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Roman Culture

Date post: 24-Feb-2016
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Roman Culture. Introduction. All the new provinces of Rome were run by an appointed governor. All provinces , like Canada, had their own unique culture while adopting Roman Traditions. Language. The most common language was Latin. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Roman Culture
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Page 1: Roman Culture

Roman Culture

Page 2: Roman Culture

All the new provinces of Rome were run by an

appointed governor.

All provinces , like Canada, had their own unique culture while adopting Roman Traditions.

Introduction

Page 3: Roman Culture

Language

The most common language was Latin.

All the peoples of Rome had to learn it to communicate and trade.

Page 4: Roman Culture

Religion

Romans were Polytheists.

To get the Gods attention they danced and made sacrifices.

Overtime the Roman religion accepted the Gods from all the people they conquered.

Page 5: Roman Culture

Architecture

Romans learned how to build from other city states, especially the Greeks.

Many Cities Today were designed based on Rome.

Page 6: Roman Culture

Roman vs Today

Page 7: Roman Culture

There were many opportunities to perform in Rome.

Amphitheaters and circuses were popular venues.

Many people left their farms and moved to the city.

By doing so, they got the right to vote, free food and entertainment!

The Emperor wanted to keep their vote!

Entertainment

Page 8: Roman Culture

Entertainment

Page 9: Roman Culture

Roman Bath houses

They were like indoor pools today!

Water came from aqueducts.

They also has steam baths, gym, and libraries.

They were like ancient community centers.

Page 10: Roman Culture

Then vs Now

Page 11: Roman Culture

Mount Vesuvius, a volcano in Italy. Its most famous eruption took

place in the year 79 A.D., when the volcano buried the ancient Roman city of Pompeii under a thick carpet of volcanic ash.

The dust “poured across the land” like a flood, one witness wrote, and shrouded the city in “a darkness…like the black of closed and unlighted rooms.”

Two thousand people died, and the city was abandoned for almost as many years.

When a group of explorers rediscovered the site in 1748, they were surprised to find that–underneath a thick layer of dust and debris–Pompeii was mostly intact. The buildings, artifacts and skeletons left behind in the buried city have taught us a great deal about everyday life in the ancient world.

Pompeii

Page 12: Roman Culture

Pompeii Influences

Pompeii Bastille Pompeii trailer

Page 13: Roman Culture

Pg 132-135

Homework


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