4.2 Roman society

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Slide 1: Mind map
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This lesson contains 37 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 3 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

Items in this lesson

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Slide 1 - Mind map

Success criteria
You can explain:
  • How Rome was governed first
  • How Rome started to conquer areas
  • How Rome became a world empire and how the empire was governed
  • How civil wars led to the imperial period
  • How emperors brought peace to the empire

Slide 2 - Slide

4.2 Roman society

Slide 3 - Slide

Success criteria
You can explain:
  • How and why the Roman economy thrived
  • What social differences there were in the empire
  • How Roman rulers treated the people
  • What the position of slaves was in Roman society

Slide 4 - Slide

What is an agricultural urban society?
A
All people live from agriculture
B
All people live in the cities
C
Most people worked in agriculture, but there were also cities
D
Most people live in the cities, a small part works in agricultre

Slide 5 - Quiz

Most Romans lived in the countryside as farmers and had to provide food for the cities.

Slide 6 - Slide

Wealthy Romans in the city


  • In Rome, the wealthy loved to show off their wealth to others
They had large luxury villas with swimming pools, wore beautiful clothes and some even let themselves be carried around in a palanquin
Een Romeinse draagstoel. Het was bij de Romeinen gebruikelijk om half te liggen in plaats van te zitten, ook aan tafel.

Slide 7 - Slide

Poor Romans in the city
  • Most people in Roma were poor
  • They did not live in large luxury villas, but usually in an apartment
  • The apartment complexes were similar to a flat
  • It was only often very dirty and unhygienic because there was no sewer connection
Een Romeins appartementencomplex

Slide 8 - Slide

Proletariat
Those who have only children (proles).

Slide 9 - Slide

What are proletarians?
A
Rich romans
B
Property-less people
C
Romans with a own house
D
Poor farmers

Slide 10 - Quiz

Slide 11 - Video

Why did the Roman emperors give the population 'bread and circuses'?

Slide 12 - Open question

Bread and circuses

  • To keep the Roman population at peace, the Roman emperors provided 'bread and circuses'
  • More than 200,000 poor people received grain from the emperor
  • Games were organized in the Colosseum
  • Plays were staged, animal fights and gladiator fights were held

Slide 13 - Slide

Slide 14 - Video

Success criteria
You can explain:
  • How and why the Roman economy thrived
  • What social differences there were in the empire
  • How Roman rulers treated the people
  • What the position of slaves was in Roman society
Read 4.2
Complete exercises: 1 to 11

Slide 15 - Slide

The economy of empire
  • The Roman Empire was an agrarian urban society
  • There was a lot of production in agriculture and industry
  • Consequence: a lot of trade inside and outside the empire
  • The economy benefited from the pax Romana, from good roads and Roman money

Roman coin with the head of August
Roman trade

Slide 16 - Slide

Which point was NOT a cause for the flourishing Roman economy
A
Having good roads
B
The Pax Romana
C
Using coins
D
Having a well organized army

Slide 17 - Quiz

Slaves
  • Because of the Roman conquests, there were many slaves in the empire
  • Many (not all) slaves were treated like animals and they had no rights
  • The slaves performed many tasks, such as working on farms, in the mines or at the villa's of wealthy Romans

Slide 18 - Slide

Slide 19 - Video

4.3 The culture of the empire
Time of Greeks and Romans
Characteristic aspect: the spread of the Greco-Roman culture and the confrontation (clash) with the Germanic culture

Slide 20 - Slide

Success criteria
You can explain:
  1. How multicultural the Roman society was
  2. How Romans dealt with their own religion and other religions
  3. How the Greco-Roman culture formed and was spread
  4. How the Roman justice system worked
Read the text in your textbook (p. 72 till 74) and try to answer the learning goals
(10 min.)

Slide 21 - Slide

Does it belong to the Greeks, Romans or both?
Greeks
Romans
Both
Columns
Arches
Poseidon
Dome
Polytheism
Democracy

Slide 22 - Drag question

Roman culture
  • The Roman Empire had a multicultural society
  • The Romans had a polytheistic faith
  • There were many different gods in the empire, but there were also state gods
  • Throughout the empire, they built temples to worship the state gods

Slide 23 - Slide

Jupiter
Venus
Mars

Slide 24 - Slide

Religious tolerance
  • In the Roman Empire, there was religious tolerance 
  • As long as people worshipped the emperor and state gods, they could follow any religion they wanted
  • The Romans also adopted gods from other cultures in their religion 
Such as the most important Greek gods; Zeus, Poseidon and Apollo. These gods became Jupiter, Neptune and Mars with the Romans.
They also adopted the Roman goddess Isis.

Slide 25 - Slide

Explain the term 'multicultural society'.
timer
1:00

Slide 26 - Open question

What is a state religion?
timer
1:00

Slide 27 - Open question

What does tolerance mean?
A
To be nice
B
To believe in many gods
C
To accept other religions
D
To believe in 1 god

Slide 28 - Quiz

Explain that there was 'religious tolerance' in the Roman empire.

Slide 29 - Open question

Following the Greek example
  • The Romans were impressed by Greek culture and adopted many things from the Greeks
  • For example, Greek art, architecture, science and philosophy
  • Romans built Greek columns in their temples
  • But they also added their own elements, such as round arches and domes
A Greek and Roman temple side by side

Slide 30 - Slide

Arches were invented by the Romans
The dome is also a Roman invention

Slide 31 - Slide

Greco-Roman culture
  • The influence of the Greeks was so great that a Greco-Roman culture developed
  • Today, this is often called ancient or classic culture

Slide 32 - Slide

Name two examples of the Greco-Roman culture.

Slide 33 - Open question

Which of the following options did the Romans NOT take over from the Greeks?
A
The arch constructions
B
The columns
C
Mars, the god of war
D
Science

Slide 34 - Quiz

Roman law
  • Some of the men in the Roman Empire held Roman citizenship
  • All citizens had equal rights 
  • Citizens were not allowed to be convicted without evidence or trial
  • Citizens could take their conflict to a judge
  • They also had the right to a lawyer

Slide 35 - Slide

Did all Romans have the right of citizenship?
A
Yes, if you were born within the Roman Empire
B
No, only men could become citizens

Slide 36 - Quiz

To work (homework)
  • What? Make assignment 4 to 7, 9 and 10
  • How? In your workbook
  • Help? Teacher
  • Finished?  Work on other subject

Slide 37 - Slide