Roman History (dates & IDS)

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Last updated 10:39 PM on 4/27/26
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39 Terms

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753 BC

Foundation of Rome

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509 BC

Beginning of the Roman Republic

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264–241 BC

The first Punic War

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218–201 BC

The Second Punic War

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146 BC

The destruction of Carthage and Corinth

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91 - 88 BC

The Social War

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31 BC - 68 AD

Julio-Claudian Dynasty

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15 March 44 BC

Assassination of Julius Caesar

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31 BC - 14 AD

Reign of Augustus

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68 - 69 AD

The year of Four Emporers

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69 - 96 AD

The Flavaian Dynasty

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96  - 192 AD

The Antonine Dynasty

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193 - 235 AD

Severan Dynasty

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212 AD

Constitutio Antoniniana

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235 - 284 AD

The Crisis of the Third Century

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285 - 311 AD

Tetrarchy

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306 - 337 AD

Reign of Constantine

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325 AD

Council of Nicaea

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11th may 330 AD

Foundation of Constantinople

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Archaeology

The study of the ancient world through material remains

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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.

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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.

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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

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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)

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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

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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

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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.

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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.

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