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    Roman Civil War

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    The Civil War of Rome The Civil War in the eyes of most people is not glorious‚ but rather one of the worst crimes you could possibly commit when the state is all-important. Only under the most extreme circumstances should one be allowed to (in the eyes of the people that is) begin a Civil War with just cause. Caesar took this into consideration‚ but too many things were going wrong in Rome for him not to begin the war. The first of many problems was the collapse of the Triumvirate. The Triumvirate

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    event – the decline of the Empire took place over around 300 years. Historians have variously dated the final collapse to the sack of Rome in AD410 by the Visigoth king Alaric‚ the deposing of the last Roman emperor by the German chieftain Odoacer in AD476 and the death of Justinian I‚ the last Roman emperor to try to reconquer the western half of the empire‚ in AD565. The reasons for the fall of the empire include military overreach‚ invasion by emboldened tribes of Huns and Visigoths from northern

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    Roman Empire and Pp

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    1. Define the term Agricultural Revolutions and explain how it impacted the world. (Chapter 1‚ pp. 7-8 and p.11 two paragraphs before the subsection “Life in Neolithic communities”) 2. What was the most important result/benefit of the development of settled agricultural communities? (Chapter 1‚ p. 11) 3. Who were the earliest settled people in Mesopotamia and what kind of writing system did they use? (Chapter 2‚ section “Mesopotamia”) 4. Why did the status of women decline with

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    Contraception and the Roman Catholic Church The modern Catholic individual faces problems daily about how to live a contemporary Catholic lifestyle. In attempt to answer the questions about how to live Catholics often turn to the Bible‚ the Pope‚ and the official doctrine of the Catholic Church. While much guidance can be taken from these sources‚ there arise many modern issues for which the Bible offers no advice‚ and the doctrine offers confusing or even conflicting advice. The Bible was written

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    The persecution of Christians in the Roman Empire was‚ perhaps‚ not as severe as led to believe‚ because the eyewitnesses that remained were Christian‚ so the record can reflect a subjective Christian opinion. The story of Jesus Christ has many versions‚ one being the Jews killed him the other being the Romans. According to myth; the Romans in 30 BCE crucified Jesus‚ however‚ according to the Gospels the Jews were the ones who persecuted Jesus. Perhaps‚ in a way‚ the persecution of Christ in the

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    The Book of Romans was written by a man formerly known as Saul of Tarsus‚ a Jewish Rabbi who belonged to the Pharisee group. He was very passionate about the Torah of Moses and the Jewish traditions. Saul was threatened by Jesus and viewed his followers as a threat until he had a radical interaction with Jesus after he was risen from the dead. Jesus commission him to be an apostle‚ one of the chief disciples of Christ. Saul became an official representative to the non-Jewish people‚ known as the

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    The Holy Roman Empire

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    The Holy Roman Empire was looming to the east of France to Poland and Hungary‚ but it size was not as potent as it might suggest. Frankish ruled the empire and German kings for 10 centuries‚ from Charlemagne’s coronation in 800 until the renunciation of the imperial title in 1806. The most powerful of these lines of kings was Otto I‚ who helped to restore the title emperor and in many ways resembled Charlemagne such as how he fostered a revival of learning in which literature and art flourished.

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    Roman Grain Trade

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    1. Was the Roman grain trade made possible by a strong state‚ or was the strength of the state derived from the kind of economy exemplified by the grain trade? In the ancient world‚ even the first and most important for people’s survival is the food‚ but for the country‚ the first and most important for its survival is the military power. Just like the Roma Empire‚ even its land was poorer than the lands in the North Africa‚ it still could conquer the more fertile countries. How it could be? Was

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    Roman Civil Serive

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    Was there a Roman civil service? The term ‘civil service’ as we know it encompasses a huge range of different offices for the government. Individuals are typically employed based on professional merit and proven credentials. They also rarely encompass anything related to the military. But was this the case in Ancient Rome? This is what I will answer through looking at the various civil bodies and the evidence of these I hope to build a coherent view of the offices held within Rome and whether this

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    Between the high and late imperial periods of the Roman Empire‚ the Romans were influenced by many different religions one of them being Christianity; this led to profound changes in the roman culture and art. Some of these changes were the practice of burials and use of a sarcophagus. A good example of this is the roman sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysus and the Seasons‚ located at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This beautiful well-preserved sarcophagus is ornate and carved from marble;

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