Period 2: Rome Gallery Walk
Across
- 3. An extended piece of writing
- 5. Something that indicates, bounds, or limits; a limiting or boundary line
- 6. A seaside suburb of Tunsia's capital
- 9. a commander of an army, or an army officer of very high rank
- 10. hostility and ill-treatment, especially because of race or political or religious beliefs
- 13. 1 of the rooms in the bath that is warm
- 15. Roman emperor from 117-138 A.D who constructed Hadrian's wall
- 17. a very light and porous volcanic rock that forms when a gas-rich froth of glassy lava solidifies rapidly
- 18. A belief in many gods
- 22. the group of horses that pull the chariot
- 23. Citizens of the ancient city referred to this space, originally a marketplace
- 24. Composition for the middle forms of schools that is still used today
- 25. a material that is produced by a volcanic explosion and stays in the air
- 26. Roman general who commanded the fleet that defeated the forces of Antony and Cleopatra at Actium (63-12 BC)
- 28. Gods or goddesses
Down
- 1. a part of western Europe where the Celtic race of the Gauls lived
- 2. the main rival of Mark Antony and the Roman Senate. He would become Augustus Caesar
- 4. Approved Christianity and oversaw most of the Gladiatorial Games
- 6. a monotheistic religion that believes Christ is their lord and savior
- 7. a local road that is usually unpaved
- 8. A male teacher in a school (in this case public schools poor children went to)
- 10. Romana a Latin term referring to the Empire in its glorified prime
- 11. a series of arches such as in aqueducts
- 12. stadium where the races were held
- 14. An organized military force equipped for fighting on land
- 16. the eye (hole atop dome)
- 19. Carthaginian war commander
- 20. a communal bath that a community shares
- 21. Mid-sized suburb of Tunisia’s capital. Was originally the seat of the Carthaginian Empire which fell to Rome in the 2nd century B.C.E.
- 24. A unit of 3,000-6,000 men in the ancient Roman army
- 27. written or spoken language in its ordinary form, without metrical structure
- 29. The second largest Greek island. The Etruscans adopted the Euboean alphabet