1) What did Augustus Caesar achieve? He replaced many of rome with Marble, he created the Praetorian guards, and expanded the roads greatly.
2) Who led Rome after Augustus? Nero, Tiberius, Caligula, and Claudius.
3) What emperors were considered "good emperors"? Antoninus Pius, Nerva, Hadrian, Marcus Aurelius, and Trajan.
4) What unified the empire? Shared laws and rules.
5) Why was the empire's economy booming? Agricultures and industries were everywhere.
6) How were roads and money useful? Roads made travel and trade easier and money made it possible to make more monuments.
7) What inequality remained? The poor and rich still were separated.
2) Who led Rome after Augustus? Nero, Tiberius, Caligula, and Claudius.
3) What emperors were considered "good emperors"? Antoninus Pius, Nerva, Hadrian, Marcus Aurelius, and Trajan.
4) What unified the empire? Shared laws and rules.
5) Why was the empire's economy booming? Agricultures and industries were everywhere.
6) How were roads and money useful? Roads made travel and trade easier and money made it possible to make more monuments.
7) What inequality remained? The poor and rich still were separated.
Pompeii was a city in ancient Italy near Sicily. The city was built near the beach, but it was also built on the bottom of a volcano. This volcano’s name was Mount Vesuvius. Until 79 AD, this volcano hadn’t exploded for 1800 years. On 79 AD, the volcano exploded, burying Pompeii in a sea of ash. Archaeologists have uncovered parts of Pompeii, but much was lost to the disaster.
We can see where bodies once were before the ash and we can see their expressions too. We also found their pets buried with them. Tho some died of drowning in ash, others retreated to their houses under the ash just to die of lack of oxygen. Mt. Vesuvius erupted for the last time in 1879. Ash from the first eruption still remains in the ocean there today.
We can see where bodies once were before the ash and we can see their expressions too. We also found their pets buried with them. Tho some died of drowning in ash, others retreated to their houses under the ash just to die of lack of oxygen. Mt. Vesuvius erupted for the last time in 1879. Ash from the first eruption still remains in the ocean there today.