Fisher, C. D. (ed.) (1906), Cornelii Taciti Annalium Ab Excessu Divi Augusti Libri, Oxford. Koestermann, E. (ed.) (1965), Cornelii Taciti Libri Qui Supersunt, Tom. I: Ab Excessu Divi Augusti, Leipzig. Heubner, H. (ed.) (1994), P. Cornelii Taciti Libri Qui Supersunt, Tom. I: Ab Excessu Divi Augusti, Stuttgart [2nd, corrected edition; first edition 1983]. Wellesley, K. (ed.) (1986), Cornelii Taciti Libri Qui Supersunt, Tomus I, Pars Secunda: Ab Excessu Divi Augusti Libri XI–XVI, Leipzig. Furneaux, H. (1907), Cornelii Taciti Annalium Ab Excessu Divi Augusti Libri/ The <strong>Annals</strong> of <strong>Tacitus</strong> edited <strong>with</strong> introduction <strong>and</strong> notes, vol. II. Books XI–XVI, 2nd edn, revised by H. F. Pelham <strong>and</strong> C. D. Fisher, Oxford. Koestermann, E. (1968), Cornelius <strong>Tacitus</strong>, Annalen, erläutert und mit einer Einleitung versehen, B<strong>and</strong> IV: Buch 14–16, Heidelberg. Miller, N. P. (1973), Cornelii Taciti Annalium Liber XV, Basingstoke <strong>and</strong> London. Jackson, J. (1937), <strong>Tacitus</strong>, <strong>Annals</strong>, Books XIII–XVI, Loeb Classical Library, London <strong>and</strong> Cambridge, Mass. Woodman, A. J. (2004), <strong>Tacitus</strong>, The <strong>Annals</strong>, translated, <strong>with</strong> introduction <strong>and</strong> notes, Indianapolis <strong>and</strong> Cambridge. Adams, J. N. (1972), ‘The Language of the Later Books of <strong>Tacitus</strong>’ <strong>Annals</strong>’, Classical Quarterly 22, 350–73. DOI: 10.1017/S0009838800042130 — (1983), ‘Words for “Prostitute” in <strong>Latin</strong>’, Rheinisches Museum 126, 321–58. Allen, W. (1962), ‘Nero’s Eccentricities Before the Fire (Tac. Ann. xv, 37)’, Numen 9, 99–109. DOI: 10.<strong>23</strong>07/3269398
Ash, R. (2006), <strong>Tacitus</strong>, Bristol. —. (ed.) (2012), Oxford Readings in <strong>Tacitus</strong>, Oxford. Austin, R. G. (1964), P. Vergili Maronis, Aeneidos Liber Secundus, <strong>with</strong> a commentary, Oxford. Ball, L. F. (1994), ‘A Reappraisal of Nero’s Domus Aurea’, JRA, Supplementary Series II, Rome Papers, 182–254. Bartera, S. (2011), ‘Year-beginnings in the Neronian Books of <strong>Tacitus</strong>’ <strong>Annals</strong>’, Museum Helveticum 68, 161–81. Barton, C. (1989), ‘The Sc<strong>and</strong>al of the Arena’, Representations 27, 1–36. DOI: 10.<strong>23</strong>07/2928482 Bartsch, S. (1994), Actors in the Audience: Theatricality <strong>and</strong> Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian, Cambridge, Mass. <strong>and</strong> London. Beacham, R. C. (1999), Spectacle Entertainments of Early Imperial Rome, New Haven <strong>and</strong> London. Bert Lott, J. (2012), Death <strong>and</strong> Dynasty in Early Imperial Rome: Key Sources, <strong>with</strong> <strong>Text</strong>, Translation, <strong>and</strong> <strong>Commentary</strong>, Cambridge <strong>and</strong> New York. DOI: 10.1017/ CBO9781139046565 Betensky, A. (1975), ‘Neronian Style, Tacitean Content: The Use of Ambiguous Confrontations in the <strong>Annals</strong>’, Latomus 37, 419–35. Birley, A. R. (2000), ‘The Life <strong>and</strong> Death of Cornelius <strong>Tacitus</strong>’, Historia 49, <strong>23</strong>0–47. Blösel, W. <strong>and</strong> Hölkeskamp, K.-J. (eds.) (2011), Von der militia equestris zur militia urbana. Prominenzrollen und Karrierefelder im antiken Rom, Stuttgart. Bomgardner, D. L. (2000), The Story of the Roman Amphitheatre, London <strong>and</strong> New York. Brunt, P. A. (1961), ‘Charges of Provincial Maladministration under the Early Principate’, Historia 10.2, 189–227. —. (1966), ‘Procuratorial Jurisdiction’, Latomus 25, 461–89. Burn<strong>and</strong>, C. (2012), <strong>Tacitus</strong> <strong>and</strong> the Principate: From Augustus to Domitian, Cambridge. Campbell, J. B. (1993), ‘War <strong>and</strong> Diplomacy: Rome <strong>and</strong> Parthia 31 BC – AD <strong>23</strong>5’, in J. Rich <strong>and</strong> G. Shipley (eds.), War <strong>and</strong> Society in the Roman World, London <strong>and</strong> New York, 213–40. Champlin, E. (2003), Nero, Cambridge, Mass. <strong>and</strong> London. Cooley, M. G. L. (ed.) (2003), The Age of Augustus (= LACTOR 17), London. Deininger, J. (1965), Die Provinziall<strong>and</strong>tage der römischen Kaiserzeit von Augustus bis zum Ende des dritten Jahrhunderts n. Chr., Munich. Develin, R. (1983), ‘<strong>Tacitus</strong> <strong>and</strong> Techniques of Insidious Suggestion’, Antichthon 17, 64–95. Dominik, W. J., Garthwaite, J., Roche, P. A. (eds.) (2009), Writing Politics in Imperial Rome, Leiden etc. Dyson, S. L. (1970), ‘The Portrait of Seneca in <strong>Tacitus</strong>’, Arethusa 3, 71–83. Eck, W. (2009), ‘The Administrative Reforms of Augustus: Pragmatism or Systematic Planning?’, in J. Edmondson (ed.), Augustus, Edinburgh, 229–49.
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Mathew Owen and Ingo Gildenhard Tac
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Tacitus, Annals, 15.20-23, 33-45 La
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Contents 1. Preface and acknowledge
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1. Preface and acknowledgements
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as to inform. Finally, for each cha
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At the outset of his Annals, which
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69 - 79 Vespasian In Rome from 75 o
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It would be misleading... to concep
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the Roman aristocracy remained a hi
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a text, early imperial Rome comes a
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in which he employed yet another ge
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Period Regime/ emperor in charge Ch
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In his history of Rome and Roman hi
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to the two high magistrates who ent
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One conspicuous aspect of the Annal
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centre of gravity is displaced to a
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judiciously aporetic stance on whet
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Stage 1: AD 54-58 Stage 2: AD 59-63
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this policy involves his presence i
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The passage offers excellent insigh
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interfered. Moreover, he identifies
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3. Latin text with study questions
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exim Cretensis, -e reus agor, agi,
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privatus, -i, m. viso, -ere, visi,
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adsensus, -us, m. celebro, -are, -a
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ultra (+ acc.) appello, -are, -avi,
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in dies cupido, -inis, f. adigo, -e
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arbitror, -ari, -atus sum providus,
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munus, -eris, n. frequento, -are, -
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omitto, -ere, -misi, -missum in inc
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adquiro, -ere, -quisivi, -quisitum
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prodo, -ere, -didi, -ditum circus,
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ago, -ere, egi, actum Palatium, -ii
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demum imus, -a, -um Esquiliae, -aru
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insula, -ae, f. numerum ineo, -ire,
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ceterum ruina, -ae, f. proinde ...
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Gallicus, -a, -um distinctio, -onis
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piaculum, -i, n. Sibyllae libri, -o
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confero, -ferre, -tuli, -latum perv
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The assigned portion of text begins
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Then a sudden transition in narrati
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starring Thrasea Paetus, are an exc
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conveys a sense of function, purpos
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additional offence outweighs the ot
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e (or traditionally were)? We may a
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. Illustration (sic...) c. Gnomic g
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disapproved of flowery rhetoric as
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[Therefore, after everything was pr
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omnibus libidinum inlecebris replet
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‘tu regere imperio populos, Roman
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whereby (quo)... we depart from the
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conducive to Thrasea’s argument -
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thinly masked by rhetorical general
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especially arresting. (Note that as
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The construction - a conditional se
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for almost everyone else the mind a
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We are still in AD 62, but Tacitus
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senatorumque interitus, quamvis pro
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he visits Roman society like a wrat
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Tacitus thus twins the abomination
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Candidates for the priesthood, girl
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Rufus chose for his tombstone (6.10
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Rufus and refocus attention from re
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during pregnancy. That poison playe
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who had made vows for his health wh
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‘In times of crisis, the senate s
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equirement of someone who took on t
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Take this as a benchmark and you co
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(in predicative position and govern
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This is another instance of Tacitea
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the major hyperbaton cupidine ... p
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Tacitus here takes a step back. Ner
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Nero imagines that his feats on sta
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position in the list, seems highly
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[62] M. Licinio L. Calpurnio consul
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at the spur of the moment. Possibly
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foedissima eius aulae ostenta is th
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The asyndetic tricolon, which consi
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up the disgust: as if the bluest of
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urial and the validity of the accus
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took a detour with the character po
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Tacitus endows Nero’s formulation
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the hands of the divine power of th
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first phrase, the second is slightl
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Tacitus goes on to explain why the
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( Chapter 37 locis struere convi
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A purpose clause: quo = ut eo.
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The general Agrippa was one of Augu
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Roman morality, and for noble women
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With ipse, Tacitus introduces a shi
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moral pollution of these men. The m
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The asyndeton of the previous two p
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Tacitus here records a telling dyna
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consumed by fire’, he rejoined
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The author of the Octavia (a so-cal
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The parallels between Quintilian’
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hunc morem cursus atque haec certam
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His (and Nero’s) assimilation of
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sed omnibus quae huic urbi per viol
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An ablative of manner, which amount
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After a long and twisting sentence
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... audebat), he again continues wi
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