Deck 4: The Roman Republic

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Question
In the first century B.C., as Roman imperialism brought the state into further wars, the political situation was dominated by

A)repeated invasions of Germanic barbarians.
B)repeated rebellion of the Greek city-states.
C)continual warfare in Asia Minor.
D)a series of plebeian revolts.
E)attempts of powerful generals to achieve supremacy in Rome through use of the army.
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Question
Which of the following is NOT correct? Augustus' legislation in favor of the Roman family was designed to

A)repopulate Italy following the civil wars.
B)grant special privileges to families with more than three children.
C)legislate against adultery.
D)allow more legal freedoms to women within the family structure.
E)curb population growth.
Question
In the Punic Wars, Rome defeated

A)Sicily.
B)Phoenicia.
C)Etruria.
D)Carthage.
E)the Gauls.
Question
Which of the following is NOT true? Caesar gained popularity by defending the rights of

A)tribunes.
B)slaves.
C)common citizens.
D)soldiers.
E)None of these answers is correct; all contributed to Caesar's popularity.
Question
Which of the following is NOT a correct match?

A)Marius: first to allow landless citizens to become soldiers
B)Sulla: first general to seize Rome and name himself dictator without time limit
C)Pompey: member of the First Triumvirate
D)Cicero: led campaign against pirates in the Mediterranean
E)Julius Caesar: extended Roman rule to France and Belgium
Question
The Roman constitution was

A)a written document.
B)a set of procedures and customs.
C)a frequently appended document.
D)determined by the power of certain clans.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Question
Polybius believed that Rome's successes stemmed from

A)its constitution and mixed government.
B)conservative Roman values.
C)its geographical diversity.
D)Roman worship of Greek deities.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
Discuss the role of the citizen-soldier-farmer in Rome's history from the era of the Punic Wars to the collapse of the Republic.
Question
The crisis of the first century B.C.Italian War centered around

A)territorial ambition.
B)trade policies.
C)citizenship.
D)threat of Germanic invasion.
E)military obligation.
Question
The Second Triumvirate of Mark Antony, Octavian, and Lepidus captured Rome by challenging the authority of

A)the Assembly of Tribunes.
B)the army.
C)the Senate.
D)the Praetorian Guard.
E)Bologna.
Question
Rome controlled all the Italian peninsula except the Po valley by

A)390 B.C.
B)300 B.C.
C)265 B.C.
D)197 B.C.
E)238 B.C.
Question
Romans believed that their gods

A)could be appeased through sacrifices.
B)could not be satisfied.
C)behaved immorally.
D)would not protect them.
E)All these answers are correct.
Question
Expansion into the eastern Mediterranean

A)inadvertently led to the decline of the Republic.
B)triggered policies of accommodation in Pergamum.
C)brought the Greeks under Roman control.
D)did all of these: brought the Greeks under Roman control; triggered policies of accommodation in Pergamum; and inadvertently led to the decline of the Republic.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Question
Which of the following best describes the political system of the Roman Republic before the era of the civil wars?

A)It was a limited monarchy.
B)The military controlled the state.
C)It had three main components: the consuls, the Senate, and the Assemblies.
D)It had two main components: the Senate and the army.
E)It was modeled on Athenian democracy.
Question
Hannibal's goal in invading Italy during the Second Punic War was to

A)keep Roman forces from extending the war to Spain.
B)prove himself a greater general than Alexander the Great.
C)persuade Rome's allies on the peninsula to switch allegiances.
D)destroy the Roman navy.
E)recover its empire in southern Spain.
Question
As the Republic developed, Roman women

A)lost the ability to choose their own husbands.
B)came to be treated as the Romans saw the Greeks treat women.
C)exercised far greater behind-the-scenes influence than Greek women ever had.
D)were prevented from divorcing or handling property.
E)participated on equal terms with men in the Republic's politics.
Question
In comparison with the Greeks, the Romans in the fifth through the third centuries

A)demonstrated greater skill in dealing with internal and external political conflicts.
B)developed a political system in which common people had more power.
C)relied more on naval power.
D)were unwilling to adopt the phonetic alphabet.
E)placed less emphasis upon family.
Question
What factors allowed Rome to become a successful empire builder? Compare the history of the Republic to that of the city-states of Greece in the fifth century
B.C.What political, geographic, social, or other factors help explain Rome's success?
Answers will vary
Question
Consider the empires established by Athens after taking over the Delian League and Rome.What were the positive and negative consequences of ancient empire building?
Question
Which was NOT one of the reforms of Julius Caesar?

A)reduced the power of the Senate by enlarging it
B)reduced the size of the army
C)allied with the Senate to defeat Pompey
D)established a new calendar
E)named himself dictator
Question
How did women's experiences in the Roman Republic differ from women's lives in the Greek city-states?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: the Forum.
Question
How did Augustus Caesar (27
A.D.) use the forms of Republican government to create an imperial government?
Answers will vary
B.C.-14
Question
How did Octavian manage to hold power in Rome for over four decades, when violence and assassination had been the fate of ambitious politicians for the previous century?
Question
Review the feature entitled "The Murder of Julius Caesar" in this chapter.Plutarch wrote The Life of Caesar more than 150 years after Caesar's death.What aspects of this account seem too contrived or too coincidental to consider the passage a completely accurate narrative of Caesar's assassination?
Question
Did Julius Caesar embody a conscious attempt to overthrow the Roman Republic or did his actions merely represent the logical continuation of a trend begun earlier in the Roman Revolution?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Etruscans.
Question
Study the photographs of Roman architecture shown in this chapter.How did architecture contribute to the identity and cohesiveness of the Roman Empire?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Apennines.
Question
Review the feature entitled "The Murder of Julius Caesar" in this chapter.Explain the symbolic significance of the statue of Pompey in this account.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: consuls.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Po River.
Question
How does the Etruscan sarcophagus pictured in this chapter reveal Greek influences in the Italian peninsula?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Tiber River.
Question
Consider the statue of General Cornelius Sulla shown in this chapter.Why would Romans portray the general as a classical orator and dignified statesmen?
Question
How did the struggle between plebeians and patricians reflect the complexities of the patron-client relationship as well as the Roman ideal of the paterfamilias?
Question
What does the gravestone seen in this chapter indicate about the status of women and children in Roman society?
Question
Was Roman expansion in Italy and throughout the Mediterranean the result of self-determination and ambition or a response to external threats?
Question
What does map 4.1 of the city of Rome indicate about Roman culture and society during the Republic?
Question
Why did the Roman Republic collapse? Who is to blame for this collapse?
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Sulla.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: First Triumvirate.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: equestrians.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Vestal Virgins.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Marius.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Julius Caesar.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: paterfamilias.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Carthage.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cicero.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Mark Antony.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Licinian-Sextian Laws.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Gauls.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Augustus.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pompey.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Octavian.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Punic Wars.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: patricians.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: assemblies.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: the Gracchi.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Polybius.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Carthage.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Senate.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: plebeians.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Hannibal.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: imperium.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pontifex Maximus.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: tribunes.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cleopatra.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Scipio Africanus.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Second Triumvirate.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Praetorian Guard.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: proconsul.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Gallic War.
Question
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: publicani.
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Deck 4: The Roman Republic
1
In the first century B.C., as Roman imperialism brought the state into further wars, the political situation was dominated by

A)repeated invasions of Germanic barbarians.
B)repeated rebellion of the Greek city-states.
C)continual warfare in Asia Minor.
D)a series of plebeian revolts.
E)attempts of powerful generals to achieve supremacy in Rome through use of the army.
attempts of powerful generals to achieve supremacy in Rome through use of the army.
2
Which of the following is NOT correct? Augustus' legislation in favor of the Roman family was designed to

A)repopulate Italy following the civil wars.
B)grant special privileges to families with more than three children.
C)legislate against adultery.
D)allow more legal freedoms to women within the family structure.
E)curb population growth.
curb population growth.
3
In the Punic Wars, Rome defeated

A)Sicily.
B)Phoenicia.
C)Etruria.
D)Carthage.
E)the Gauls.
Carthage.
4
Which of the following is NOT true? Caesar gained popularity by defending the rights of

A)tribunes.
B)slaves.
C)common citizens.
D)soldiers.
E)None of these answers is correct; all contributed to Caesar's popularity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Which of the following is NOT a correct match?

A)Marius: first to allow landless citizens to become soldiers
B)Sulla: first general to seize Rome and name himself dictator without time limit
C)Pompey: member of the First Triumvirate
D)Cicero: led campaign against pirates in the Mediterranean
E)Julius Caesar: extended Roman rule to France and Belgium
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
The Roman constitution was

A)a written document.
B)a set of procedures and customs.
C)a frequently appended document.
D)determined by the power of certain clans.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Polybius believed that Rome's successes stemmed from

A)its constitution and mixed government.
B)conservative Roman values.
C)its geographical diversity.
D)Roman worship of Greek deities.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Discuss the role of the citizen-soldier-farmer in Rome's history from the era of the Punic Wars to the collapse of the Republic.
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The crisis of the first century B.C.Italian War centered around

A)territorial ambition.
B)trade policies.
C)citizenship.
D)threat of Germanic invasion.
E)military obligation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The Second Triumvirate of Mark Antony, Octavian, and Lepidus captured Rome by challenging the authority of

A)the Assembly of Tribunes.
B)the army.
C)the Senate.
D)the Praetorian Guard.
E)Bologna.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Rome controlled all the Italian peninsula except the Po valley by

A)390 B.C.
B)300 B.C.
C)265 B.C.
D)197 B.C.
E)238 B.C.
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Romans believed that their gods

A)could be appeased through sacrifices.
B)could not be satisfied.
C)behaved immorally.
D)would not protect them.
E)All these answers are correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Expansion into the eastern Mediterranean

A)inadvertently led to the decline of the Republic.
B)triggered policies of accommodation in Pergamum.
C)brought the Greeks under Roman control.
D)did all of these: brought the Greeks under Roman control; triggered policies of accommodation in Pergamum; and inadvertently led to the decline of the Republic.
E)None of these answers is correct.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following best describes the political system of the Roman Republic before the era of the civil wars?

A)It was a limited monarchy.
B)The military controlled the state.
C)It had three main components: the consuls, the Senate, and the Assemblies.
D)It had two main components: the Senate and the army.
E)It was modeled on Athenian democracy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Hannibal's goal in invading Italy during the Second Punic War was to

A)keep Roman forces from extending the war to Spain.
B)prove himself a greater general than Alexander the Great.
C)persuade Rome's allies on the peninsula to switch allegiances.
D)destroy the Roman navy.
E)recover its empire in southern Spain.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
As the Republic developed, Roman women

A)lost the ability to choose their own husbands.
B)came to be treated as the Romans saw the Greeks treat women.
C)exercised far greater behind-the-scenes influence than Greek women ever had.
D)were prevented from divorcing or handling property.
E)participated on equal terms with men in the Republic's politics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
In comparison with the Greeks, the Romans in the fifth through the third centuries

A)demonstrated greater skill in dealing with internal and external political conflicts.
B)developed a political system in which common people had more power.
C)relied more on naval power.
D)were unwilling to adopt the phonetic alphabet.
E)placed less emphasis upon family.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What factors allowed Rome to become a successful empire builder? Compare the history of the Republic to that of the city-states of Greece in the fifth century
B.C.What political, geographic, social, or other factors help explain Rome's success?
Answers will vary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Consider the empires established by Athens after taking over the Delian League and Rome.What were the positive and negative consequences of ancient empire building?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which was NOT one of the reforms of Julius Caesar?

A)reduced the power of the Senate by enlarging it
B)reduced the size of the army
C)allied with the Senate to defeat Pompey
D)established a new calendar
E)named himself dictator
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
How did women's experiences in the Roman Republic differ from women's lives in the Greek city-states?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
22
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: the Forum.
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k this deck
23
How did Augustus Caesar (27
A.D.) use the forms of Republican government to create an imperial government?
Answers will vary
B.C.-14
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
How did Octavian manage to hold power in Rome for over four decades, when violence and assassination had been the fate of ambitious politicians for the previous century?
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Review the feature entitled "The Murder of Julius Caesar" in this chapter.Plutarch wrote The Life of Caesar more than 150 years after Caesar's death.What aspects of this account seem too contrived or too coincidental to consider the passage a completely accurate narrative of Caesar's assassination?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Did Julius Caesar embody a conscious attempt to overthrow the Roman Republic or did his actions merely represent the logical continuation of a trend begun earlier in the Roman Revolution?
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Etruscans.
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k this deck
28
Study the photographs of Roman architecture shown in this chapter.How did architecture contribute to the identity and cohesiveness of the Roman Empire?
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Apennines.
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k this deck
30
Review the feature entitled "The Murder of Julius Caesar" in this chapter.Explain the symbolic significance of the statue of Pompey in this account.
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31
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: consuls.
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32
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Po River.
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33
How does the Etruscan sarcophagus pictured in this chapter reveal Greek influences in the Italian peninsula?
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34
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Tiber River.
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35
Consider the statue of General Cornelius Sulla shown in this chapter.Why would Romans portray the general as a classical orator and dignified statesmen?
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
36
How did the struggle between plebeians and patricians reflect the complexities of the patron-client relationship as well as the Roman ideal of the paterfamilias?
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
37
What does the gravestone seen in this chapter indicate about the status of women and children in Roman society?
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k this deck
38
Was Roman expansion in Italy and throughout the Mediterranean the result of self-determination and ambition or a response to external threats?
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Unlock for access to all 74 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
What does map 4.1 of the city of Rome indicate about Roman culture and society during the Republic?
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40
Why did the Roman Republic collapse? Who is to blame for this collapse?
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41
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Sulla.
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42
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: First Triumvirate.
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43
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: equestrians.
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44
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Vestal Virgins.
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45
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Marius.
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46
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Julius Caesar.
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47
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: paterfamilias.
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48
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Carthage.
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49
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cicero.
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50
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Mark Antony.
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51
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Licinian-Sextian Laws.
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52
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Gauls.
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53
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Augustus.
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54
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pompey.
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55
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Octavian.
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56
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Punic Wars.
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57
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: patricians.
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58
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: assemblies.
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59
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: the Gracchi.
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60
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Polybius.
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61
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Carthage.
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62
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Senate.
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63
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: plebeians.
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64
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Hannibal.
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65
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: imperium.
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66
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Pontifex Maximus.
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67
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: tribunes.
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68
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Cleopatra.
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69
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Scipio Africanus.
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70
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Second Triumvirate.
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71
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Praetorian Guard.
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72
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: proconsul.
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73
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: Gallic War.
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74
Identify/define and explain the significance of the following: publicani.
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