republic
a form of government in which power is in the hands of representatives and leaders are elected by the citizens who have the right to vote
patrician
in ancient rome a member of the wealthy, privileged upper class
plebeian
in ancient rome on eo fthe common farmers, artisans,and merchants who made up most of the population
tribune
in ancient rome an official elected by the plebeians to protect their rights
consul
in the roman empire one of the two powerful officials elected each year to command the army and direct the government
senate
in ancient rome the supreme governing body, originally made up only of aristocrats
dictator
in ancient rome a political leader given absolute power to make laws and command the army for a limited time
legion
a military unit of the ancient roman army, made up of about 5000 foot soldiers and a group of soldiers horseback
punic wars
a series of three wars between rome and carthage; resulted in the destruction of carthage and rome's dominance over the western mediterranean
hannibal
carthaginian general; brilliant military strategist who wanted to avenge carthage's earlier defeat (mastermind behind second punic war)
civil war
a conflict between two political groups within the same country
julius caesar
military leader who joined forces with crassus, pompey,elected consul in 59 B.C. ruled in triumvirate; appointed himself governor of gaul; led his legions in a grueling but successful campaign to conquer all of gaul
triumvirate
in ancient rome a group of three leaders sharing control of the government
augustus
octavian "exalted one"; "supreme military commander"; adopted son of caesar; joined forces with two others
pax romana
a period of peace and prosperity throughout the roman empire
JESUS
a jew, was born in the town of bethlehem in judea; raised in the village of nazareth in northerm palestine; did good works
apostle
one of the followers of Jesus who preached and spread his teachings
paul
apostle, had enormous influence on christianity's development; jew who had never met JESUS and at first was an enemy of christianity
diaspora
the dispersal of the jews from their homeland in palestine--especially during the period of more than 1800 years that followed the romans' destruction of the temple in jerusalem in A.D. 70
constantine
roman emperor, announced the end of persecution to christians
bishop
a high-ranking christian official who supervises a number of local churches
peter
apostle who had traveled to rome from jerusalem and became the first bishop there
pope
the bishop of rome, heade of the roman catholic church
inflation
decline in the value of money, accompanied by a rise in the prices of goods and services
mercenary
a soldier who is paid to fight in a foreign army
diocletian
a strong-willed army leader, became the new emperor; ruled with an iron fist and severely limited personal freedoms; restored order to the empire and increased its strength, doubled the size of the roman army and sought control of inflation
constantinople
city of constantine; east would survive; west would fall
attila
hun; powerful chieftain; 100000 soldiers; terrorized both halves of the empire
greco-roman culture
an ancient culture that developed from a blending of greek, hellenistic, and roman cultures
pompeii
has best examples of roman painting; by mount vesuvius when it erupted covering it in a thick layer of ash and killing about 2000 residents
virgil
poet, who spent ten years writing the most famous work of Latin literature (Aeneid)
tacitus
roman historian, notable among ancient historians because he presented the facts accurately
aqueduct
a pipeline or channel built to carry water to populated areas