2. Romulus and
Remus
About Romulus and Remus
They are twin brothers.
They have a wicked uncle who put them in a
river named Tiber.
A female Wolf found them and took them to
his cave.
When Romulus was carried away to the sky
the name of god he turned into was the name
Quirinus.
3. Roman Empire
The Romans invaded lots of
countries.
They invaded countries like
Spain,Iraq,Syria and
France.
They also invaded Britain.
The reason for that was
They wanted our wealth.
They didn’t go further than
Central Scotland because
they thought we were
crazy.
4. Julius Ceasar
Julius Ceasar was a very cruel
and wicked leader he was the
one who ordered the Romans
to invade Britain.
Here are some facts about
him.
His full name is Gailus Julius
Ceasar.
His mother was called Aurelia
Cotta.
Julius Ceasar’s face was
depicted on Roman coins.
5. Roman Baths
The Romans liked to go to the
baths in the afternoon.
The ladies didn’t bath with
men.
They didn’t just go to the
baths for a bath. They also
had a bit of a relaxation like a
chat or sometimes just to
chill. The place Bath was
named after the baths the
Romans made.
6. Roman Soldier
Here are some Roman
soldiers.
Dux= a general in
charge of two or more
legions.
Imaginifer=
A
standard-bearer
carrying
the imago - the standard
which bore a likeness of the
emperor, and, at later
dates, his family.
7. Coliseum
The Coliseum
had around 80
entrances and
can
accommodate
50,000
spectators.
The last
gladiatorial fights
took place in 435
AD.
8. Tortoise Formation
The Romans used
tortoise formation for
keeping them safe
because remember
there were no things to
hide behind.
The reason there were
gaps were so they
could see where they
were going.
9. Roman Gladiator
Nearly 30 types of
gladiators have
been found out.
By the time of the
end of the
republic, about
50% of
all gladiators were
volunteers.
10. Roman Banquet
The rich Romans ate a
variety of food like
basically they tried
everything.
The poor Romans would
have to eat bread and
vegetable soup
sometimes porridge.
Meat for a poor Roman
was a luxury.
11. Roman numerals
In Roman times there
were no such thing as
numbers.
In Roman times they
used Roman numerals.
Roman numerals were
mostly lines and
crosses. Once you got
up to number 100 it
would be C.
Roman numerals were
hard to use we don’t use
them now a days.
13. Antonine wall
The Antonine wall was
built around 2000 years
ago.
It was built in Scotland it
was around from here
to Glasgow.
It was not a few miles
long It was a few
kilometres long!
There is only the ditch
left of the wall.
And its in Callender
14. Presentation Last Slide
Does any
one have a
question, c
omment, o
r quick
question
Before I
end my
presentatio
n.