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         Tacitus:     more books (100)
  1. The Agricola (Classic Reprint) by Cornelius Tacitus, 2010-04-17
  2. Tacitus and Bracciolini The Annals Forged in the XVth Century by John Wilson Ross, 2009-10-04
  3. Historiae I-V (Oxford Classical Texts) (Latin Edition) by Cornelius Tacitus, 1922-02-22
  4. Tacitus - The Histories of Ancient Rome by Tacitus, 2008-09-07
  5. Irony and Misreading in the Annals of Tacitus by Ellen O'Gorman, 2006-12-14
  6. Works of Cornelius Tacitus. Includes Agricola, The Annals, A Dialogue Concerning Oratory, Germania and The Histories (mobi) by Cornelius Tacitus, 2009-02-16
  7. Tacitus: Histories Book I (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) by Tacitus, 2003-01-27
  8. Tacitus: Histories Book II (Cambridge Greek and Latin Classics) (Bk. 2) by Tacitus, 2007-12-10
  9. Tacitus: Annals XV (Latin and English Edition) (Bk. 15) by Cornelius Tacitus, 2007-08-30
  10. Tacitus: Annals XIV (Bristol Latin Texts Series) (Bk.14) by E.C. Woodcock, 1997-05-31
  11. The Annals of Tacitus: Volume 1, Annals 1.1-54 (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries) (Books 1-6) by Tacitus, 2005-01-20
  12. Tacitus: Germania by J.G.C. Anderson, 2009-09-17
  13. Annals and Histories (Everyman's Library) by Tacitus, 2009-10-06
  14. Opera Minora (Latin Edition) by Cornelius Tacitus, Henry Furneaux, 2009-11-12

41. Tacitus
tacitus. tacitus je asi právem považován za nejvetšího historika rímské ríše. O ní neco málo zaznamenává sám tacitus ve svých knihách.
http://web.dkm.cz/antika/tacitus.htm
Tacitus
Svou spisovatelskou dráhu zahájil teprve za klidné vlády Traiana a to spisem Životopis Iulia Agricoly, v nìmž oslavil úspìchy svého tchána v Británii. Spis z roku 98 je protknut témìø posvátnou úctou pøed vynikajícím mužem impéria. Ještì téhož roku pak Tacitus sepsal spis o pùvodu, sídlech, zvycích a kmenech Germánù nazvaný Germania (nebo úplnìji a pøesnìji O pùvodu, sídle, mravech a národech Germánù). Toto dílo má obrovský význam pro poznání starovìku v Nìmecku, by vychází pøedevším z knih Caesara a Plinia staršího. Na spisu je zajímavá sympatie autora pro mravnì nezkazitelné Germány i strach z potencionálního nebezpeèí ze strany tìchto národù.
Tacitus údajnì plánoval sepsání dalších dvou knih - jedné o díle Augusta a druhé o vládì Nervy a Traiana, ale k tomu už se nedostal - smrt byla asi rychlejší.
Kromì tìchto historických dìl sepsal Tacitus Rozhovor o øeènících, kulturní dokument velkého významu. Dialog má téma úpadku soudního øeènictví, kterým se Tacitus mimo jiné dlouho živil, ve starém Øímì za císaøství. Styl a sloh tohoto spisu se pomìrnì radikálnì liší od všech ostatních Tacitových dìl, což dalo vzniknout sporné myšlence, že autor tohoto spisu je jiný a nám neznámý. Tuto otázku však asi nikdy s jistotou nevyøešíme.
Tacitova díla nejsou opìvována jen pro svùj obsah, ale pro svou vynikající formu. Tacitovi se jako jednomu z prvních podaøilo díky síle své osobnosti napsat dìjiny jako historické drama, plného vzruchu, ale pøitom vìtšinou pravdivého. Používal propracovaných psychologických obrazù osobností, hledá souvislosti a pøíèiny. S historikù antiky jej mùžeme srovnávat jen s málokterými Øeky (Hérodotos, Thúkydidés, Polybios) a možná s žádným Øímanem. Jeho díla samozøejmì nejsou bez chybièky, nìkterá fakta úèelovì pøevrátil, ale stejnì ho øadíme k naprosté elitì svìtových historikù všech dob.

42. - Great Books -
tacitus (55117), Brief long. tacitus was primarily concerned with the concentration of power into the hands of the Roman Emperors.
http://www.mala.bc.ca/~mcneil/taci.htm
Tacitus (55-117)
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43. CSL: Publius Cornelius Tacitus
Publius Cornelius tacitus (ca. 55 ca. 120), Works Agricola ed. William Allen (Boston Ginn Co., 1913) Alternate Latin texts
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(single page) Help Secondary Texts What's New Credits ... Contact Us Publius Cornelius Tacitus (ca. 55 - ca. 120) Works Agricola Alternate Latin texts ed. Henry Furneaux (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1900) [Perseus] Translations English by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb (London, New York: Macmillan, 1877) French by Danielle De Clercq-Douillet (2000) [Bibliotheca Classica Selecta] French by Danielle De Clercq-Douillet (2000) [Itinera Electronica] Annales ab excessu divi Augusti ed. C.D. Fisher, Cornelii Taciti Annalium (Oxford 1906) [The Latin Library] Alternate Latin texts ed. Henry Furneaux (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1900) [Perseus] Translations English by Alfred John Church AND William Jackson Brodribb (New York: Random House, 1942) [Perseus] English by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb (London, New York: Macmillan, 1888) [Internet Classics Archive] English by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb (London, New York: Macmillan, 1888) [Ancient History Sourcebook] Dutch by Ben Bijnsdorp [Dutch Tacitus Project] French by J.L. Burnouf (Paris: Librairie de L. Hachette et Cie, 1859) [Itinera Electronica]

44. Cornelius Tacitus
Craig Space / Historia Cornelius tacitus. CORNELIVS TACITVS. Background. tacitus was born about AD 56 and probably died some time after AD 117.
http://www.interlog.com/~gilgames/tacitus.htm
Craig Space Historia : Cornelius Tacitus
CORNELIVS TACITVS
PAX ROMANA: The "Roman Peace"
(Source unknown)
Background
Tacitus was born about A.D. 56 and probably died some time after A.D. 117. We don't know a lot about him. Though he wrote quite a bit, he was very "taciturn" when it came to writing about himself. His birthplace may have been somewhere in the vicinity of Massilia (modern Marseilles, in southern France). It was an old Greek city-colony, a centre of sophisticated Greek culture and philosophy in a Roman empire that thought such things effeminate and unworthy.
His Career and Personality
Tacitus was an aristocrat through and through, the son of a member of the privileged Roman "knight" class. He eventually became a Roman senator. This position brought him great wealth and power. Despite his social advantages and very high rank, he complained bitterly about the tyrany of the elitist, autocratic political system and the lack of political and personal freedom in the dictatorship of the Empire. Like many people in such situations, however, he led a very successful public career. This could have been the result of several factors. Perhaps he could deal with the obvious hypocrisy of his position. Perhaps he was personally ambitious or cynical. He may have had a sense of duty to his state, his people or to the idealism of Rome and its "destiny". It may have been a combination of all these.

45. Tacitus Enemy Mine
tacitus. Is that all you got? Is that all you got? . Crazy war. Posted by tacitus at September 15, 2003 0803 AM. Comments. Crazy War . *g*.
http://38.144.96.23/tacitus/archives/000918.html

46. Tacitus X2
tacitus. Now, back to the land of adulthood. Oh yeah go here if you have 15 minutes to kill. Posted by tacitus at May 3, 2003 0406 AM. Comments.
http://38.144.96.23/tacitus/archives/000610.html

47. Tacitus: Nero's Persecution Of The Christians
tacitus (c. 55 117 CE) Nero s persecution of the Christians. If tacitus shows sympathy for them, it is because he detests Nero more.
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_1/tacitus.html
Tacitus (c. 55 -117 CE): Nero's persecution of the Christians
Tacitus was a fierce critic of Nero, and modern scholars have questioned the reliability of his account of this notorious Roman Emperor; but the following passage from his Annals
What were the main accusations brought against the Christians?
Translated by Richard Hooker
Back to table of contents This is an excerpt from Reading About the World, Volume 1 , edited by Paul Brians, Mary Gallwey, Douglas Hughes, Azfar Hussain, Richard Law, Michael Myers, Michael Neville, Roger Schlesinger, Alice Spitzer, and Susan Swan and published by Harcourt Brace Custom Books. The reader was created for use in the World Civilization course at Washington State University, but material on this page may be used for educational purposes by permission of the editor-in-chief: Paul Brians
Department of English
Washington State University
Pullman 99164-5020 This is just a sample of Reading About the World, Volume 1 . If, after examining the table of contents of the complete volume, you are interested in considering it for use at your own campus, please contact

48. WINDOWS\DESKTOP\WEB\AGRICOLA
tacitus The Life of Gnaeus Julius Agricola Chapter 1. To bequeath to posterity a record of the deeds and characters of distinguished
http://129.186.40.170/THOMAS/netscape/agricola.htm
Tacitus: The Life of Gnaeus Julius Agricola
Chapter 2. We have read that the panegyrics pronounced by Arulenus Rusticus on Paetus Thrasea, and by Herennius Senecio on Priscus Helvidius, were made capital crimes, that not only their persons but their very books were objects of rage, and that the triumvirs were commissioned to burn in the forum those works of splendid genius. They fancied, forsooth that in that fire the voice of the Roman people, the freedom of the Senate, and the conscience of the human race were perishing, while at the same they banished the teachers of philosophy, and exiled every noble pursuit, that nothing good might anywhere confront them. Certainly we showed a magnificent example of patience; as a former age had witnessed the extreme of liberty, so we witnessed the extreme of servitude, when the informer robbed us of the interchange of speech and hearing. We should have lost memory as well as voice, had it been as easy to forget as to keep silence.
Chapter 8. Britain was then under Vettius Bolanus, who governed more mildly than suited so turbulent a province. Agricola moderated his energy and restrained his ardor, that he might not grow too important, for he had learnt to obey, and understood well how to combine expediency with honor. Soon afterwards Britain received for its governor a man of consular rank, Petilius Cerialis. Agricola's merits had not room for display. Cerialis let him share at first indeed only the toils and dangers, but before long the glory of war, often by way of trial putting him in command of part of the army, and sometimes, on the strength of the result, of larger forces. Never to enhance his own renown did Agricola boast of his exploits; he always referred his success, as though he were but an instrument, to his general and director. Thus by his valor in obeying orders and by his modesty of speech he escaped jealousy without losing distinction.

49. Tacitus Annals 14., Chapters 29-38 Boudicea
tacitus Annals 14., chapters 2938 Boudicea Reading for Friday 12 December 1997 (Named spelled Boudicea or Boudicca). In the consulship
http://129.186.40.170/THOMAS/netscape/boudicca.htm
Tacitus Annals 14., chapters 29-38: Boudicea Reading for Friday 12 December 1997 (Named spelled Boudicea or Boudicca)
On the shore stood the opposing army with its dense array of armed warriors, while between the ranks dashed women, in black attire like the Furies, with hair disheveled, waving brands. All around, the Druids, lifting up their hands to heaven, and pouring forth dreadful imprecations, scared our soldiers by the unfamiliar sight, so that, as if their limbs were paralyzed, they stood motionless, and exposed to wounds. Then urged by their general's appeals and mutual encouragements not to quail before a troop of frenzied women, they bore the standards onwards, smote down all resistance, and wrapped the foe in the flames of his own brands. A force was next set over the conquered, and their groves, devoted to inhuman superstitions, were destroyed. They deemed it indeed a duty to cover their altars with the blood of captives and to consult their deities through human entrails. Suetonius had the fourteenth legion with the veterans of the twentieth, and auxiliaries from the neighborhood, to the number of about ten thousand armed men, when he prepared to break off delay and fight a battle. He chose a position approached by a narrow defile, closed in at the rear by a forest, having first ascertained that there was not a soldier of the enemy except in his front, where an open plain extended without any danger from ambuscades. His legions were in close array; round them, the light-armed troops, and the cavalry in dense array on the wings. On the other side, the army of the Britons, with its masses of infantry and cavalry, was confidently exulting, a larger host than ever had assembled, and so fierce in spirit that they actually brought with them, to witness the victory, their wives riding in wagons, which they had placed on the extreme border of the plain.

50. Tacitus And Tiberius
Did tacitus malign Tiberius by portraying him as hypocritical, cruel, wrathful and preverted? tacitus and Tiberius. tacitus is also given to exaggerations.
http://janusquirinus.org/essays/Tiberius.html
Tacitus and Tiberius
The emperor Tiberius emerges from Tacitus' Annals as a hypocritical, cruel and immoral character. Yet a closer study of the factual evidence given by Tacitus illustrates a totally different emperor. Indeed, it would appear that Tiberius, at least in the first half of his reign, was exceedingly capable. It is interesting to note that the negative impression created by Tacitus—despite the factual evidence—arises from his seductive writing style and innuendoes, and not so much from tangible evidence. The reason why Tacitus depict Tiberius as such is of interest because it shows his bias, perhaps based on his background, and brings into question the reliability of Tacitus' history writing. It is also representative of the hostile senatorial tradition towards the emperors. from http://janusquirinus.org/ The reign of Tiberius according to Tacitus can be separated into two different periods, demarcated by the death of Drusus and the ascendancy of Sejanus. The initial period was regarded by Tacitus as "a time of reserve and crafty assumptions of virtue", while the days in Capri were a time of paranoid politics and moral depravity, "[plunging] into every wickedness and disgrace" ( Annals VI.51). The general picture painted of 'Tiberius is that he was a man with inherent character flaws, which he hid as long as there were external reasons, perhaps with hypocritical acts of goodness or kindness. Eventually, though, he cast off his pretences and "indulged his own inclination"’ (

51. The Viking Age, Some Literature (Tacitus)
A bit of Swedish (and scandinavic) history Works by tacitus Germania Annals Annals, chapter I; Annals, chapter II; Annals
http://www.luth.se/luth/present/sweden/history/lit/tacitus/
A bit of Swedish (and scandinavic) history...

52. Tacitus --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Visit Britannica Store, Encyclopædia Britannica, tacitus Encyclopædia Britannica Article. To cite this page MLA style tacitus. Encyclopædia Britannica.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=72709&tocid=0

53. Tacitus And Jesus. Christ Myth Refuted. Did Jesus Exist? A Christian Response
Get the entire Tekton site on CD or zipfile. Get a strippeddown copy of this page. Jesus Nero s Scapegoats Cornelius tacitus The
http://www.tektonics.org/tekton_01_01_01_TC.html
Apologetics Ministries Apologetics Encyclopedia of Bible Verses get your answers here! Look up by person's name, Scripture cite, or keyword search] What's New! Book Reviews and Bookstore Donate to the Ministry Challenge to Critics ... Why Critics of the Bible Do Not Deserve Benefit of the Doubt Search What Letter? A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U-V W XYZ What Bible Book? Genesis Exodus Leviticus Numbers Deuteronomy Joshua Judges Ruth 1 Samuel 2 Samuel 1 Kings 2 Kings 1 Chronicles 2 Chronicles Ezra-Nehemiah Esther-Job Psalms Proverbs Ecclesiastes-Song Isaiah Jeremiah-Lam. Ezekiel Daniel Hosea-Joel Amos-Obadiah Jonah-Micah Nahum-Habakkuk Zephaniah-Haggai Zachariah-Malachi Matthew Mark Luke-Acts John Romans Galatians Colossians Pastorals/Philemon Hebrews James 1 and 2 Peter 1, 2, 3 John, Jude Revelation Support Us Cross Daily.com Awesome
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54. Tacitus: Agricola
THE LIFE OF CNAEUS JULIUS AGRICOLA. The Emperor Domitian. by tacitus. (98 AD). Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb.
http://members.aol.com/antoninus1/piety/agricola.htm
THE LIFE OF CNAEUS JULIUS AGRICOLA
The Emperor Domitian by Tacitus (98 A.D.) Translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb 2. We have only to read that the panegyrics pronounced by Arulenus Rusticus on Paetus Thrasea, and by Herennius Senecio on Priscus Helvidius, were made capital crimes, that not only their persons but their very books were objects of rage, and that the triumvirs were commissioned to burn in the forum those works of splendid genius. They fancied, forsooth, that in that fire the voice of the Roman people, the freedom of the Senate, and the conscience of the human race were perishing, while at the same time they banished the teachers of philosophy, and exiled every noble pursuit, that nothing good might anywhere confront them. Certainly we showed a magnificent example of patience; as a former age had witnessed the extreme of liberty, so we witnessed the extreme of servitude, when the informer robbed us of the interchanges of speech, and hearing. We should have lost memory as well as voice, had it been as easy to forget as to keep silence. 8. Britain was then under Vettius Bolanus, who governed more mildly than suited so turbulent a province. Agricola moderated his energy and restrained his ardour, that he might not grow too important, for he had learnt to obey, and understood well how to combine expediency with honour. Soon afterwards Britain received for its governor a man of consular rank, Petilius Cerialis. Agricola's merits had now room for display. Cerialis let him share at first indeed only the toils and dangers, but before long the glory of war, often by way of trial putting him in command of part of the army, and sometimes, on the strength of the result, of larger forces. Never to enhance his own renown did Agricola boast of his exploits; he always referred his success, as though he were but an instrument, to his general and director. Thus by his valour in obeying orders and by his modesty of speech he escaped jealousy without losing distinction.

55. Tacitus: Nero And The Murder Of Agrippina (Annals, Book XIV)
THE ANNALS. tacitus. Nero and the Murder of Agrippina (Book XIV, 116). translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb.
http://members.aol.com/zoticus/bathlib/nero.htm
THE ANNALS
Tacitus Nero and the Murder of Agrippina (Book XIV, 1-16) translated by Alfred John Church and William Jackson Brodribb These and the like complaints, rendered impressive by tears and by the cunning of an adulteress, no one checked, as all longed to see the mother's power broken, while not a person believed that the son's hatred would steel his heart to her murder. 3. Nero accordingly avoided secret interviews with her, and when she withdrew to her gardens or to her estates at Tusculum and Antium, he praised her for courting repose. At last, convinced that she would be too formidable, wherever she might dwell, he resolved to destroy her, merely deliberating whether it was to be accomplished by poison, or by the sword, or by any other violent means. Poison at first seemed best, but, were it to be administered at the imperial table, the result could not be referred to chance after the recent circumstances of the death of Britannicus. Again, to tamper with the servants of a woman who, from her familiarity with crime, was on her guard against treachery, appeared to be extremely difficult, and then, too, she had fortified her constitution by the use of antidotes. How again the dagger and its work were to be kept secret, no one could suggest, and it was feared too that whoever might be chosen to execute such a crime would spurn the order. An ingenious suggestion was offered by Anicetus, a freedman, commander of the fleet at Misenum, who had been tutor to Nero in boyhood and had a hatred of Agrippina which she reciprocated. He explained that a vessel could be constructed, from which a part might by a contrivance be detached, when out at sea, so as to plunge her unawares into the water. Nothing, he said, allowed of accidents so much as the sea, and should she be overtaken by shipwreck, who would be so unfair as to impute to crime an offence committed by the winds and waves? The emperor would add the honour of a temple and of shrines to the deceased lady, with every other display of filial affection.

56. Tacitus Biblio
tacitus Some basic bibliography The following selection focuses heavily on works in English and on the Agricola, Dialogus, and Annales.
http://classics.rutgers.edu/tacitus_biblio.htm
TACITUS
Some basic bibliography
The following selection focuses heavily on works in English and on the Agricola, Dialogus, and Annales . Much excellent work, especially of the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries, is in German. Editions
Agricola, Germania, Dialogus
: R. M. Ogilvie and M. Winterbottom (1975) (OCT); E. Koestermann (1970) (BT)
Historiae
Annales
Commentaries
Agricola
: R. Till (Berlin 1961); R. M. Ogilvie and I. A. Richmond (Oxford 1967)
Germania J. G. C. Anderson (Oxford 1938); R. Much, 3rd ed. rev. H. Jankuhn and W. Lange (Heidelberg 1967)
Dialogus : W. Peterson (Oxford 1893); A. Gudeman (Boston 1894), 2nd ed. (Leipzig 1914)
Historiae
A. L. Irvine (London 1952); G. E. F. Chilver (Oxford 1979); Book 3: K. Wellesley G. E. F. Chilver rev. G. B. Townend (Oxford 1985) Annales H. Furneaux Book 1: N. P. Miller F. D. Goodyear F. D. Goodyear (Cambridge 1981); Book 3: A. J. Woodman and R. H. Martin (Cambridge 1996); Book 4: R. H. Martin and A. J. Woodman (Cambridge 1989); D. C. A. Shotter (Warminster 1989); Book 11: H. W. Benario

57. Tacitus - Germania: De Origine Et Situ Germanorum Liber
Translate this page tacitus Germania. De origine et situ Germanorum liber. Die Grenzen Germaniens. Ich lasse das als unverbürgt auf sich beruhen. tacitus, (ca. 70 n.Ch.).
http://www.nordzeit.de/germania.htm
Tacitus: Germania
De origine et situ Germanorum liber
Die Grenzen Germaniens Ursprung und Name der Germanen Herkules und Odysseus bei den Germanen Volkstypus Natur des Landes, Bodenerzeugnisse, Geld Heerwesen Die Volksversammlung Gerichtsbarkeit Wehrhaftmachung und Gefolgschaft Kleidung Mitgift und Ehe Erziehung, Erbrecht Fehde und Gastfreundschaft Trank und Speise Spiele Die Unfreien Feldwirtschaft Totenbestattung Die Chatten Tacitus,
(ca. 70 n.Ch.)

58. Lexikon - Gaius Cornelius Tacitus Definition Erklärung Bedeutung
Translate this page Was Wer Wo ist Gaius Cornelius tacitus - Definition Erklärung Bedeutung von Gaius Cornelius tacitus. Gaius Cornelius tacitus. Definition
http://www.net-lexikon.de/Gaius-Cornelius-Tacitus.html
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Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
Definition, Bedeutung, Erkl¤rung im Lexikon
Dieser Artikel befasst sich mit dem Historiker Tacitus. F¼r den gleichnamigen Kaiser siehe Marcus Claudius Tacitus Gaius (oder Publius Cornelius Tacitus (geb. ca. , gest. nach ) war ein r¶mischer Historiker und Politiker ( Senator
Leben
œber Tacitus' Leben haben wir nur verstreute Zeugnisse von ihm selbst oder von seinen Zeitgenossen, vor allem dem j¼ngeren Plinius. Seine Familie stammte eventuell aus einer der r¶mischen Provinzen, vielleicht Gallien . Tacitus begann unter Kaiser Vespasian die typische politische Karriere eines r¶mischen Senators, die ihren formalen H¶hepunkt mit dem Konsulat im Jahre und dem Prokonsulat der Provinz Asia (auf dem Gebiet der heutigen T¼rkei ) zwischen und erreichte. Tacitus galt als einer der bedeutendsten Redner seiner Zeit; dem Zustand der Redekunst widmete er seine vielleicht fr¼heste Schrift, den Dialogus de oratoribus . Nach dem Konsulat begann er mit der Arbeit an seinen beiden groŸen Geschichtswerken, die sich vielleicht noch bis in die beginnende Herrschaft des Kaisers

59. Lexikon - Tacitus Definition Erklärung Bedeutung
Translate this page tacitus. Definition, Bedeutung, Erklärung im Lexikon. Artikel auf Englisch Gaius Cornelius tacitus. Dieser Artikel befasst
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Definition, Bedeutung, Erkl¤rung im Lexikon
Artikel auf Englisch: Gaius Cornelius Tacitus
Dieser Artikel befasst sich mit dem Historiker Tacitus. F¼r den gleichnamigen Kaiser siehe Marcus Claudius Tacitus Gaius (oder Publius Cornelius Tacitus (geb. ca. , gest. nach ) war ein r¶mischer Historiker und Politiker ( Senator
Leben
œber Tacitus' ("Der Schweigsame") Leben haben wir nur verstreute Zeugnisse von ihm selbst oder von seinen Zeitgenossen, vor allem dem j¼ngeren Plinius. Seine Familie stammte eventuell aus einer der r¶mischen Provinzen, vielleicht Gallien . Tacitus begann unter Kaiser Vespasian die typische politische Karriere eines r¶mischen Senators, die ihren formalen H¶hepunkt mit dem Konsulat im Jahre und dem Prokonsulat der Provinz Asia (auf dem Gebiet der heutigen T¼rkei ) zwischen und erreichte. Tacitus galt als einer der bedeutendsten Redner seiner Zeit; dem Zustand der Redekunst widmete er seine vielleicht fr¼heste Schrift, den Dialogus de oratoribus . Nach dem Konsulat begann er mit der Arbeit an seinen beiden groŸen Geschichtswerken, die sich vielleicht noch bis in die beginnende Herrschaft des Kaisers Hadrian hinzog. Tacitus schrieb seine Geschichtswerke aus der Perspektive des Senators, der die Zeit der r¶mischen Kaiser von Augustus bis Domitian danach beurteilte, wie weit sie noch den Idealvorstellungen der r¶mischen Republik entsprach. Seine scharfen und auch sprachlich brillanten Analysen haben das moderne Bild vom r¶mischen Reich im 1. Jahrhundert n. Chr. wesentlich gepr¤gt.

60. TacituS - Of The Fallen Ones
tacitus of the fallen ones cy)dots - cydots.com P.
http://www.tacitus.de.ms/
TacituS - of the fallen ones
cy)dots - [ cydots.com ]
P TacituS - of the fallen ones
cy)dots - [ cydots.com ]
P

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