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Number of hills on which Rome was built |
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The Italian peninsula extended into this sea |
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Creature who cared for Rome's legendary twins as infants |
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Sea on Italy's east coast |
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Legendary twins who fought to become Rome's first king |
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Invading people who founded Rome |
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Northern people who took over Rome from its founders |
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People who established city-states on islands south of Italy |
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Etruscan method of making marshes useful |
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Bridge-building element Latins borrowed from Etruscans |
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Etruscan system of government |
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River Caesar was ordered not to cross on his way back to Rome |
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Western boundary of the Roman Empire at its height |
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Southern boundary of the Roman Empire at its height |
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Northern land invaded by Caesar, secured under Claudius |
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Region north of Rome, today's France |
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Roman Empire at its height |
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The two rivers that were the northern boundary of the Roman Empire at its height |
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One of Rome's two main hills |
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Source of Etruscans' written language |
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Roman form of government in which the citizens who voted held power |
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Extended period of peace that Augustus brought to Rome |
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Popular public meeting places for both men and women |
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Popular public entertainment staged by the government |
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Professional public fighters |
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Rulers who held absolute power for no more than six months |
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Joint officials who were chief executives and military leaders |
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Rome's main public square |
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Basic unit of the Roman army |
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Elected officials who protected plebeians' rights |
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Class that expanded as the large estates grew |
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Class that was driven from the countryside to the cities |
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Basic principles of Roman law |
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Water-transporting systems |
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Basic occupation of people in the Roman Empire during the peaceful years |
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Method of succession developed during the empire |
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Type of housing for Rome's lower classes |
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Social and economic division that weakened both the republic and the empire |
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Famed soldier and politician who became sole ruler and was later assassinated |
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The day Caesar was assassinated |
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Caesar's top general, who fell in love with Cleopatra |
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Caesar's grandnephew and political heir |
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"Exalted One," Octavian's new title |
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Octavian's status as absolute ruler of the Roman Empire |
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Emperor blamed for the Roman fire of C.E. 64 |
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Brothers who were "reformer" tribunes |
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Senator and general who opposed Marius and seized Rome |
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Co-ruler defeated by Caesar in Greece |
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One of Caesar's two close friends who became his killers |
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The third Good emperor, who had a defensive wall built in Britain |
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Last of the Good Emperors; a Stoic philosopher |
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Adopted son and successor of Augustus |
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Insane successor of Tiberius |
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Succession of five wise and able rulers |
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Old lawyer/ruler who adopted his successor in C.E. 96 |
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Orator and politician who supported Pompey |
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Conflict that broke out while Marius and Sulla were contending for power |
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General of Carthage who invaded Italy in 218 B.C.E. |
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Mountain range crossed by Hannibal and his troops |
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Large animals that crossed the mountains with Hannibal |
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New, eastern capital established by Constantine |
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Peoples whose tribes invaded the Roman Empire |
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Fierce Asiatic tribe that drove other tribes toward the empire |
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Leader of the Huns; "the Scourge of God" |
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Great commercial power that fought with Rome |
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The wars between Rome and Carthage |
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Geographic area where Carthage was located |
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Roman general who defeated Hannibal |
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Reforming ruler who divided the empire's administration into East and West |
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Strong ruler who moved the capital to the East |
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Tribe permitted to cross the Danube into imperial territory that later sacked Rome |
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Germanic chief whose army sacked Rome |
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Major political reason for Rome's fall |
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a lack of fixed succession |
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Major economic reason for Rome's fall |
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expenses greater than revenues (and then inflation) |
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Major social reason for Rome's fall |
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moral decline/lack of patriotism |
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Area north of Greece acquired by Rome in 148 B.C.E. |
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The two islands to the west of Italy lost by Carthage in the First Punic War |
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What Romans did to destroy Carthaginian land |
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plowed salt into the fields |
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Series of emperors enthroned and assassinated by the army |
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