ACT SSC Ancient History · Units 1–4
ACT SSC Ancient History Unit 4: Legacy of the Ancient World — Flashcards & Quiz
ACT SSC Ancient History Unit 4 explores the enduring legacy of the ancient world and its influence on modern society. These 20 free flashcards and 20 true/false quiz questions cover the origins of democracy in Athens, the foundations of Roman law from the Twelve Tables to Justinian, monumental architecture (the Colosseum, the Parthenon, the Pantheon), Greek philosophy from Socrates to Aristotle, Roman engineering (aqueducts, roads, concrete and domes), the development of historiography from Herodotus and Thucydides to Tacitus and Polybius, classical reception in later cultures, and the historiographical skills of source evaluation and evidence-based argument. Every card aligns with the ACT BSSS Ancient History framework for Unit 4 and reinforces the culminating skills of the course: synthesising evidence across periods, engaging with ancient and modern interpretations, and building arguments about continuity and change between antiquity and the modern world.
Key Terms
- Classical reception
- The study of how later cultures have used, reinterpreted and reimagined ancient Greek and Roman material. Now mainstream within ancient history and central to analysing legacy.
- Corpus Juris Civilis
- The 534 CE Byzantine compilation of Roman law commissioned by Justinian. Rediscovered in medieval Bologna, it became the foundation of European legal education and modern civil law systems.
- Stoicism / Epicureanism
- Two major Hellenistic philosophical schools — Stoicism (virtue through reason) and Epicureanism (ataraxia, freedom from disturbance). Both remain influential in Western ethics.
- Historiography
- The study of how history is written, interpreted and debated over time. Strong Unit 4 responses engage both ancient historiography (Herodotus, Thucydides, Polybius, Tacitus) and modern historiographical change.
- Pantheon
- A temple in Rome, rebuilt under Hadrian, with the largest unreinforced concrete dome in the world. A defining example of Roman architecture and engineering legacy.
- Continuity and change
- The historical-thinking framework for analysing legacy — identifying what persists from antiquity, what changes, and why the differences matter. Central to Unit 4 responses.
- Neoclassicism
- The 18th- and 19th-century revival of ancient Greek and Roman forms in art and architecture, often used to legitimise modern political institutions. A concrete example of reception and legacy.
Sample Flashcards
Q1: How did Athenian democracy influence modern democratic systems?
Athenian democracy introduced foundational principles: citizen participation in governance, equality before the law (isonomia), freedom of speech (parrhesia) and decision-making by majority vote. Modern democracies adopted these concepts, though they expanded participation to include women, all ethnicities and all social classes.
Q2: How did Roman law influence modern legal systems?
Roman law, codified in the Twelve Tables (c. 451–449 BCE) and later Justinian’s Corpus Juris Civilis (534 CE), established principles still used today: presumption of innocence, the right to a fair trial, written legal codes, contract law and the distinction between public and private law. Civil law systems in Europe, Latin America and parts of Asia are directly descended from Roman law.
Q3: What is the architectural significance of the Parthenon?
The Parthenon (completed 432 BCE) on the Athenian Acropolis is a masterpiece of Classical Greek architecture. Built in the Doric order, it features optical refinements (entasis, slight curvature of the stylobate) to appear perfectly straight. It symbolised Athenian power, wealth and devotion to Athena.
Q4: What engineering innovations made the Roman Colosseum possible?
The Colosseum (completed 80 CE) showcased Roman engineering: concrete construction, the arch-and-vault system, a complex underground network (hypogeum) for staging, and a retractable awning (velarium). It could seat 50,000 spectators and featured 80 entrances for efficient crowd management.
Q5: What were the key ideas of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle?
Socrates (c. 470–399 BCE): the Socratic method (questioning to reveal truth), examined ethics and virtue, "the unexamined life is not worth living." Plato (c. 428–348 BCE): Theory of Forms (abstract ideals), wrote The Republic on justice and the ideal state, founded the Academy. Aristotle (384–322 BCE): empirical observation, logic, classification of knowledge into disciplines, founded the Lyceum, tutored Alexander the Great.
Q6: How did Roman aqueducts work and why were they significant?
Roman aqueducts used gravity to transport water over long distances from mountain sources to cities. They featured arched bridges (such as the Pont du Gard in France), underground channels, settling tanks and distribution networks. Aqueducts supplied public baths, fountains and private homes, enabling urbanisation on an unprecedented scale.
Q7: What was the significance of the Roman road network?
The Roman road network (over 400,000 km at its peak) connected the empire’s provinces to Rome. Roads were engineered with multiple layers (foundation stones, gravel, paving) and featured drainage ditches. They enabled rapid military deployment, trade, communication (cursus publicus postal system) and cultural integration.
Q8: What is historiography and who were the first historians?
Historiography is the study of how history is written and interpreted. Herodotus (c. 484–425 BCE) is called the "Father of History" for his Histories, which investigated the causes of the Persian Wars using eyewitness accounts and travel observations. Thucydides (c. 460–400 BCE) advanced historiography with his rigorous, evidence-based History of the Peloponnesian War, emphasising cause-and-effect analysis over divine explanation.
Sample Quiz Questions
Q1: The word "democracy" comes from the Latin words for "people" and "power."
Answer: FALSE
The word "democracy" comes from the Greek words demos (people) and kratos (power/rule), not Latin. It was coined to describe the Athenian political system.
Q2: The Twelve Tables (c. 451–449 BCE) were the first written legal code in Roman history.
Answer: TRUE
The Twelve Tables were Rome’s first written law code, created in response to plebeian demands for publicly accessible laws. They covered property, family, inheritance and criminal law.
Q3: The Parthenon was built in the Corinthian architectural order.
Answer: FALSE
The Parthenon was built primarily in the Doric order (with some Ionic elements inside). The Corinthian order, with its ornate acanthus-leaf capitals, was developed later and is exemplified by the Temple of Olympian Zeus in Athens.
Q4: The Roman Colosseum featured a retractable awning called a velarium to shade spectators.
Answer: TRUE
The velarium was a massive retractable canvas awning operated by sailors from the Roman navy. It could cover most of the Colosseum’s seating area to protect spectators from sun and rain.
Q5: Plato founded the Lyceum, a school of philosophy in Athens.
Answer: FALSE
Plato founded the Academy in Athens (c. 387 BCE). The Lyceum was founded by Aristotle (c. 335 BCE). Both were influential centres of learning, but they are distinct institutions with different philosophical approaches.
Why It Matters
The legacy of the ancient world is not just history — it is the foundation on which much of modern Western civilisation was built, and also a category that has itself been used politically from the Renaissance to the present. The democratic principles of Athens, the legal frameworks of Rome, the philosophical traditions of Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics and Epicureans, and the engineering of aqueducts, roads and domes all continue to shape our political institutions, legal systems, intellectual traditions and built environment today. Unit 4 is the culminating unit of the ACT SSC Ancient History course, requiring you to synthesise knowledge from Units 1–3 and demonstrate how ancient developments have enduring significance while engaging with modern revisionist scholarship and the political uses of classical heritage. The historiographical skills you develop — evaluating sources, identifying bias, constructing evidence-based arguments, engaging with continuity and change — are the most transferable skills in the course and are directly assessed in BSSS examinations as well as in tertiary study in history, law, politics and philosophy.
Key Concepts
Democratic and Republican Legacy
Athenian democracy and the Roman Republic established political principles (citizen participation, rule of law, separation of powers) that modern democracies adopted and expanded. Understanding both the continuities and the significant differences between ancient and modern systems is essential for BSSS extended responses.
Legal Legacy of Rome
Roman law, from the Twelve Tables to Justinian’s Corpus Juris Civilis, established foundational legal principles (presumption of innocence, written law codes, contract law) that underpin civil law systems worldwide. Being able to trace specific modern legal principles back to their Roman origins is a key assessment skill.
Intellectual and Cultural Legacy
Greek philosophy, literature, drama and science created the intellectual framework of Western civilisation. The Socratic method, Platonic idealism and Aristotelian empiricism continue to influence education, ethics and scientific inquiry. Identifying these connections demonstrates the enduring relevance of ancient thought.
Historiography and Source Analysis
The methods of Herodotus and Thucydides established the discipline of history itself. Understanding how ancient historians approached evidence, causation and narrative — and evaluating their biases — is both a core Unit 4 topic and a transferable skill assessed throughout the BSSS course.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Claiming simple continuity between ancient and modern institutions (e.g. "modern democracy is the same as Athenian democracy") — strong responses weigh continuity and change.
- Treating ancient "legacy" as a neutral fact rather than a politically constructed category — claims about classical heritage have been used in imperial and nationalist projects.
- Reducing legacy to similarity — the distinctive Greek and Roman contributions (democracy, law, architecture, philosophy) coexist with non-classical traditions that also shaped the modern world.
- Omitting modern historiography — Finley, de Ste. Croix, Zanker, Brown and Pirenne are all relevant modern voices to name in Unit 4 responses.
- Listing "legacies" without evidence of the mechanism of transmission — explain how Roman law reached modern codes (Corpus Juris Civilis, Bologna) or how Greek philosophy reached modern thought (Islamic scholarship, medieval Latin translation), not just that it did.
Study Tips
- Create a "Legacy Map" linking ancient developments (left column) to their modern equivalents (right column) — e.g. Athenian Assembly → Australian Parliament, Roman roads → modern highway networks.
- Practise writing "continuity and change" paragraphs: what has survived from the ancient world, what has changed, and why the differences matter.
- Memorise key primary sources and their limitations: Pericles’ Funeral Oration (via Thucydides), Augustus’ Res Gestae, Caesar’s Gallic Wars — always note the author’s purpose and bias.
- Use flashcards with spaced repetition to memorise philosophical concepts, key dates and architectural terms — this factual knowledge is the foundation for analytical responses.
- For historiography questions, always compare at least two ancient historians (e.g. Herodotus vs Thucydides, Polybius vs Tacitus) and explain how their methods influenced the discipline of history.
- Review your notes from Units 1–3 before studying Unit 4 — legacy questions require you to draw on knowledge from the entire course.
Related Topics
Exam Prep & Study Notes
Frequently Asked Questions
What does ACT SSC Ancient History Unit 4 cover?
Unit 4 covers the legacy of the ancient world including the origins of democracy (Athens), Roman law and its influence on modern legal systems, ancient architecture (Colosseum, Parthenon), Greek philosophy (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle), engineering (aqueducts, roads) and the development of historiography as a discipline.
Are these flashcards aligned to the BSSS curriculum?
Yes — every flashcard and quiz question is mapped to the ACT Board of Senior Secondary Studies (BSSS) Ancient History curriculum for Unit 4: Legacy of the Ancient World.
How does Unit 4 connect to the rest of the ACT SSC Ancient History course?
Unit 4 synthesises knowledge from Units 1–3 by examining the lasting impact of ancient civilisations, governance systems and cultural achievements. It requires you to draw connections between ancient developments and their modern legacies, making it the culminating unit of the course.
Last updated: March 2026 · 20 flashcards · 20 quiz questions · Content aligned to the BSSS Framework