This lesson contains 29 slides, with interactive quizzes.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
Monarchy
Republic
hereditary
dictator
dynasty
2 consuls
king / emperor
senate
elections
Slide 1 - Drag question
Senate
Consul
Dictator
Patricians
Plebeians
Optimates
Populares
group of wise, old men that advised the king. Made laws in the Republic.
head of the senate in the Republic, had the right to command armies
temporary return of a single ruler with all powers of the old king
ruling class in Rome
non-patrician people of Rome
politicians who looked after the upper class (the patricians and the senate)
politicians who tried to help the plebeians
Slide 2 - Drag question
Gaius Marius
Julius Caesar
Princeps senatus
Caesar
Romanisation
Jesus of Nazareth
Constantine
Roman general, who was not a patrician. Became consul 7 times and reformed the Roman army
first senator. Spoke first in the senate. One of Augustus’ powers
title used by Augustus and later Roman emperors to describe their position. We call it an emperor as it is a monarch, but not a king
first Christian emperor (Mrs Den Boer addition: only during the last minutes of his life)
famous Roman general who conquered Gaul (58-50 BC). Killed because people thought he wanted to be king
to become more like the Romans
or Jesus Christ; said people should take care of each other and that after this life there was a new life in Heaven
Slide 3 - Drag question
Death of Julius Caesar
A
44 BC
B
33 AD
C
105 BC
D
27 BC
Slide 4 - Quiz
Start of the Republic
A
506 BC
B
509 AD
C
509 BC
D
510 BC
Slide 5 - Quiz
Marius is elected as consul for a second time
A
44 BC
B
33 AD
C
105 BC
D
27 BC
Slide 6 - Quiz
Death of Jesus of Nazareth
A
44 BC
B
33 AD
C
105 BC
D
27 BC
Slide 7 - Quiz
Start of the Roman Empire
A
44 BC
B
33 AD
C
105 BC
D
27 BC
Slide 8 - Quiz
Below are four terms/concepts. Which concept does not fit in the list?
Senator - Rich - patrician - proletarian
A
Senator
B
Rich
C
Patrician
D
Proletarian
Slide 9 - Quiz
Why did Rome change into an aristocracy after 509 B.C.
A
A small group of people held the power
B
Women did not have the right to vote
C
The Romans were allowed to vote for their representatives
D
Caesar became a dictator
Slide 10 - Quiz
The Romans conquered many areas. In which parts of the world were these conquered territories located?
A
Europe - Africa - Asia
B
Europe - Africa - America
C
Europe - America - Asia
D
Africa - Asia - America
Slide 11 - Quiz
Which statement is correct?
A
Caesar was the first Roman emperor
B
The conquest of Gaul caused the end of the Roman Republic
C
Augustus was the first Roman emperor
D
The Roman Republic changed into the Empire without bloodshed
Slide 12 - Quiz
After the Roman civil wars there was a period of peace; the Pax Romana. How did the Romans create the Pax Romana?
A
The borders of the Roman Empire were well guarded
B
There was a lot of war and those wars were won
C
The Senate made good laws
Slide 13 - Quiz
What positive consequences did the Pax Romana have?
A
Trade and prosperity were declined (became less).
B
The empire kept getting bigger and safer
C
Camps were built everywhere
D
From then on everyone had to pay taxes to the emperor
Slide 14 - Quiz
Rome had many forms of government. What is the correct chronological order of the forms of government? A. Republic B. Kingdom C. Empire
A
A - B - C
B
B - C - A
C
B - A - C
D
A - C - B
Slide 15 - Quiz
What do we call the group of people in the Roman Empire who had nothing but their own children?
A
Communist
B
Senators
C
Bourgeoisie
D
Proletarians
Slide 16 - Quiz
The Romans saw Christianity as a danger. Which statement is correct?
A
The Christians refused to worship the Roman gods and the emperor
B
The Christians set Rome on fire
C
The Christians refused to move to Rome
D
The Christians did not want to fight in the army
Slide 17 - Quiz
Christianity gained wide support among women, slaves and the poor. What is an explanation for this?
A
Equality before God and a better life after death was a pleasant prospect
B
Roman gods demanded sacrifices and the poor could not afford that
C
Jesus Christ spoke only to women and slaves
D
Jesus Christ promised the slaves freedom and the poor riches
Slide 18 - Quiz
Which emperor gave in AD 313. the Christians freedom of religion?
A
Julius Caesar
B
Augustus
C
Theodosius
D
Constantijn
Slide 19 - Quiz
Which emperor made in 380 AD. Christianity the State Religion in the Roman Empire?
A
Julius Caesar
B
Augustus
C
Theodosius
D
Constantijn
Slide 20 - Quiz
Below are three events. What is the correct chronological order? A. Christianity originated in Judea B. Emperors prohibit (verbieden) Christianity C. Preachers spread Christianity
A
A - B - C
B
A - C - B
C
B - C - A
D
C - A - B
Slide 21 - Quiz
Match the titles of Augustus with their explanations. (2p)
High priest of Jupiter
People’s tribune
Consul
Princeps senatus
I forbid
General
Speaking in senate
No one could hurt him
Slide 22 - Drag question
How could someone become a Roman citizen? Give two ways. (2p)
Slide 23 - Open question
Why did non-Romans want to have Roman citizenship? (2p)
Slide 24 - Open question
Explain how the Pax Romana led to the spread of Roman culture in Europe. (2p)
Slide 25 - Open question
Why was Julius Caesar so populair with the proletarians?
A
Conquered the whole of Gaul and added it to the Roman Empire
B
Enabled many of the poor to find work as farmers elsewhere
C
Gave lots of war booty to soldiers
D
Gave land to war veterans
Slide 26 - Quiz
What was an unforseen consequence of the changes Gaius Marius made to the army?
A
The soldiers demanded more salary
B
The soldiers demanded more war booty
C
Everybody wanted to become an officier
D
Soldiers were more loyal to their general than to the Republic
Slide 27 - Quiz
Why did giving Roman citizenship to people in provinces give Julius Caesar more power?
A
Citizenship was given to the more powerful and influential, thus giving J.C. more power and influence
B
Citizenship was only given to those who had enough money to buy it. More money = more power
C
Citizenship was given to the most loyal , thus giving support to Julius Caesar
Slide 28 - Quiz
Why was Julius assassinated?
A
Because he became too popular with the people in the provinces
B
Because the senators thought he wanted to end the Republic
C
Because the proletarians wanted to declare him king
D
Because the senators thought he wanted to become king