Geography
People & Society
Government & Law
Rome & Warfare
Culture & Legacy
100

This river runs through Rome and helped provide water and a trade route.

The Tiber River

100

The early people who controlled Rome as a monarchy and influenced Roman culture; Romans initially resented them.

Etruscans

100

Rome’s executives in the Republic were two leaders called these (chief executives).

Consuls

100

he basic unit of the Roman army consisting of about 5,000 soldiers was called this.

legion

100

The period of relative peace and prosperity initiated under Augustus is called this two-word Latin phrase.

Pax Romana

200

Rome was built on these geographic features; there are traditionally seven of them.

Hills

200

The social class of wealthy aristocrats and military leaders in Rome.

Patricians

200

The written law code of Rome that was publicly displayed and used to govern behavior.

Twelve Tables

200

The series of wars between Rome and this North African city-state for control of the Mediterranean.

Carthaginians (or Carthage)

200

The emperor who made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire.

Theodosius (or Emperor Theodosius I)

300

The mountain range to the north of Italy that protected Rome and influenced climate and travel.

The Alps

300

The common working citizens — merchants, artisans, and small farmers — were called this.

Plebeians

300

Rome could appoint this emergency leader for up to six months during a crisis.

dictator

300

This Carthaginian commander famously used war elephants against Rome (first name acceptable).

Hannibal

300

The roads and safe sea routes of the Roman Empire helped this religion spread throughout the empire.

Christianity

400

Name the peninsula where Rome is located; its shape helped Rome control the Mediterranean.

Italian Peninsula

400

Name the language family descended from Latin that includes Spanish, Italian, and French.

Romance languages

400

This earlier law code, created in ancient Mesopotamia, is often compared to Rome’s Twelve Tables.

Code of Hammurabi

400

Soldiers hired from other regions who fought for pay rather than loyalty to Rome were called these.

mercenary soldiers (mercenaries)

400

Romans adopted many gods, art, and literature from this earlier Mediterranean civilization.

Greeks

500

Compared with Greece, Italy had more of this useful resource, which supported larger populations and farming.

Usable farmland

500

These artistic decorations used small pieces of tile, glass, or stone to form images; common in Roman homes.

mosaic

500

One Roman legal principle: a person is considered innocent until this happens.

“proven guilty”

500

One effect of Rome’s military and expansion that contributed to the fall of the Republic: pay for soldiers increased but their loyalty shifted to these people instead of the state.

loyalty shifted to generals

500

Name two ways Roman law influenced modern legal ideas.

Written laws (Twelve Tables), burden of proof on accuser, presumption of innocence, punishment for actions not thoughts