the head of his troops, and by 46 B.C., he was dictator of Rome. • Caesar brought about many reforms of land and wealth distribution. Some Romans were afraid that Caesar planned to make himself king. As he entered the Senate on March 15, 44 B.C., Caesar was stabbed to death.
Political power passed to another triumvirate. Marcus Antonius, or Mark Antony, Caesar’s closest follower and a popular general, took command of Rome’s territories in the East. . Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, one of Caesar’s top officers, took over the rule of Africa. Octavian, Caesar’s grand-nephew and adopted son, took charge of the West. For a while, the triumvirate worked. Then fights broke out, leaving Octavian as sole ruler of the Roman Empire in 31 B.C.
Roman Reformers Limit the amount of land a person could own 9300 acres) Give excess to landless Small farmers lost land Assembly put his idea into effect More food for Romans 1 out of 3 Roman s received free wheat Wheat prices were high Sell wheat to the poor at below market prices Set up a professional army Offered pay, land, pensions and booty Ex-soldiers lost land when they left for service in the army Soldiers gave loyalty to generals not Roman government Marched his army on Rome and seized the capital Doubled the size of the Senate Marius received military command Sulla wanted Senate did not have enough power First time a Roman commander led his soldiers against Rome Senate power increased; tribune were weakened Land issue Farmers in city can not find work Gave veterans land Public works projects New colonies overseas were populated by Romans Gave jobs to thousands