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World History Friday September 5,
2014
Agenda
Warm Up1. Warm Up: The Week in Rap2. Country of the day: 3. Remind 101 Setup 4. CNN Student News Walk
Through Due Date: September 30th
5. World History WorkBooks6. Wrap Up
World History Thursday September 4,
2014
Agenda
What were three key components of the Roman Republic?Where do we see these in use today?Home FunWrite Questions and Summary for todays notes.
Warm Up1. Warm Up: Video Clip 2. Country of the day: Ukraine3. Class Notes: 1.2 The Roman
Republic and Empire 4. Wrap Up
AVID 9Thursday August 29,
2014
Agenda
Home Fun
Warm Up
1. Turn in last weeks signed assignment sheet.
2. Khan Academy3. How to do grade checks.4. Computer lab. You must be quiet
in the library. 1) Create Grade Checks 2) Email them to me as an attachment 3) Sign Up for Khan academy
No Warm Up Today
Use your plannersCornell Note Check TuesBE GOOD!!!
Thursday September 12,2013
1. Warm Up: Week #5 (20)
2. The Republic of Rome video clip: take notes on Cornell Notes: The Roman Republic and Empire (pg 23)
3. Summary for 1.2 Cornell Notes
4. Finish 1.2 Illustrated Vocabulary
5. Wrap Up.
Agenda
Complete 1.2 vocabulary.
Summary for Cornell Notes.
Current Event #4 (21)
Warm Up Due Tomorrow.
Check grades on IC, YOUR grades are YOUR responsibility
On next slide.
Warm UpHome Fun
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people.Eleanor Roosevelt
Warm Up:Read the
excerpt and answer the questions in
complete sentences.
Wednesday September 11,2013 Patriot Day
1. Warm Up: Week #5 (20)
2. Cornell Notes: The Roman Republic and Empire (pg 23)
3. Check last nights vocab.
4. Wrap Up.
Agenda
DO SOMETHING GOOD FOR OTHERS TODAY.
Finish notes not finished in class.(ONLINE)
Complete sentences on 1.2 vocabulary.
Current Event #4 (21)
Check grades on IC
Based on what you think you know:Who attacked us on 9/11?Why did they attack us?What were the short term effects?What were the long term effects?
Warm UpHome Fun
America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves. Abraham Lincoln
1. Republic2. Consul3. Dictator4. Tribune5. Veto6. Carthage7. Julius Caesar8. Augustus9. Justinian
Ch1 Section 2 Vocabulary
The Roman Republic and EmpireChapter. 1 Sec. 2
Essential question: How did the government of Rome develop
into an empire?
How did the Roman Republic differ from government under the Etruscans?Etruscans ruled Rome
with an Aristocracy of nobles and a king.
In 509 b.c The Romans established a Republic or “thing of the people” to keep any individual from gaining too much power.
In the Republic- power rest in the hands of the citizens who elect leaders to make gov’t decisions.
How did the Roman Republic differ from government under the Etruscans?The Senate, land owning
upper class, held most power. Served for life and made laws.
Senators elected two consuls.Consuls: supervised the
business of gov’t and Rome’s armies. Created a system of checks on the power of the gov’t.
Dictators, rulers with complete control of the gov’t, would be chosen by senators if war broke out.
How did the Roman Republic differ from government under the Etruscans?
The Laws of the Twelve Tables: made laws public and made it possible for plebeians (common people) to appeal a judgment by a patrician judge.
Tribunes: officials elected to protect interests of plebeians. Could veto laws harmful to Plebeians
How did the Roman republic become an empire?
Republic Military Strength
Conquest of new
colonies
Control of trade routes Prosperity Julius
Caesar
Rome developed written laws. The Twelve Tables.
Rome’s greatest legacies:written legal code
equally and impartially applied to all.
Republic – citizens choose who will represent them
Government: senate, veto, checks on power.
“Let justice be done,” proclaimed a Roman saying, “though the heavens fall!”
What principles of law did Romans develop?
What principles of law did Romans develop? (Con’t)Justinian set up a
commission to collect, revise, and organize all the laws of ancient Rome.
They produced the Body of Civil Law, popularly known as Justinian’s Code.
Centuries later, the code was a model for Western Europe and international law in use today
The Rule of Law and Justice
1.Applied to all people under Roman rule. 2. Five basic principles
b. A person is presumed innocent until proven guilty
a. People equal under
the law
E. Decisions must be based on fairness
C. The accused can face accusers and defend against
the charge.
D. Guilt must be clearly
established
3.Created stability and unity during Roman empire
What cultures contributed to Greco-Roman civilization?