1/38
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced | Call with Kai |
|---|
No analytics yet
Send a link to your students to track their progress
753 BC
Foundation of Rome
509 BC
Beginning of the Roman Republic
264–241 BC
The first Punic War
218–201 BC
The Second Punic War
146 BC
The destruction of Carthage and Corinth
91 - 88 BC
The Social War
31 BC - 68 AD
Julio-Claudian Dynasty
15 March 44 BC
Assassination of Julius Caesar
31 BC - 14 AD
Reign of Augustus
68 - 69 AD
The year of Four Emporers
69 - 96 AD
The Flavaian Dynasty
96 - 192 AD
The Antonine Dynasty
193 - 235 AD
Severan Dynasty
212 AD
Constitutio Antoniniana
235 - 284 AD
The Crisis of the Third Century
285 - 311 AD
Tetrarchy
306 - 337 AD
Reign of Constantine
325 AD
Council of Nicaea
11th may 330 AD
Foundation of Constantinople
Archaeology
The study of the ancient world through material remains
Historiography
Written history from the time period being studied.
IMPORTANT: Allows us to understand how the Roman communicated, their literacy, and what records were important to them.
Primary Source
A first hand account of a historical event
IMPROTANT: Allows us to get a written testimony of how and why events occurred through someone’s lived experience.
Secondary Source
A second hand account of a historical event.
IMPORTANT: Allows us to interpret information from the past to draw our own conclusions about what we believe about history
Mixed source
A source that includes both first and secondhand information from historical events
IMPORTANT: Allow us to analyze bias and identify gaps in history amist differing perspectives. (Germanius statue)
Mythistory
The legends passed down from ancient Rome that make claims about its orgin.
IMPORTANT: It provides ties to Romulus and aeneas to roman lineage
The twelve tables
Twelve laws written in stone that helped form Romes early government.
IMPROTANT: Allow us to see how the Romans treated law, what needed to be enforced, and how they viewed themselves as romans
Aeneas
The man who led the Romans out of Troy.
IMPORTANT: It gave the roman a divine lineage to trace back to. Aeneas, said to be the son of Venus connects the romans to the gods.
Romulus
The original founder of Rome
IMPORTANT: Without him, there would be no Rome. He allowed the romans to claim divine heritage, as he was the son of Mars.