CHAPTER TIMELINE
CHAPTER REVIEW
Upon Reflection
Q How did Rome’s contact with the Hellenistic world
affect Roman civilization in the second and first
centuriesB.C.E.?
Q How did Rome achieve its empire from 264 to 133
B.C.E., and in the course of its expansion, what
happened to the political structure and the political
values of the Roman republic?
Q Was the fall of the Roman republic due to systemic
institutional weaknesses or the personal ambitions
of generals and politicians? Why?
Key Terms
consuls(p. 98)
praetors(p. 98)
imperium(p. 98)
quaestors(p. 98)
aediles(p. 98)
senate(p. 98)
centuriate assembly(p. 98)
patricians(p. 99)
plebeians(p. 99)
tribunes of the plebs(p. 99)
council of the plebs(p. 99)
plebiscita(p. 99)
paterfamilias(p. 106)
latifundia(p. 107)
nobiles(p. 112)
optimates(p. 112)
populares(p. 112)
equestrian order(p. 112)
Suggestions for Further Reading
GENERAL SURVEYS Good surveys of Roman history include
C. S. Mackay,Ancient Rome: A Military and Political History
(Cambridge, 2004), andM. T. Boatwright, D. J. Gargola, and
R. J. A. Talbert, The Romans: From Village to Empire
(New York, 2004).
500 B.C.E. 406 B.C.E. 312 B.C.E. 218 B.C.E. 124 B.C.E. 30 B.C.E.
Caesar as dictator
Conquest of the Mediterranean
Conquest of Italy
Struggle of the orders Decline and collapse of the Republic
Reforms of the Gracchi
Plays of Plautus Poems of Catullus
Works of Cicero
Republic begins
Twelve Tables
118 Chapter 5The Roman Republic
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