Ancient Rome- Sydney and Tommy

  • 650 BCE

    Etruscans Rule Rome

    Etruscans Rule Rome
    The Etruscans found Rome as just a village. They made a building program which turned Rome into a city. The Etruscans wore togas and short cloaks which the Romans later adopted. 2/7 kings that ruled Rome were Etruscans but were kicked out and subbed for a republic. The Etruscan economy was based on trade, agriculture, and mineral resources.
  • 264 BCE

    The 1st Punic War

    The 1st Punic War
    264BC- 261BC. The war began when the Romans sent an army to Sicily. The Carthaginians, who considered Sicily a part of their empire, thought of this as an act of war. The Romans created a large naval fleet to win over Sicily. Carthage gave up all rights to Sicily and paid a fine to Rome. Carthage vowed to get revenge which led to another Punic War.
  • 218 BCE

    The 2nd Punic War

    The 2nd Punic War
    218BC- 201BC. Hannabil decided to take the Carthaginians to fight in Rome. The Romans decided to meet them head on. Rome lost 40,000 men but refused to surrender. Rome decided to invade Carthaginian instead of fighting Hannibal in Italy. Carthage lost Spain and Rome became the dominant power in the Western Mediterranean.
  • 149 BCE

    3rd Punic War

    3rd Punic War
    149-146 B.C. The 3rd Punic War was the final struggle Rome had with Carthage. For years, many Romans wanted to destroy Carthage. 146 B.C. Carthage was destroyed, and the following 10 days Roman soldiers burned all of the buildings. Romans made the citizens-50,000 men, women, and children- sold into slavery. Carthage was then became a Roman province called Africa.
  • 73 BCE

    Spartacus

    Spartacus
    Spartacus escaped with 70-80 gladiators. He raised about 70,000 slaves to revolt. The Romans set an army after him. Spartacus beat the first two armies. The Romans finally defeated Spartacus' army and killed him.
  • 60 BCE

    1st Triumvirate

    1st Triumvirate
    Caesar joined forces with Crassus and Pompey to form the 1st Triumvirate. Each in command of a province. Crassus died in battle, leading senators wanted to make Pompey rule alone. Caesar refused and illegally crossed the Rubicon, the river that sets the boundary for his province. He then marched to Rome and started a civil war, which he won, and declared himself ruler in 45 B.C.
  • 43 BCE

    2nd Triumvirate

    2nd Triumvirate
    Octavian, Antony, and Lepidus formed the 2nd Triumvirate. Only two men split the empire, the empire still wasn't big enough for the both of them. Octavian and Antony soon came into conflict with each other, Antony allied with queen Cleopatra of Egypt. Octavian's forces crushed Antony and Cleopatra's army and navy at the Battle of Actium. The two then fled to Egypt and committed suicide.
  • 31 BCE

    The Age of Augustus

    The Age of Augustus
    31BC- AD14. In 27BC Octavian knew that the Republic could not be restored to the way it was before. The senate gave him the title Augustus which means the revered one. The system he established is called a principate which is first among equals. Officials continued to be elected but Augustus had more authority. This caused involvement in elections to decline.
  • 40

    Gospels begin to be written

    Gospels begin to be written
    40AD. The gospels were written about Jesus' time on earth. They were documented by four different people- Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. These are from four different point of views which means the wording is not the same. Mark is the shortest gospel. Luke is the longest gospel.
  • 70

    Colosseum

    Colosseum
    The colosseum was built by Emperor Vespasian as a gift to Rome. It was used to fight wild animals and gladiators. Two-thirds of the building has been destroyed over time. It held more than 50,000 spectators. The colosseum was used for 4 centuries. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGoRf1My62g
  • 80

    Colosseum Opens

    Colosseum Opens
    Was used for gladiator fights. Naval battles also taken place taken place here. Christians renounced going to these fights. There were battles between dwarves and women. Massacred anywhere from 5 to 9,000 animals a day. Also gladiators fought to death.
  • 313

    Constatine the First Christian Emperor

    Constatine the First Christian Emperor
    Constatine made Christianity legal. For the first time people were allowed to openly worship. Under him, churches were quickly built, not just in Rome but throughout the empire. In A.D. 391, the worship of other gods became illegal. Before Christianity was legal, many went to underground tombs to worship.
  • 476

    Fall of Roman Empire

    Fall of Roman Empire
    After Constatine, the empire kept on dividing into eastern and western parts. Many blame Christianity weakened military virtues. Another reason could be that one-tenth of the population was wiped out due to a plague. Traditional Roman values declined as Italians gained prominence. Rome was unable to put together a workable political system. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ITVUBXVyR8
  • Scripture Reflection

    Scripture Reflection
    Acts 17:26 says "He makes nations great, and destroy them; He enlarges nations, and guides them." God, even at the beginning when Rome wasn't Christian, He lead them. He also destroyed Rome. God enlarged Rome and guided them.