MY HISTORY PROJECT By Anuj Patel
Contents Page A map of Roman Britain………………………………………………Slide3 Emperors and Govenorers…………………………………………..Slide4 A native tribe…………………………………………………………Slide5 Roman roads……………………………………………..................Slide6 Roman food and drink…………………………………………………Slide7 Roman law and order…………………………………………………Slide8 Hadrian's wall…………………………………………………………Slide9 Roman army…………………………………………………………Slide10 Boudicca………………………………………………………………Slide11 Roman religion……………………………………………………….Slide12 How Romans lived…………………………………………………..Slide13 Roman entertainment………………………………………………Slide14 How Latin affected our language…………………………………Slide15 Roman Bibliography………………………………………………Slide16
Map of Roman Britain This is a map to show part of Roman Britain: If you would like to view more pictures please click  here
Emperors And Governors Honeyman 135; Horblit Library 54; Wing A-3621 (11 copies), A-3534 (11 copies) & formerly T-857A (now combined with A-3621); DNB I, pp. 1219-1225; not in Norman Library. The first editions of Archimedes, Apollonius and Theodosius to be published in England. The addition of these three classics of mathematics generally and geometry in particular to the more widely available Euclid, showed that English mathematical publishing was coming of age and catching up with that on the continent, twelve years before the publication of Newton’s  Principia . To Archimedes we owe much of modern analytical geometry, mechanics and hydrostatics, including practical applications to pulleys and levers. Apollonius’s conics (the four first books here being all that survived in Greek) recognized that the parabola, ellipse and hyperbola (names coined in this treatise) were all special cases of the conic section.
A Native Tribe Anglo Saxon England Before the Germanic invasions Celts - Prior to the Germanic invasions Britain was inhabited by various Celtic tribes who were united by common speech, customs, and religion. Each tribe was headed by a king and was divided by class into Druids (priests), warrior nobles, and commoners. The lack of political unity made them vulnerable to their enemies.
Roman Roads Here is how to make a roman road: Plan your route carefully.  Clear any trees and grass out of your way.  Dig a deep trench and fill the bottom with layers of stones.  Make sure the road will be wide enough for soldiers to march along.   Cover the surface with small gravel or cobblestones.  Make sure that the surface of the road is curved, so that all the rain will run off to the ditches at the edge and not make any puddles.  How to make a Roman Road
Roman Food And Drink Beer was regarded as a barbarian drink (the Celts drank it)   Wines were described as black, red, white, or yellow.   The best wine producing region in Italy was near the border between Latium and Campania. Vintages produced were: Caecuban, Setian, Falernian, and Massic   Sheep or goats' milk were considered uncivilized drinks; they were used mainly for making cheese and for medicinal purposes   In every great house, the wine cellar contained glass jars carefully sealed with gypsum, with labels showing when they were laid away.
Roman Law And Order As the empire developed, the emperor stood at the top of the administrative system. He served as military commander in chief, high priest, court of appeal, and source of law. All this power was intensely personal: Soldiers swore their oath to the emperor, not to a constitution or a flag. Personal ties of patronage, friendship, and marriage had always bound together Roman society, but during the empire the emperor became the universal patron.
Hadrain's Wall The time of Julius Ceasar's first small invasion of the south coast of Britain in 55 BC, the British Isles, like much of mainland Europe was inhabited by many Celtic tribes loosely united by a similar language and culture but nevertheless each distinct. He returned the next year and encountered the 4000 war chariots of the Catevellauni in a land "protected by forests and marshes, and filled with a great number of men and cattle." He defeated the Catevellauni and then withdrew, though not before establishing treaties and alliances. Thus began the Roman occupation of Britain.      Nearly 100 years later, in 43 AD, the Emperor Claudius sent Aulus Plautius and about 24,000 soldiers to Britain, this time to establish control under a military presence. Although subjugation of southern Britain proceeded fairly smoothly by a combination of military might and clever diplomacy, and by 79 AD what is now England and Wales were firmly under control, the far North remained a problem.
The Roman Army From early times right down to the 3rd century A.D, the Roman army was based on its legions. A  legion  varied in strength from 4,000 to 6,000 men, and was subdivided onto ten  cohorts . Its leader used the title of  legatus . His staff officers were called  tribuni . Senior non-commissioned officers were called  centurions , who varied greatly in rank. The soldiers of the legion were picked men: They were all Roman citizens and received a higher pay than the auxillary troops - that is, foreigners who serve with the Roman army.
Boudicca Boudicca, Queen of the Celts In the days of Roman Britain, in the 1st century AD, there lived a warrior queen by the name of Boudicca. Flame-haired and proud, she ruled the Iceni, in a time when Rome wanted to rule everything. The lands she governed were located in what is now East Anglia; she had inherited them from her late husband, Prasutagus. When he died, he had left half his lands to Boudicca and her daughters, and the other half to the Emperor Nero, as a sort of payoff to encourage the Romans not to try and take any more -- perhaps not the most ideal package for a grieving widow, but Boudicca was willing to live with it if it meant peaceful coexistence for Romans and Iceni.
Roman Religion When the  Romans invaded Britain  in 43 AD, they found a country whose  religion  was based on local stories, superstitions and beliefs with no real order on consistency amongst the individual tribes. Their first port of call was the south east of England, which had a race that consisted of with their own beliefs and Belgic and Gallic people that had taken refuge in Britain. These immigrants had brought their own brand of worship with them.
How The Romans Lived Scientific inquiry into the origins of Christianity begins to-day with the question: "Did Jesus Christ really live?" Was there a man named Jesus, who was called the Christ, living in Palestine nineteen centuries ago, of whose life and teachings we have a correct account in the New Testament? The orthodox idea that Christ was the son of God -- God himself in human form -- that he was the creator of the countless millions of glowing suns and wheeling worlds that strew the infinite expanse of the universe; that the forces of nature were the servants of his will and changed their courses at his command -- such an idea has been abandoned by every independent thinker in the world -- by every thinker who relies on reason and experience rather than mere faith -- by every man of science who places the integrity of nature above the challenge of ancient religious tales.
                                                                                          Roman Amphitheatre .  The largest amphitheatre in the empire was the Colosseum. It could seat up to 50,000 people at once. The amphitheatre was the place where people went to see fights. These fights were between slaves, prisoners of war or criminals, and sometimes wild animals.These fights were so popular that schools were set up to train ordinary men as special fighters known as  Gladiators This idea once started out as entertainment at funerals.Two fighters would begin and the crowd would watch. Eventually the crowds got so big, they had to build a place to hold them. This was not only the reason for building the amphitheatre.
How Latin Affected Our Language Latin was brought to Italy about 1000 BC by Indo-European immigrants from Northern Europe. It began, as all languages do, as an isolated local tongue of a small territory on the Tiber River called Latium. As the people in Latium developed into an organized community, the city of Rome was eventually founded in, according to legend, 753 BC. In a little over a century, the Latin Romans would fall under the sway of Etruscan Kings. The evolution of Latin in its early development was therefore heavily influenced by these non-Indo-European Etruscans. Over time, it was also affected by the Celtic migrations and their dialects from Northern Italy and by the dominant regional culture of the Greeks.  Latin Language
Roman Bibliography Welcome to Britannica This site is the modest beginning of what I hope will become a useful tool for finding what has been written about the Roman invasion and occupation of Britain. It began as a simple database of bibliographical material I had collected to aid my own further study but now seems to have a life of its own. It might in fact be better presented as a database,  but as an inveterate browser,  the information appears here as I should like to find it. Once I'm a little more organized I shall put the whole site and the underlying database on-line for download as standard zip files.

More Related Content

PPTX
The Middle Ages introduction and overview
PPTX
1. Celt to Caesar Roman Britain
PDF
U3. feudalism
PPT
The Middle Ages
PDF
The History of Roman Britain (Notes Class 1)
PDF
Roman empire
PPT
The Early Midle Ages
PPTX
The Middle Ages
The Middle Ages introduction and overview
1. Celt to Caesar Roman Britain
U3. feudalism
The Middle Ages
The History of Roman Britain (Notes Class 1)
Roman empire
The Early Midle Ages
The Middle Ages

What's hot (20)

PPT
The Middle Ages in Europe - World History
PDF
Activities ancient rome
PPTX
Mesopotamian Empires
PPT
Roman Culture
PDF
The Renaissance.docx
PDF
rome at war ad 293-696
PPT
Chapter 8 PPT
DOCX
Compare/Contrast
PDF
2 eso summary_the_classical_ world
PDF
Chapter 5 Greece Part 1
PPT
Middle age notes
PPT
Medieval Casey
PPTX
Roman Empire
PDF
The Romans Book
PPT
Medieval times
PPT
Medieval feudalism 4
PPTX
History: Middle Ages
PPTX
Early Middle Ages
The Middle Ages in Europe - World History
Activities ancient rome
Mesopotamian Empires
Roman Culture
The Renaissance.docx
rome at war ad 293-696
Chapter 8 PPT
Compare/Contrast
2 eso summary_the_classical_ world
Chapter 5 Greece Part 1
Middle age notes
Medieval Casey
Roman Empire
The Romans Book
Medieval times
Medieval feudalism 4
History: Middle Ages
Early Middle Ages
Ad

Viewers also liked (13)

PPTX
History of britain
ODP
King Arthur
PPTX
Roman Britain: Celts to Caesar
PPT
Boudicca
PPT
PDF
13 Roman cities
PPT
Roman cities
PPTX
3..F2011 Britain becomes Roman Claudius
PPTX
3. F2012 Culture in Post Roman Britain religion, dress
PPTX
1 F2012 After the Romans; The Saxon Advent
PPTX
9. F2011 Cities of Roman Britain
PPTX
Ancient Roman Architecture
PPT
Roman Architecture
History of britain
King Arthur
Roman Britain: Celts to Caesar
Boudicca
13 Roman cities
Roman cities
3..F2011 Britain becomes Roman Claudius
3. F2012 Culture in Post Roman Britain religion, dress
1 F2012 After the Romans; The Saxon Advent
9. F2011 Cities of Roman Britain
Ancient Roman Architecture
Roman Architecture
Ad

Similar to Romans by Anuj Patel (20)

PDF
S3 British History and Culture part1.pdf
PPTX
Romans in Britain
PPT
PPT
Classical rome-1216519026393697-9
PPT
Rome: Republic and Empire
PPT
British Literature3.ppt
PPT
PDF
Session Two_ Augustine of Canterbury and Early English Catholicism.pdf
PPT
PDF
romancultureandsociety-121017153511-phpapp02.pdf
PPT
C12 - Roman Civilization
PDF
Romans Knowledge Organiser. Romans technology
PDF
inglese the roams presentazioni scuole superiori
PPT
DOCX
A BRIEF HISTORY OF ENGLAND
PPT
Classical Rome2
PPT
PPT
PPT
S3 British History and Culture part1.pdf
Romans in Britain
Classical rome-1216519026393697-9
Rome: Republic and Empire
British Literature3.ppt
Session Two_ Augustine of Canterbury and Early English Catholicism.pdf
romancultureandsociety-121017153511-phpapp02.pdf
C12 - Roman Civilization
Romans Knowledge Organiser. Romans technology
inglese the roams presentazioni scuole superiori
A BRIEF HISTORY OF ENGLAND
Classical Rome2

More from Dafydd Humphreys (8)

PPT
cliffs by jake cudd
PPT
Work houses by shaquille brown
PPT
Weather Phenomena by Ali Hussain
PPT
work house by Gary Eden
PPT
Indians by Ali Hussain
PPT
Crimewatch UK - What crime was like in Early Modern Times by Qasim Khan
PPT
Titanic by Myrin Hall
PPT
Titanic by Jermaine Monero
cliffs by jake cudd
Work houses by shaquille brown
Weather Phenomena by Ali Hussain
work house by Gary Eden
Indians by Ali Hussain
Crimewatch UK - What crime was like in Early Modern Times by Qasim Khan
Titanic by Myrin Hall
Titanic by Jermaine Monero

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
The-2025-Engineering-Revolution-AI-Quality-and-DevOps-Convergence.pdf
PPTX
Microsoft User Copilot Training Slide Deck
PDF
MENA-ECEONOMIC-CONTEXT-VC MENA-ECEONOMIC
PDF
Improvisation in detection of pomegranate leaf disease using transfer learni...
PPTX
future_of_ai_comprehensive_20250822032121.pptx
PPTX
MuleSoft-Compete-Deck for midddleware integrations
PPTX
AI-driven Assurance Across Your End-to-end Network With ThousandEyes
PDF
Produktkatalog für HOBO Datenlogger, Wetterstationen, Sensoren, Software und ...
PPTX
GROUP4NURSINGINFORMATICSREPORT-2 PRESENTATION
PDF
Co-training pseudo-labeling for text classification with support vector machi...
PDF
Lung cancer patients survival prediction using outlier detection and optimize...
PDF
Enhancing plagiarism detection using data pre-processing and machine learning...
DOCX
Basics of Cloud Computing - Cloud Ecosystem
PDF
giants, standing on the shoulders of - by Daniel Stenberg
PDF
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
PDF
SaaS reusability assessment using machine learning techniques
PDF
Accessing-Finance-in-Jordan-MENA 2024 2025.pdf
PPTX
SGT Report The Beast Plan and Cyberphysical Systems of Control
PDF
IT-ITes Industry bjjbnkmkhkhknbmhkhmjhjkhj
PPTX
agenticai-neweraofintelligence-250529192801-1b5e6870.pptx
The-2025-Engineering-Revolution-AI-Quality-and-DevOps-Convergence.pdf
Microsoft User Copilot Training Slide Deck
MENA-ECEONOMIC-CONTEXT-VC MENA-ECEONOMIC
Improvisation in detection of pomegranate leaf disease using transfer learni...
future_of_ai_comprehensive_20250822032121.pptx
MuleSoft-Compete-Deck for midddleware integrations
AI-driven Assurance Across Your End-to-end Network With ThousandEyes
Produktkatalog für HOBO Datenlogger, Wetterstationen, Sensoren, Software und ...
GROUP4NURSINGINFORMATICSREPORT-2 PRESENTATION
Co-training pseudo-labeling for text classification with support vector machi...
Lung cancer patients survival prediction using outlier detection and optimize...
Enhancing plagiarism detection using data pre-processing and machine learning...
Basics of Cloud Computing - Cloud Ecosystem
giants, standing on the shoulders of - by Daniel Stenberg
sbt 2.0: go big (Scala Days 2025 edition)
SaaS reusability assessment using machine learning techniques
Accessing-Finance-in-Jordan-MENA 2024 2025.pdf
SGT Report The Beast Plan and Cyberphysical Systems of Control
IT-ITes Industry bjjbnkmkhkhknbmhkhmjhjkhj
agenticai-neweraofintelligence-250529192801-1b5e6870.pptx

Romans by Anuj Patel

  • 1. MY HISTORY PROJECT By Anuj Patel
  • 2. Contents Page A map of Roman Britain………………………………………………Slide3 Emperors and Govenorers…………………………………………..Slide4 A native tribe…………………………………………………………Slide5 Roman roads……………………………………………..................Slide6 Roman food and drink…………………………………………………Slide7 Roman law and order…………………………………………………Slide8 Hadrian's wall…………………………………………………………Slide9 Roman army…………………………………………………………Slide10 Boudicca………………………………………………………………Slide11 Roman religion……………………………………………………….Slide12 How Romans lived…………………………………………………..Slide13 Roman entertainment………………………………………………Slide14 How Latin affected our language…………………………………Slide15 Roman Bibliography………………………………………………Slide16
  • 3. Map of Roman Britain This is a map to show part of Roman Britain: If you would like to view more pictures please click here
  • 4. Emperors And Governors Honeyman 135; Horblit Library 54; Wing A-3621 (11 copies), A-3534 (11 copies) & formerly T-857A (now combined with A-3621); DNB I, pp. 1219-1225; not in Norman Library. The first editions of Archimedes, Apollonius and Theodosius to be published in England. The addition of these three classics of mathematics generally and geometry in particular to the more widely available Euclid, showed that English mathematical publishing was coming of age and catching up with that on the continent, twelve years before the publication of Newton’s Principia . To Archimedes we owe much of modern analytical geometry, mechanics and hydrostatics, including practical applications to pulleys and levers. Apollonius’s conics (the four first books here being all that survived in Greek) recognized that the parabola, ellipse and hyperbola (names coined in this treatise) were all special cases of the conic section.
  • 5. A Native Tribe Anglo Saxon England Before the Germanic invasions Celts - Prior to the Germanic invasions Britain was inhabited by various Celtic tribes who were united by common speech, customs, and religion. Each tribe was headed by a king and was divided by class into Druids (priests), warrior nobles, and commoners. The lack of political unity made them vulnerable to their enemies.
  • 6. Roman Roads Here is how to make a roman road: Plan your route carefully. Clear any trees and grass out of your way. Dig a deep trench and fill the bottom with layers of stones. Make sure the road will be wide enough for soldiers to march along. Cover the surface with small gravel or cobblestones. Make sure that the surface of the road is curved, so that all the rain will run off to the ditches at the edge and not make any puddles. How to make a Roman Road
  • 7. Roman Food And Drink Beer was regarded as a barbarian drink (the Celts drank it) Wines were described as black, red, white, or yellow. The best wine producing region in Italy was near the border between Latium and Campania. Vintages produced were: Caecuban, Setian, Falernian, and Massic Sheep or goats' milk were considered uncivilized drinks; they were used mainly for making cheese and for medicinal purposes In every great house, the wine cellar contained glass jars carefully sealed with gypsum, with labels showing when they were laid away.
  • 8. Roman Law And Order As the empire developed, the emperor stood at the top of the administrative system. He served as military commander in chief, high priest, court of appeal, and source of law. All this power was intensely personal: Soldiers swore their oath to the emperor, not to a constitution or a flag. Personal ties of patronage, friendship, and marriage had always bound together Roman society, but during the empire the emperor became the universal patron.
  • 9. Hadrain's Wall The time of Julius Ceasar's first small invasion of the south coast of Britain in 55 BC, the British Isles, like much of mainland Europe was inhabited by many Celtic tribes loosely united by a similar language and culture but nevertheless each distinct. He returned the next year and encountered the 4000 war chariots of the Catevellauni in a land "protected by forests and marshes, and filled with a great number of men and cattle." He defeated the Catevellauni and then withdrew, though not before establishing treaties and alliances. Thus began the Roman occupation of Britain.     Nearly 100 years later, in 43 AD, the Emperor Claudius sent Aulus Plautius and about 24,000 soldiers to Britain, this time to establish control under a military presence. Although subjugation of southern Britain proceeded fairly smoothly by a combination of military might and clever diplomacy, and by 79 AD what is now England and Wales were firmly under control, the far North remained a problem.
  • 10. The Roman Army From early times right down to the 3rd century A.D, the Roman army was based on its legions. A legion varied in strength from 4,000 to 6,000 men, and was subdivided onto ten cohorts . Its leader used the title of legatus . His staff officers were called tribuni . Senior non-commissioned officers were called centurions , who varied greatly in rank. The soldiers of the legion were picked men: They were all Roman citizens and received a higher pay than the auxillary troops - that is, foreigners who serve with the Roman army.
  • 11. Boudicca Boudicca, Queen of the Celts In the days of Roman Britain, in the 1st century AD, there lived a warrior queen by the name of Boudicca. Flame-haired and proud, she ruled the Iceni, in a time when Rome wanted to rule everything. The lands she governed were located in what is now East Anglia; she had inherited them from her late husband, Prasutagus. When he died, he had left half his lands to Boudicca and her daughters, and the other half to the Emperor Nero, as a sort of payoff to encourage the Romans not to try and take any more -- perhaps not the most ideal package for a grieving widow, but Boudicca was willing to live with it if it meant peaceful coexistence for Romans and Iceni.
  • 12. Roman Religion When the Romans invaded Britain in 43 AD, they found a country whose religion was based on local stories, superstitions and beliefs with no real order on consistency amongst the individual tribes. Their first port of call was the south east of England, which had a race that consisted of with their own beliefs and Belgic and Gallic people that had taken refuge in Britain. These immigrants had brought their own brand of worship with them.
  • 13. How The Romans Lived Scientific inquiry into the origins of Christianity begins to-day with the question: "Did Jesus Christ really live?" Was there a man named Jesus, who was called the Christ, living in Palestine nineteen centuries ago, of whose life and teachings we have a correct account in the New Testament? The orthodox idea that Christ was the son of God -- God himself in human form -- that he was the creator of the countless millions of glowing suns and wheeling worlds that strew the infinite expanse of the universe; that the forces of nature were the servants of his will and changed their courses at his command -- such an idea has been abandoned by every independent thinker in the world -- by every thinker who relies on reason and experience rather than mere faith -- by every man of science who places the integrity of nature above the challenge of ancient religious tales.
  • 14.                                                                                          Roman Amphitheatre . The largest amphitheatre in the empire was the Colosseum. It could seat up to 50,000 people at once. The amphitheatre was the place where people went to see fights. These fights were between slaves, prisoners of war or criminals, and sometimes wild animals.These fights were so popular that schools were set up to train ordinary men as special fighters known as Gladiators This idea once started out as entertainment at funerals.Two fighters would begin and the crowd would watch. Eventually the crowds got so big, they had to build a place to hold them. This was not only the reason for building the amphitheatre.
  • 15. How Latin Affected Our Language Latin was brought to Italy about 1000 BC by Indo-European immigrants from Northern Europe. It began, as all languages do, as an isolated local tongue of a small territory on the Tiber River called Latium. As the people in Latium developed into an organized community, the city of Rome was eventually founded in, according to legend, 753 BC. In a little over a century, the Latin Romans would fall under the sway of Etruscan Kings. The evolution of Latin in its early development was therefore heavily influenced by these non-Indo-European Etruscans. Over time, it was also affected by the Celtic migrations and their dialects from Northern Italy and by the dominant regional culture of the Greeks. Latin Language
  • 16. Roman Bibliography Welcome to Britannica This site is the modest beginning of what I hope will become a useful tool for finding what has been written about the Roman invasion and occupation of Britain. It began as a simple database of bibliographical material I had collected to aid my own further study but now seems to have a life of its own. It might in fact be better presented as a database,  but as an inveterate browser,  the information appears here as I should like to find it. Once I'm a little more organized I shall put the whole site and the underlying database on-line for download as standard zip files.