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Outline of ancient Rome

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to ancient Rome:

Essence of Ancient Rome
CivilizationClassical antiquityAncient RomeGreco-Roman world == Geography of ancient Rome ==
Government and politics of ancient Rome
, the first Roman emperor • CuriaForumCursus honorumCollegialityEmperorLegatusDuxOfficiumPraefectusPrinceps senatusPopularesVicariusVigintisexviriLictorMagister militumImperatorPontifex maximusAugustusCaesarSPQRTetrarchTriumvirateDictatorDecemviri Political institutions of ancient Rome Political institutions of ancient Rome • of ancient Rome in general • Roman SenateRoman assembliesCuriate AssemblyCenturiate AssemblyTribal AssemblyPlebeian CouncilExecutive magistrates • of the Roman KingdomSenate of the Roman KingdomLegislative Assemblies of the Roman KingdomExecutive magistrates of the Roman Kingdom • of the Roman RepublicSenate of the Roman RepublicLegislative Assemblies of the Roman RepublicExecutive magistrates of the Roman Republic • of the Roman EmpireSenate of the Roman EmpireLegislative Assemblies of the Roman EmpireExecutive magistrates of the Roman Empire Magistrates Roman magistrate Ordinary magistrates Ordinary magistrateTribuneQuaestorAedilePraetorConsulCensorPromagistrateGovernor Extraordinary magistrates Extraordinary magistrateDictatorMaster of the HorseDecemviriConsular tribuneTriumvirRexInterrex Roman law Roman lawConstitution (Roman law)Roman lawsTwelve TablesRoman citizenshipAuctoritasImperiumStatus in Roman legal systemRoman litigationRoman ConstitutionHistory of the Roman ConstitutionConstitution of the Roman KingdomHistory of the Constitution of the Roman KingdomConstitution of the Roman RepublicHistory of the Constitution of the Roman RepublicConstitutional reforms of SullaConstitutional reforms of Julius CaesarConstitution of the Roman EmpireHistory of the Constitution of the Roman EmpireConstitution of the Late Roman EmpireHistory of the Constitution of the Late Roman Empire (post Diocletian) Military of ancient Rome , from the Arch of Claudius, Rome Military of ancient RomeRoman generals • Weapons • BallistaBattering ramCatapultaGladiusOnagerPilumScorpioSiege towerSpathaRoman military diplomaHonesta missioPraetorian GuardVictory titles Roman armed forces Roman armyEarly Roman armyRoman army of the mid-RepublicRoman army of the late RepublicImperial Roman armyLate Roman armyEast Roman armySize of the Roman army • , c. 122 BC; the altar shows two Roman infantrymen equipped with long scuta and a cavalryman with his horse. All are shown wearing chain mail armour. Troops • AlaeCohorts • Auxiliaries • Alpine regiments of the Roman armyCavalryTurmae • Centuriae • ContuberniaLegionsVexillationes • LimitaneiNumeriManiplesPalatini • formation Roman infantry tacticsTestudo formation • Military equipment • Roman military personal equipmentRoman siege enginesNavyFleetDecorations and punishmentsRoman triumphOvationDecimatioFustuariumEconomics of the Roman armyRoman military clothing Military history of Rome Military history of ancient RomeBorders of the Roman EmpireRoman military frontiers and fortificationsCastraMilitary engineering of ancient RomeMilitary establishment of the Roman kingdomMilitary establishment of the Roman RepublicPolitical history of the Roman militaryStrategy of the Roman militaryStructural history of the Roman militaryTechnological history of the Roman military Military conflict Campaign history of the Roman militaryRoman warsRoman battlesBattle of CannaeBattle of Cape EcnomusBattle of Actium == General history of ancient Rome ==
General history of ancient Rome
Roman eraHistory of RomeFounding of RomeKingdom of RomeKings of Rome from 500 BC to 218 BC through the Latin War (light red), Samnite Wars (pink/orange), Pyrrhic War (beige), and First and Second Punic War (yellow and green). Cisalpine Gaul (238-146 BC) and Alpine valleys (16-7 BC) were later added. The Roman Republic in 500 BC is marked with dark red. Roman RepublicConflict of the Orders (494-287 BC) • Punic Wars (264-146 BC) – series of three wars fought between Rome and ancient CarthageFirst Punic War (264-241 BC) • Ebro TreatySecond Punic War (218-201 BC) – marked by Hannibal's surprising overland journey and his costly crossing of the Alps, followed by his reinforcement by Gaulish allies and crushing victories over Roman armies in the battle of the Trebia and the giant ambush at Trasimene. • Hannibal – Punic Carthaginian military commander, generally considered one of the greatest military commanders in history. Hannibal occupied much of Italy for 15 years, but a Roman counter-invasion of North Africa forced him to return to Carthage, where he was decisively defeated by Scipio Africanus at the Battle of Zama. • Conquests of Hannibal • Hannibal's Crossing of the AlpsBattle of the TrebiaBattle of Lake TrasimeneBattle of CannaeBattle of Zama – marked the final and decisive end of the Second Punic War. A Roman army led by Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus defeated a Carthaginian force led by the legendary commander Hannibal. Soon after this defeat on their home ground, the Carthaginian senate sued for peace, which was given to them by the Roman Republic on rather humiliating terms, ending the 17-year war. • Third Punic War (149-146 BC) – involved an extended siege of Carthage, ending in the city's thorough destruction. The resurgence of the struggle can be explained by growing anti-Roman agitations in Hispania and Greece, and the visible improvement of Carthaginian wealth and martial power in the fifty years since the Second Punic War. • Siege of Carthage (c. 149 BC) • Crisis of the Roman Republic (134 BC-44 BC) – extended period of political instability and social unrest that culminated in the demise of the Roman Republic and the advent of the Roman Empire. • on the eve of the assassination of Julius Caesar, 44 BCAssassination of Julius CaesarRoman EmpirePrincipate (27 BC-284 AD) – first period of the Roman Empire, extending from the beginning of the reign of Caesar Augustus to the Crisis of the Third Century, after which it was replaced with the Dominate. During the Principate, the constitution of the Roman Republic was never formally abolished. It was amended in such a way as to maintain a politically correct façade of Republican government. This ended following the Crisis of the Third Century (235–284), during the reign of Diocletian. • Julio-Claudian dynasty (27 BC-68 AD) – the first five Roman Emperors, including Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula (also known as Gaius), Claudius, and Nero. The dynasty ended when Nero committed suicide. • AugustusTiberius (ruled 14-37 AD) – stepson of Augustus. He was one of Rome's greatest generals, conquering Pannonia, Dalmatia, Raetia, and temporarily Germania; laying the foundations for the northern frontier. But he came to be remembered as a dark, reclusive, and sombre ruler who never really desired to be emperor; Pliny the Elder called him tristissimus hominum, "the gloomiest of men." • CaligulaClaudiusNeroYear of the Four Emperors (69 AD) – these four emperors were Galba, Otho, Vitellius, and Vespasian. Vespasian's rule marked the beginning of the Flavian dynasty. • GalbaOthoVitelliusVespasianFlavian dynasty (69-96 AD) • Nerva–Antonine dynasty (96-192 AD) – dynasty of seven Roman Emperors who ruled over the Roman Empire from 96 AD to 192 AD. These Emperors were Nerva, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus Pius, Marcus Aurelius, Lucius Verus, and Commodus. • NervaTrajanHadrianAntoninus PiusMarcus AureliusLucius VerusCommodusSeveran dynasty (193-235 AD) • , the Roman Empire suffered internal schisms, forming the Palmyrene Empire and the Gallic EmpireCrisis of the Third Century (235-284 AD) – period in which the Roman Empire nearly collapsed under the combined pressures of invasion, civil war, plague, and economic depression. The Crisis began with the assassination of Emperor Alexander Severus at the hands of his own troops, initiating a fifty-year period in which 20–25 claimants to the title of Emperor, mostly prominent Roman army generals, assumed imperial power over all or part of the Empire. • Barracks emperor – any Roman Emperor who seized power by virtue of his command of the army. Barracks emperors were especially common in the period from 235 through 284, during the Crisis of the Third Century. • List of barracks emperorsGallic Empire (260-274 AD) – modern name for a breakaway realm of the Roman Empire, founded by Postumus in 260 in the wake of barbarian invasions and instability in Rome, and at its height included the territories of Germania, Gaul, Britannia, and (briefly) Hispania. • Palmyrene Empire (260-273) – splinter empire, that broke away from the Roman Empire during the Crisis of the Third Century. It encompassed the Roman provinces of Syria Palaestina, Egypt and large parts of Asia Minor. • Dominate (284-476 AD) – 'despotic' latter phase of government in the ancient Roman Empire from the conclusion of the Third Century Crisis until the collapse of the Western Empire. The Emperor Diocletian abandoned the appearances of the Republic for the sake of control, and introduced a novel system of joint rule by four monarchs known as the Tetrarchy. • Decline of the Roman Empire – process spanning many centuries; there is no consensus when it might have begun but many dates and time lines have been proposed by historians. • Tetrarchy (293-313 AD) – Diocletian designated the general Maximian as co-emperor, first as Caesar (junior emperor) in 285, and then promoted him to Augustus in 286. Diocletian took care of matters in the Eastern regions of the Empire while Maximian similarly took charge of the Western regions. In 293, feeling more focus was needed on both civic and military problems, Diocletian, with Maximian's consent, expanded the imperial college by appointing two Caesars (one responsible to each Augustus). The tetrarchy collapsed, however, in 313 and a few years later Constantine I reunited the two administrative divisions of the Empire as sole Augustus. • First Tetrarchy – created by Diocletian with Maximian's consent in 293 by the appointment of two subordinate Caesars. • Diocletian (Augustus) • Galerius (Caesar) • Maximian (Augustus) • Constantius Chlorus (Caesar) • Second Tetrarchy – in 305, the senior emperors jointly abdicated and retired, elevating Constantius and Galerius to the rank of Augusti. They in turn appointed two new Caesars. • Galerius (Augustus) • Maximinus (Caesar) • Constantius Chlorus (Augustus) • Flavius Valerius Severus (Caesar) • Civil wars of the Tetrarchy – series of conflicts between the co-emperors of the Roman Empire, starting in 306 AD with the usurpation of Maxentius and the defeat of Severus, and ending with the defeat of Licinius at the hands of Constantine I in 324 AD. • Constantinian dynasty – informal name for the ruling family of the Roman Empire from Constantius Chlorus (†305) to the death of Julian in 363. It is named after its most famous member, Constantine the Great who became the sole ruler of the empire in 324. It is also called the Neo-Flavian dynasty. • First phase of the Migration Period • Division of the Roman Empire – in order to maintain control and improve administration, various schemes to divide the work of the Roman Emperor by sharing it between individuals were tried between 285 and 324, from 337 to 350, from 364 to 392, and again between 395 and 480. Although the administrative subdivisions varied, they generally involved a division of labour between East and West. Each division was a form of power-sharing (or even job-sharing), for the ultimate imperium was not divisible and therefore the empire remained legally one state—although the co-emperors often saw each other as rivals or enemies rather than partners. • Western Roman Empire – In 285, Emperor Diocletian (r. 284–305) divided the Roman Empire's administration into western and eastern halves. In 293, Rome lost its capital status, and Milan became the capital. • Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire) – term used by modern historians to distinguish the Constantinople-centered Roman Empire of the Middle Ages from its earlier classical existence. • Nicomedia – Nicomedia was the metropolis of Bithynia under the Roman Empire, and Diocletian made it the eastern capital city of the Roman Empire in 286 when he introduced the Tetrarchy system. • Constantinople – founded in AD 330, at ancient Byzantium as the new capital of the entire Roman Empire by Constantine the Great, after whom it was named. • Walls of ConstantinopleFall of the Western Roman Empire (476 AD) – the two halves of the Roman Empire ended at different times, with the Western Roman Empire coming to an end in 476 AD (the end of Ancient Rome). The Eastern Roman Empire (referred to by historians as the Byzantine Empire) survived for nearly a thousand years more, and eventually engulfed much of the Western Roman Empire's former territory. • Fall of the Western Roman Empire – this was not sudden, and took over a hundred years. By 476, when Odoacer deposed the Emperor Romulus, the Western Roman Empire wielded negligible military, political, or financial power and had no effective control over the scattered Western domains that still described themselves as Roman. • Odoacer – Germanic soldier, who in 476 became the first King of Italy (476-493). His reign is commonly seen as marking the end of the Western Roman Empire. • Byzantine Empire (Byzantium) – after the Western Roman Empire fragmented and collapsed, the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantium) continued to thrive, existing for nearly another thousand years until it fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453. Its citizens referred to it as the Roman Empire, and saw it as a direct continuation of it. Historians consider it to be a distinctly different empire, with some overlap, but generally not included in the period referred to as Ancient Rome. Byzantium differed in major ways, including its primary language, which was Greek rather than Latin. It also differed religiously, with Roman mythology being replaced by Christianity. • Legacy of the Roman Empire – what the Roman Empire passed on, in the form of cultural values, religious beliefs, as well as technological and other achievements, and through which it continued to shape other civilizations, a process which continues to this day. • Cultural heritage of the Roman Empire • Last of the RomansHistory of the Romans in ArabiaLegacy of ByzantiumThird Rome Roman historiography Roman historiographyHistoriography of the fall of the Western Roman EmpireProsopography of ancient Rome Works on Roman history Ab urbe condita by Titus Livius (around 59 BC-17 AD), a monumental history of Rome, from its founding (traditionally dated to 753 BC). • Annals and Histories by TacitusDe re militari by VegetiusRes Gestae by Ammianus MarcellinusThe History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon == Culture of ancient Rome ==
Culture of ancient Rome
, the largest amphitheatre ever built , a Roman aqueduct built circa 40–60 AD , Tunisia , cymbala, and tympanum (mosaic from Pompeii) and Pasiphaë, Roman fresco in the House of the Vettii, Pompeii, first century AD , ca. 400 AD (Collection Staatliche Antikensammlung, Munich) , a museum in Rome devoted to aspects of the Ancient Roman civilization Culture of ancient Rome Architecture of ancient Rome Ancient Roman architectureRoman Architectural RevolutionRoman concreteRoman brick Types of buildings and structures • Roman amphitheatreList of Roman amphitheatresRoman aqueductList of aqueducts in the city of RomeList of aqueducts in the Roman EmpireRoman bridgeList of Roman bridgesRoman canalRoman circusRoman cisternRoman dams and reservoirsRoman defensive wallsRoman domesForumRoman ForumList of monuments of the Roman ForumRoman gardensRoman horreumInsula (building)Roman roadsRoman roofsRoman templeList of Ancient Roman templesRoman theatreList of Roman theatresThermaeList of Roman public bathsTholosRoman triumphal archesRoman villaVilla rustica Art in ancient Rome Roman artArt collection in ancient Rome • Decorative arts of ancient Rome • Ancient Roman potteryRoman glassRoman mosaicLiteratureAugustan literatureAugustan poetryMusic of ancient Rome • Painting of ancient Rome • Pompeian Styles • Sculpture of ancient Rome • Roman sculptureRoman portraitureTheatre of ancient RomeBathing in ancient RomeCalendarJulian calendarCuisine of ancient RomeFood and dining in the Roman EmpireBaking in ancient RomeWine in Roman cultureAlban wineCaecuban wineFalernian wineEducation in ancient RomeAthenaeumPaedagogus • Fashion in ancient Rome • Clothing in ancient RomeAbollaPallaPalliumStolaSynthesisTogaAngusticlaviaTrabeaCosmetics in Ancient RomeRoman hairstylesCaesar cutRoman jewelryFestivalsLudi RomaniLupercaliaSaturnaliaFiction set in ancient RomeRoman folkloreRoman jokesLegacy of the Roman EmpireMuseum of Roman CivilizationMedicine in ancient RomeDentistry in ancient RomeDisability in ancient RomeDisease in Imperial RomeFood and diet in ancient medicineGynecology in ancient RomeMedical community of ancient RomeMental illness in ancient RomeSurgery in ancient RomeNaming conventions • People in ancient Rome • List of ancient RomansPhilosophy in ancient Rome • Public entertainment • Chariot racingGladiator combatLudiSexuality in ancient RomeHomosexuality in ancient RomeProstitutionTechnologyEngineering in ancient RomeUnits of measurementRoman timekeepingSanitation in ancient Rome Social order in ancient Rome , possibly the most famous example of adoption in Ancient Rome ) • Associations in Ancient RomeCollegiumDignitasFamily in ancient RomePater familiasAdoption in ancient RomeBirth registration in ancient RomeChildhood in ancient RomeMarriage in ancient RomeConfarreatioDiffarreationManus marriageWeddings in ancient RomeMos maiorumPatronage in ancient RomeRoman citizenshipRomanizationSlavery in ancient RomeSocial class in ancient RomePatriciansEquitesPlebsConflict of the OrdersSecessio plebisEquestrian orderGensTribesPoverty in ancient RomeWomen in ancient RomeNaming conventions for women in ancient Rome Religion in ancient Rome in Nîmes, a mid-sized provincial temple of the Augustan imperial cult , Vatican, Rome. Religion in ancient RomeChristianityImperial cultPersecution of pagans in the late Roman EmpireReligious persecution in the Roman Empire Roman mythology Roman mythologyRoman GodsCapitoline TriadJunoJupiterMinerva • Heroes • Hercules in ancient RomeGreat Altar of HerculesTemple of Hercules VictorRoma (deity) Roman religious institutions in ritual attire • Collegium PontificumVestal VirginRex SacrorumPontifex maximusFlamenAugurQuindecimviri sacris faciundisEpulones Roman religious practices • Animal sacrifice • LustratioOctober HorseTauroboliumRoman funerary practicesRoman funerary artRoman sarcophagi Language in ancient Rome LatinRomance languagesHistory of LatinOld LatinClassical LatinVulgar LatinLatin alphabetLatin letters used in mathematicsRoman numeralsLatin phrases • Latin-script calligraphy • Roman cursiveRoman square capitalsRustic capitals Languages of the Roman Empire == Economy of ancient Rome ==
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