Asked by nunya
How did Augustus change the government of Rome?
(1 point)
Responses
He took away most powers of the Senate.
He took away most powers of the Senate.
He made the Senate more powerful.
He made the Senate more powerful.
He respected the traditions of the republic.
He respected the traditions of the republic.
He allowed the citizens to hold the power.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
He took away most powers of the Senate.
Explanation: Augustus kept republican forms and titles but concentrated real power (military command, control of provinces, key magistracies) in himself, reducing the Senate to a largely advisory body.
Explanation: Augustus kept republican forms and titles but concentrated real power (military command, control of provinces, key magistracies) in himself, reducing the Senate to a largely advisory body.
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