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Evidence for Greek and Roman Life

META
HistoryAncient Greece & Rome|Ages 9—11|ID: mt_N1744276Zu

Understand that historians and archaeologists piece together ancient Greek and Roman life from evidence — pottery paintings, coins, inscriptions, ruins like Pompeii, and written texts by authors such as Homer and Pliny — and that the same evidence can be interpreted in different ways by different historians

Mastery Evidence

  • Name at least three types of evidence historians use to learn about ancient Greece and Rome
  • Explain why Pompeii is especially valuable as a source of evidence about Roman life
  • Give an example of how the same piece of evidence could be interpreted in more than one way

Assessment Prompt

“If [child] saw an ancient Greek pot or a Roman coin in a museum, could they explain what historians can learn from objects like these and why different experts might interpret them differently?”

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