SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND SOCIETY
Ancient Civilizations
              MODULE 1-Lesson 1.C
   ROMAN
CIVILIZATION
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               COLA JANE I.
    Roman Civilization
    The successor to the Greek
    civilization in the Mediterranean
    basin and the Near East was Rome,
    an Italian city-state that grew to
    be an empire and the dominant
    power in East and West alike.
    Although Rome is considered the
    successor to Hellenistic Greece,
    they actually overlapped in time,
    and Rome itself is in many ways a
    Hellenistic entity.
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    Roman Civilization
    Rome is situated about halfway down the
    western coast of the Italian Peninsula,
    where one of the country’s few sizable
    rivers, the Tiber, flows through fertile
    plains before emptying into the sea.
    ***The Italian Peninsula was invaded innumerable
    times throughout history. The native Italic peoples
    of the north and center were taken over by the more
    civilized Etruscans in the tenth to eighth centuries
    B.C.E. Rome was probably founded by the
    unification of several villages under a single
    government in the eighth century, as Roman legend
    states.
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    Roman Civilization
    ⬗ Among the many legacies of Roman dominance are the widespread use of
      the Romance languages (Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese and
      Romanian) derived from Latin, the modern Western alphabet and
      calendar, and the emergence of Christianity as a major world religion.
    ⬗ After 450 years as a republic, Rome became an empire in the wake of
      Julius Caesar’s rise and fall in the first century B.C.
    ⬗ The long and triumphant reign of its first emperor, Augustus, began a
      golden age of peace and prosperity; by contrast, the Roman Empire’s
      decline and fall by the fifth century A.D. was one of the most dramatic
      implosions in the history of human civilization.
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    Roman Civilization
    ROMAN INFANTRYMAN.
    This picture shows a bronze figure of a Roman
    legionary in full dress at the time of the empire in
    the second century C.E. The soldier’s vest is
    constructed of overlapping metal bands that,
    although heavy and awkward, effectively protected
    him from enemy thrusts. The Trustees of The British Museum/Art Resource,
    NY
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    Roman Civilization
    A ROMAN EMPEROR.
    The Roman preference for realism in their
    pictorial arts is shown by this bust of a man
    assumed to be the Emperor Macrin. Although
    their techniques were generally dependent on
    classical Greek models, the Romans soon
    progressed beyond the desire to merely imitate.
    Bust of Marcus Claudius Tacitus (c.200–276) or Marcus Opelius Macrinus (164-218) (marble),
    Roman, (3rd century AD) / Louvre, Paris, France / Bridgeman Images
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    Roman Civilization
    ROMAN FAMILY.
     The ancient Romans, as a whole, passed
    laws that supported conservative social
    values. One of these was the importance of
    the family and honoring the family
    ancestors. Despite sumptuary laws that
    denied rights to women and children, most
    families were closely knit, and the love that
    existed in the family and between husbands
    and wives seem to differ little from modern
    families. This fact is well attested by the
    funerary reliefs, like this one, and grave
    inscriptions that still can be seen in the
    tombs, graveyards, and catacombs around
    and beneath the ancient city.
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    Roman Civilization
                         The Spread of
                         Christianity,
                         300–800 C.E.
                         After the emperor
                         Theodosius made
                         Christianity the official
                         imperial religion,
                         Christianity spread
                         dramatically throughout
                         the Roman Empire.
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 Roman Civilization
     ROMAN AQUEDUCT IN
     SPAIN.
     This modern photo shows the
     enduring nature of Roman civic
     architecture all around the
     Mediterranean basin. This
     aqueduct could still be used by
     the citizens of Segovia, Spain, to
     bring fresh water to them. Similar
     structures survive in southern
     France and in Turkey.
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 Roman Civilization
     Many ancient Roman structures like the Pantheon, the
     Colosseum, and the Roman Forum are still standing
     today thanks to the development of Roman cement and
     concrete.
     The Romans were also known to contribute to public
     discourse using official texts detailing military, legal,
     and civil issues.
     Known as Acta Diurna, or “daily acts,” these early
     newspapers were written on metal or stone and then
     posted in heavily trafficked areas like the Roman
     Forum.
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 Roman Civilization                                    Roman engineers improved on
                                                       arches by flattening their shape
                                                       to create what is known as a
                                                       segmental arch and repeating
                                                       them at various intervals to build
                                                       stronger supports that could span
                                                       large gaps when used in bridges
                                                       and aqueducts. Along with
                                                       columns, domes and vaulted
                                                       ceilings, the arch became one
                                                       of the defining characteristics
                                                       of the Roman architectural
                                                       style.
              To ensure effective administration of their sprawling domain, the Romans
              built the most sophisticated system of roads the ancient world had ever
              seen. These Roman roads—many of which are still in use today—were
              constructed with a combination of dirt, gravel, and bricks made from
              granite or hardened volcanic lava.
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 Roman Civilization
     The Romans invented many surgical tools and pioneered the use of the cesarean section,
     but their most valuable contributions to medicine came on the battlefield. Under the
     leadership of Augustus, they established a military medical corps that was one of the first
     dedicated field surgery units.
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 Impacts of the Roman Civilization
     ⬗ The Roman greatness was marked by their willingness to receive other
       people's ideas for their own purposes.
     ⬗ Their architecture, technology, city planning, art, and military planning all
       resulted from other people’s influences.
     ⬗ The Romans brought Greek ideas, modified them, and transmitted them
       throughout the western world. In fact without Roman conquest, Greek
       ideas would not have reached the west.
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                    END of Lesson 1.C
                                                        Ancient Civilizations
Sources:
Adler, P. J., & Pouwels, R. L. (2017). World Civilizations (8th ed.). Cengage Learning US.
https://www.history.com/news/10-innovations-that-built-ancient-rome                          COLA JANE I. BAGUIO