$100
This reformer’s land redistribution plan threatened elite control by reclaiming public land held illegally by the wealthy.$200
→ Who is Tiberius Gracchus?
$100
He crossed the Rubicon, triggering civil war.
→ Who is Julius Caesar?
$100
This group rejected Roman rule violently and led revolts like Masada.
→ Who are the Zealots?
$100
This period saw rapid turnover of emperors and civil war.
→ What is the Crisis of the Third Century?
$100
This event traditionally marks the fall of the Western Roman Empire.
→ What is the deposition of Romulus Augustulus (476 CE)?
His military reforms shifted loyalty from the state to generals by recruiting landless citizens.
→ Who is Gaius Marius?
$200
This battle ended the Roman Republic and marked the rise of Octavian.
→ What is the Battle of Actium?
$200
This sect emphasized communal living, purity, and withdrawal from society.
→ Who are the Essenes?
$200
This reform divided the empire into four rulers.
→ What is the Tetrarchy?
$200
This Byzantine emperor attempted to restore Roman glory through reconquest and law codes.
→ Who is Justinian?
$300
This general marched on Rome itself, setting a precedent that political disputes could be resolved through military force.
→ Who is Sulla?
$300
This title allowed Octavian to maintain republican appearances while holding real power.
→ What is “Princeps”?
$300
Jesus’ teachings most directly challenged Roman authority in this indirect way.
→ What is promoting a moral/spiritual kingdom over political power?
$300
Diocletian’s reforms primarily aimed to solve this structural problem.
→ What is governing a vast empire and unstable succession?
→ Who is Constantine?
$300
This religion spread rapidly through trade, conquest, and shared belief systems across Afro-Eurasia.
→ What is Islam?
$400
The First Triumvirate formed less out of friendship and more because these three men shared this common political problem.
→ What is opposition from the Senate blocking their ambitions?
$400
Explain how Augustus stabilized Rome without openly declaring himself king.
→ He preserved republican institutions (Senate, consuls) while controlling the army, provinces, and finances.
$400
This policy allowed Christianity to spread legally within the empire under Constantine.
→ What is the Edict of Milan (policy of tolerance)?
$400
This emperor moved the capital east, reshaping the empire’s future.
→ Who is Constantine?
$400
This ruler revived imperial authority in Western Europe and was crowned by the pope.
→ Who is Charlemagne?
$500
Explain why the rise of client armies made the Republic structurally unstable, not just politically tense.
→ Armies became loyal to generals instead of the state, allowing individuals to seize power through force, undermining republican institutions.
$500
Why does the Pax Romana reflect elite perspective rather than universal peace?
→ It was peaceful for Rome’s core but involved continued violence and suppression in provinces.
$500
Explain why Christianity spread successfully despite persecution.
→ It appealed to the poor, offered moral equality, built tight communities, and martyrdom strengthened belief.
$500
Explain why moving the capital to Constantinople strengthened the empire.
→ Better defense, control of trade routes, and distance from western instability.
$500
Explain how the manorial system reflects both stability and limitation in medieval society.
→ It created local self-sufficiency and order but restricted mobility, trade, and economic growth.