Jobs the Roman did during the Pax Romana were the same as those they did throughout the history of ancient Rome. They were: farming, carpentry, furniture making, shoe making, weaving, making clothes and/or items in fabrics, various types of metal working, jewellery making, brick making, brick laying, road building, stone masonry, butchery, bakery, engineering, mosaic making, fresco painting, making statues, writing, being an administrator, money lending, being a merchant of trader, shop keeping, selling at market stalls, mining, working in mints sailing, soldiering, etc. This list is not exhaustive.
many lost their jobs, those who kept their jobs faced pay cuts and reduced hours
The army was one way that the Romans maintained peace in the provinces, but most times it was not needed unless the province were on a border and there was danger of invasion. Most provincials were happy to have the benefits of Roman civilization, protection and opportunity. Another way they maintained the peace was by incorporating the gods and cultures of the provincials into their society. Roman citizenship and all its benefits was a third way.
monasteries and roman catholic church
I don't know very much, but I do know that as women did a lot of men's jobs during the second world war, after the war was over, women still kept up some of their jobs.
These jobs helped keep their communiity together. Everyone had something to do to keep it from destroying. For example, soldiers kept out a good eye for anything wrong happening, or scribes kept the daily records.
No new systems of law were established during the Pax Romana. Roman law just kept evolving as it had done before. Pax Romana was not about the law. it is a term which has been coined by historians to indicate the 200-year period of relative political stability within the Roman Empire which followed the creation of rule by emperors by Augustus. This stability was due to the empire having a strong central authority which was capable of holding the empire together, rather tan legislation.
many lost their jobs, those who kept their jobs faced pay cuts and reduced hours
peter andrew and john
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Men in Sparta fought, kept the city-state safe, and farmed. Men in Athens had schooling and got better jobs, but also fought during wars and battles.
The army was one way that the Romans maintained peace in the provinces, but most times it was not needed unless the province were on a border and there was danger of invasion. Most provincials were happy to have the benefits of Roman civilization, protection and opportunity. Another way they maintained the peace was by incorporating the gods and cultures of the provincials into their society. Roman citizenship and all its benefits was a third way.
Roman farms were kept all over the place
monasteries and roman catholic church
yes, because when the man went to the war world 1 the woman did the man job and thyey said " we can do it" so they kept working and helping the man.
I don't know very much, but I do know that as women did a lot of men's jobs during the second world war, after the war was over, women still kept up some of their jobs.
There were cutbacks in wages and hours