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Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington
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Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Ancient Roman Culture

By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington

Page 2: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Family• The father was the head of the

household.• The father was responsible for the

actions of any member of his household. If anyone in his family committed a crime he could be punished for something they did.

Page 3: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Education• There were 2 types of schools in Rome. The first

type was for children about 11 or 12. They learned to read, write, and do basic mathematics.

• For writing, they used a stylus and a wax tablet. • Older children would go to more advanced

schools where they did studies on topics such as public speaking.

• Girls rarely went to these schools as they were allowed to get married at the age of 12, where boys had to wait until they were 14 to get married.

Page 4: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Social Classes• Ancient Rome consisted of Upper,

middle, and lower class people.• In the Upper class there were: wealthy

landowners, nobles, and priests.• The middle class was mostly: farmers,

traders, and city workers.• In the lower class were enslaved

people.

Page 5: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Sports and games

• Roman Men excercised and practiced riding, horse racing, wrestling, boxing, archery and swimming.

• The gambled with ivory dice and played games similar to chess.

Page 6: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Leisure• Chariot racing was Rome’s most

popular pastime.• The public baths were something

Romans enjoyed doing.  People from nearly every class could attend the thermae(public baths) similar to modern day fitness clubs.

Page 7: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Clothing• Both men and women wore leather

sandals, or leather boots in cold weather.

• Women wore wooden hairsticks or wooden combs in their hair, that they could also use to comb their hair.

• Also men wear togas, also called tunics.

Page 8: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Houses• They made houses with sundried

brick on heavy timber.• Roman houses were built around an

open courtyard. The open roof vented smoke and let the rainwater in. The open center usually contained a leisure area with a bath, chairs, and sometimes a garden.

• The inside of the house contained rooms for the family, a dining room, and indoor bathrooms.

Page 9: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Food

• Meals were centered around corn, oil and wine. • Bread was the single most often eaten food in

Ancient Rome.• Fish and oysters were especially popular and meat

was in high demand as well.• Breakfast was often nothing more than a piece of

bread.• For the poor, meals consisted of porridge or bread

with meat and vegetables.• For the wealthy, the meal was divided into three

courses. The main course consisted of cooked vegetables and meats.

Page 10: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Reference Slide• http://www.hadrians.com/rome/romans/fun/roman_games.html • http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/romans/clothing/index.htm • http://rome.mrdonn.org/families.html • http://library.thinkquest.org/26602/diet.htm• http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/roman_education.htm • http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/cultural/oldworld/europe/ancient_roma

n_culture.html

• Human Heritage Book

Page 11: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Julius Caesar

By: Ariel Emberton, Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, & Megan

Pennington

Page 12: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Family• Father- Gaius Julius Caesar. • Mother- Aurelia.• First marriage to Cornelia Cinnilla, from

83 BC until her death in childbirth in 69 or 68 BC.

• Second marriage to Pompeia, from 67 BC until he divorced her around 61 BC.

• Third marriage to Calpurnia Pisonis, from 59 BC until Caesar's death.

Page 13: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Childhood• He was born in Rome in July

in the year 100 B.C.• His father Gaius Caesar, died

when Caesar was 16 years old.

Page 14: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Julius Caesar• Caesar married Cornelia, daughter of

Lucius Cornelius Cinna in 84 B.C.• However, in 82 B.C., Caesar was ordered

to divorce his wife by Lucius Cornelius Sulla, an enemy of the radicals. Caesar refused and left Rome for military service in Asia and Cilicia.

• In 78 B.C. he returned when Sulla died and began his political career as a prosecuting advocate.

Page 15: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Military and War efforts

• In 60 B.C. political power passed that a group of 3 people also known as a triumvirate was to rule Rome.• Julius, Marcus Licinius Crassus,

Gnaeus Pompeius were in the 1st triumvirate.

Page 16: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

The fall of Roman Republic

• He wanted to defend tribunes that were recently casted out of Rome.

• Pompey had to leave Rome with senators to escape from Caesar’s army.

• Labienus abandoned Julius during the war.

• Pompey’s army either retreatedor joined Caesar’s.• Pompey escaped to Egypt where he was murdered by Ppolemeus.

Page 17: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Caesar and Cleopatra

• There was a civil war in Egypt between Cleopatra and her brother at the same time as the fall of Roman Republic.

• Cleopatra wanted Caesar on her side knowing he had a huge army.

• They weren’t as successful as they planned because when they met at Alexandria’s Palace, they were surrounded by a mad local population.

• Shortly after Caesar left Egypt, Cleopatra gave birth to Caesar’s son-Cesarion.

Page 18: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Achievements• He was named governor of the Roman

province in 58 B.C.• He built large and strong armies.• In 7 years he conquered Northern France

and Belgium.• He invaded Britain.• In 50 B.C., the senate told Caesar to break

up his legions because they thought he was beginning to become too strong, he didn’t and took over Rome.

Page 19: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

His Death• Romans were afraid that

Caesar planned to make himself king.• About 60 men, thought and

worked out a plan to kill him.• He got 23 stabs by a dagger but only one killing.

Page 20: Ancient Roman Culture By: Bailey Copas, Brooklyn Bryant, Ariel Emberton, & Megan Pennington.

Reference Slide• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Caesar• Human Heritage Book• http://www.ancient-rome.biz/julius-caesar-bio

graphy.html