Well there were no Roman newspapers (no printing presses for another 1,500 years).
They had to use other means of getting the message out, like reading out and posting notices or decrees in the squares of cities, and erecting statues, monuments, triumphal arches etc with inscriptions on them. And then there was grafitti on walls.
A basic means of spreading messages was coinage, which everyone saw as a matter of routine eg, when Brutus fled to the east after murdering his patron Caesar, he had coinage struck with his image promoting himself as getting rid of a would-be king; later, an emperor trying to promote family life struck a coin with an effigy of the empress and her children looking cute; and so on.
Inscriptions (whether Roman, Persian, Greek etc) were partly propaganda, partly commemorative, partly communicative. They would be nearest to today's editorial.
An example is Augustus columns in which he sets out his achievements, beginning:
'Below is a copy of the acts of the Deified Augustus by which he placed the whole world under the sovereignty of the Roman people, and of the amounts which he expended upon the state and the Roman people, as engraved upon two bronze columns which have been set up in Rome'
An ancient Roman newspaper editorial would likely have focused on political issues, military campaigns, or public debates. It would have been written in a persuasive and opinionated style, often using rhetoric to sway public opinion or criticize political figures. The editorial might also have drawn on historical events or moral lessons from Roman culture to make its point.
Roman Republic
No newspapers were published in Ancient Rome.
The Caesarian. idk really bbut that's my best guess.
That would be the 'editorial'.
it would cost 5 yins
A crusade editorial is a written piece that passionately advocates for a particular cause or belief. It often uses strong language and persuasive techniques to rally support for a specific goal or to condemn a particular issue. These editorials are meant to inspire action and bring attention to important societal issues.
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A windmill in Ancient Roman times would be unscrambled as "niskefllau."
The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.The ancient Roman looked like the modern Roman except he would be wearing a toga and tunic, whereas the modern Roman would be wearing a suit and tie or jeans and tee shirt.
A stola
A Roman patriot would be an ancient Roman citizen who took pride in being a member of the Roman Empire.
That would be the 'editorial'.