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Ancient Romans, Leaders names - Coggle Diagram
Ancient Romans
Music/ instruments
Tubas
French horn
Bugles
oboe
bagpipe
lyre
clairnet type horn
panpipe
Economy
The Romans imported a whole variety of materials: beef, corn, glassware, iron, lead, leather, marble, olive oil, perfumes, purple dye, silk, silver, spices, timber, tin and wine
Ancient Rome became one of the biggest empires in the World
Clothes and materials
Clothing in ancient Rome generally comprised a short-sleeved or sleeveless, knee-length tunic for men and boys, and a longer, usually sleeved tunic for women and girls.
Roman builders utilized naturally occurring materials, primarily stone, timber and marble. Manufactured materials consisted of brick and glass and composite materials consisted of concrete.
Writing
The original form of "lead pencil" was the leaden stylus used by the ancient Romans, who also used it to write on wood or papyrus by leaving dark streaks where the soft metal rubbed off onto the surface.
What did the Romans write on? Important documents were written on papyrus scrolls (made from the papyrus plant in Egypt) or on parchment (pages made from animal skin). They wrote with a metal pin that they dipped in ink. For more temporary day-to-day writing they used a wax tablet or thin pieces of wood.
Sustainability
the romans most harvest crop is wheat to make bread and the harvest it with a big heavy stick which is pulled by a Ox.
Innovation
Romans used scalpels made of bronze, iron and steel, and a wide variety of medical scissors were used.
Technology
They did invent underfloor heating, concrete and the calendar.
Special things
they made lots of ancient buildings.
Ancient Roman civilisation has contributed to modern language, religion, society, technology, law, politics, government, warfare, art, literature, architecture and engineering.
Transportation
Aside from chariots and walking (the most common forms of transportation), Romans had other ways of getting around. Large carriages were pulled by animals and could hold several people. The problem? Iron wheels made so much noise that they were actually banned from entering city centers during the day.
Houses
Fine Roman homes were built with stone, plaster, and brick. They had tiled roofs. A "villa urbana" was a villa that was fairly close to Rome and could be visited often.
Schools
There were two types of schools in Ancient Rome. The first type of school was for younger children aged up to 11 or 12 where they learned to read and write and to do basic mathematics. At these schools, children worked on an abacus to learn basic maths. For writing, they used a stylus and a wax tablet.
Bathrooms
A sponge top stick called a tersorium to wipe there backsides. And it was passed around un cleaned.
Roman Toys
Roman children played with balls and kites and made hoops with pieces of metal on them so when they rolled they chimed like bells.
Leaders
Leaders names
Augustus (31 bce–14 ce)
Aulus Vitellius (July–December 69 ce)
Otho (January–April 69 ce)
Galba (68–69 ce)
Nero (54–68 ce)
Claudius (41–54 ce)
Caligula (37–41 ce)
Tiberius (14–37 ce)