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  1. Dress - Ancient Rome, Tunic, Toga: The civilization of ancient Rome spanned more than a thousand years, from the traditional founding of the walled city in the mid-8th century bce to the final collapse of the western part of the empire in 476 ce. Until the 3rd century bce the Romans derived their culture from the Greeks and the Etruscans but after this gradually began to develop their own ...

  2. 7. Ancient Rome is underground. That’s right! As hundreds of years went by the original city of Rome had more and more buildings built on top of it and now the city is underground! 8. The Romans spoke Latin. Latin is a very, very old language that people don’t usually speak anymore.

  3. Ancient Rome - Culture and religion: Expansion brought Rome into contact with many diverse cultures. The most important of these was the Greek culture in the eastern Mediterranean with its highly refined literature and learning. Rome responded to it with ambivalence: although Greek doctrina was attractive, it was also the culture of the defeated and enslaved. Indeed, much Greek culture was ...

  4. jus civile. Roman law, the law of ancient Rome from the time of the founding of the city in 753 bce until the fall of the Western Empire in the 5th century ce. It remained in use in the Eastern, or Byzantine, Empire until 1453. As a legal system, Roman law has affected the development of law in most of Western civilization as well as in parts ...

  5. chariot racing, in the ancient world, a popular form of contest between small, two-wheeled vehicles drawn by two-, four-, or six-horse teams. The earliest account of a chariot race occurs in Homer’s description of the funeral of Patroclus ( Iliad, book xxiii). Such races were a prominent feature of the ancient Olympic Games and other games ...

  6. Mar 29, 2024 · Colosseum, giant amphitheater built in Rome under the Flavian emperors. Construction of the Colosseum was begun sometime between 70 and 72 ce during the reign of Vespasian. It is located just east of the Palatine Hill, on the grounds of what was Nero ’s Golden House. The artificial lake that was the centerpiece of that palace complex was ...

  7. Ancient Rome - Republic, Senate, Patricians: The ancient historians depicted Rome’s first six kings as benevolent and just rulers but the last one as a cruel tyrant who murdered his predecessor Servius Tullius, usurped the kingship, terrorized the Senate, and oppressed the common people with public works. He supposedly was overthrown by a popular uprising ignited by the rape of a virtuous ...

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