Illustrated
History of the Roman Empire - FAQ (See
"Why did Rome fall?")
Fall
of Rome: Decline of the Roman Empire - Some
say Rome fell when it was split in two. Many say
the Fall was an ongoing process lasting more
than a century. Since Rome still exists it could
even be argued it never fell.
Roman
Empire: The Fall of Rome - It didn't
take long for the Germans and Goths to realize
that the new young emperors were weak and so
this was a good time to attack. Roman generals
also saw this weakness and revolted.
50
States Webliography
- Informative
sites, games, fun facts--all about the 50 U.S.
states.
Classics
Technology Center on the Web
- Focusing
on the Classical civilizations of Greece and
Rome, this site aims to incorporate the use of
technology into study of the Classics
Cold
War Museum
GeoBee
Challenge
- Stretch your mental muscles with a
daily dose of the questions that have stumped
geography whizzes from across the U.S.
Holocaust
- Holocaust
Teacher Resource Center
The
Living Room Candidate
- History
of Presidential Campaign Commercials 1952-2004
First
Amendment Project
First
Amendment Schools: Resources for Students,
Teachers ...
National
Archives & Records Administration -- Digital
Classroom-
Contains
reproducible copies of primary documents from
the holdings of the National Archives of the
United States, teaching activities correlated to
the National
History Standards
and National
Standards for Civics and Government,
and cross-curricular connections.
National
D-Day Museum
OurDocuments.gov
- Suggestions
and lesson ideas for all grades on how to
integrate OurDocuments.gov into your social
studies classroom. Includes downloadable Teacher
Sourcebook, a key resource for working with
the 100
milestone documents
in the classroom.
Plimoth-on-Web
Plantation
The
American Experience/Vietnam
The
Roaring Twenties and the Great Depression
The
Vietnam War
Wise
Guide
- This
web site from the Library of Congress is a
monthly magazine-style publication that features
short articles about a handful of historical
events or people each month, complete with a
brief history and links to primary-source
materials and other background information from
the Library's extensive online archives.