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  2. Tacitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus

    Publius Cornelius Tacitus, [note 1] known simply as Tacitus (/ ˈ t æ s ɪ t ə s / TAS-it-əs, [2] [3] Latin: [ˈtakɪtʊs]; c. AD 56 – c. 120), was a Roman historian and politician. Tacitus is widely regarded as one of the greatest Roman historians by modern scholars.

  3. Tacitus on Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus_on_Jesus

    Tacitus suggested that Nero used the Christians as scapegoats. [17] As with almost all ancient Greek and Latin literature, [18] no original manuscripts of the Annals exist. The surviving copies of Tacitus' major works derive from two principal manuscripts, known as the Medicean manuscripts, which are held in the Laurentian Library in Florence ...

  4. Tacitus (emperor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitus_(emperor)

    An origin story which claimed Tacitus to be the heir of an old Umbrian family and one of the wealthiest men of the empire with a total wealth of 280 million sestertii circulated after his coronation. His faction distributed copies of the historian Publius Cornelius Tacitus ' work, which was barely read at the time, perhaps contributing to its ...

  5. Tacitean studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacitean_studies

    Tacitus's contemporaries were well-acquainted with his work; Pliny the Younger, one of his first admirers, congratulated him for his better-than-usual precision and predicted that his Histories would be immortal: only a third of his known work has survived and then through a very tenuous textual tradition; we depend on a single manuscript for books I–VI of the Annales and on another one for ...

  6. The Twelve Caesars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Twelve_Caesars

    The book discusses the significant and critical period of the Principate from the end of the Republic to the reign of Domitian; comparisons are often made with Tacitus, whose surviving works document a similar period. The Twelve Caesars, using the same group, were a popular subject in art in many different media from the Renaissance onwards.

  7. Battle of Mons Graupius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Mons_Graupius

    The Battle of Mons Graupius was, according to Tacitus, a Roman military victory in what is now Scotland, taking place in AD 83 or, less probably, 84. The exact location of the battle is a matter of debate. Historians have long questioned some details of Tacitus's account of the fight, suggesting that he exaggerated Roman success.

  8. Germania (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germania_(book)

    Germaniae veteris typus (Old Germany) edited by Willem and Joan Blaeu), 1645, based on information from Tacitus and Pliny. One of the minor works of Tacitus, Germania was not widely cited or used before the Renaissance. In antiquity, Lucian appears to imitate a sentence from it. [7] It was largely forgotten during the Middle Ages.

  9. Histories (Tacitus) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histories_(Tacitus)

    First page of the Histories in its first printed edition. Histories (Latin: Historiae) is a Roman historical chronicle by Tacitus.Written c. 100–110, its complete form covered c. 69–96, a period which includes the Year of Four Emperors following the downfall of Nero, as well as the period between the rise of the Flavian dynasty under Vespasian and the death of Domitian. [1]