1. Cicero, Letters To His Friends, 8.11.4, 12.23.2, 12.28.3 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
2. Suetonius, Augustus, 36 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
3. Suetonius, Caligula, 8.1-8.2 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
4. Suetonius, Claudius, 41.3 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
5. Suetonius, Iulius, 20.1 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
6. Tacitus, Annals, 2.83, 3.17.4, 11.14.3, 13.31, 13.31.1, 14.65.2, 16.22.3 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna/acta urbis •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166, 167; Bruun and Edmondson (2015) 354 2.83. Honores ut quis amore in Germanicum aut ingenio validus reperti decretique: ut nomen eius Saliari carmine caneretur; sedes curules sacerdotum Augustalium locis superque eas querceae coronae statuerentur; ludos circensis eburna effigies praeiret neve quis flamen aut augur in locum Germanici nisi gentis Iuliae crearetur. arcus additi Romae et apud ripam Rheni et in monte Syriae Amano cum inscriptione rerum gestarum ac mortem ob rem publicam obisse. sepulchrum Antiochiae ubi crematus, tribunal Epidaphnae quo in loco vitam finierat. statuarum locorumve in quis coleretur haud facile quis numerum inierit. cum censeretur clipeus auro et magni- tudine insignis inter auctores eloquentiae, adseveravit Tiberius solitum paremque ceteris dicaturum: neque enim eloquentiam fortuna discerni et satis inlustre si veteres inter scriptores haberetur. equester ordo cuneum Germanici appellavit qui iuniorum dicebatur, instituitque uti turmae idibus Iuliis imaginem eius sequerentur. pleraque manent: quaedam statim omissa sunt aut vetustas oblitteravit. 13.31. Nerone iterum L. Pisone consulibus pauca memoria digna evenere, nisi cui libeat laudandis fundamentis et trabibus, quis molem amphitheatri apud campum Martis Caesar extruxerat, volumina implere, cum ex dignitate populi Romani repertum sit res inlustris annalibus, talia diurnis urbis actis mandare. ceterum coloniae Capua atque Nuceria additis veteranis firmatae sunt, plebeique congiarium quadringeni nummi viritim dati, et sestertium quadringenties aerario inlatum est ad retinendam populi fidem. vectigal quoque quintae et vicesimae venalium mancipiorum remissum, specie magis quam vi, quia cum venditor pendere iuberetur, in partem pretii emptoribus adcrescebat. et edixit Caesar, ne quis magistratus aut procurator in provincia quam obtineret spectaculum gladiatorum aut ferarum aut quod aliud ludicrum ederet. nam ante non minus tali largitione quam corripiendis pecuniis subiectos adfligebant, dum quae libidine deliquerant ambitu propugt. | 2.83. Affection and ingenuity vied in discovering and decreeing honours to Germanicus: his name was to be chanted in the Saliar Hymn; curule chairs surmounted by oaken crowns were to be set for him wherever the Augustal priests had right of place; his effigy in ivory was to lead the procession at the Circus Games, and no flamen or augur, unless of the Julian house, was to be created in his room. Arches were added, at Rome, on the Rhine bank, and on the Syrian mountain of Amanus, with an inscription recording his achievements and the fact that he had died for his country. There was to be a sepulchre in Antioch, where he had been cremated; a funeral monument in Epidaphne, the suburb in which he had breathed his last. His statues, and the localities in which his cult was to be practised, it would be difficult to enumerate. When it was proposed to give him a gold medallion, as remarkable for the size as for the material, among the portraits of the classic orators, Tiberius declared that he would dedicate one himself "of the customary type, and in keeping with the rest: for eloquence was not measured by fortune, and its distinction enough if he ranked with the old masters." The equestrian order renamed the soâcalled "junior section" in their part of the theatre after Germanicus, and ruled that on the fifteenth of July the cavalcade should ride behind his portrait. Many of these compliments remain: others were discontinued immediately, or have lapsed with the years. 13.31. In the consulate of Nero, for the second time, and of Lucius Piso, little occurred that deserves remembrance, unless the chronicler is pleased to fill his rolls with panegyrics of the foundations and the beams on which the Caesar reared his vast amphitheatre in the Campus Martius; although, in accordance with the dignity of the Roman people, it has been held fitting to consign great events to the page of history and details such as these to the urban gazette. Still, the colonies of Capua and Nuceria were reinforced by a draft of veterans; the populace was given a gratuity of four hundred sesterces a head; and forty millions were paid into the treasury to keep the public credit stable. Also, the tax of four per cent on the purchase of slaves was remitted more in appearance than in effect: for, as payment was now required from the vendor, the buyers found the amount added as part of the price. The Caesar, too, issued an edict that no magistrate or procurator should, in the province for which he was responsible, exhibit a gladiatorial spectacle, a display of wild beasts, or any other entertainment. Previously, a subject community suffered as much from the spurious liberality as from the rapacity of its governors, screening as they did by corruption the offences they had committed in wantonness. |
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7. Pliny The Younger, Letters, 5.13.8, 7.33.3 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 167 |
8. Pliny The Younger, Letters, 5.13.8, 7.33.3 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 167 |
9. Pliny The Younger, Panegyric, 75.1-75.3 (2nd cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 167 |
10. Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Commodus, 15.4 (4th cent. CE - 5th cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
11. Scriptores Historiae Augustae, Commodus, 15.4 (4th cent. CE - 5th cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna Found in books: Ando (2013) 166 |
12. Macrobius, Saturnalia, 1.12 (4th cent. CE - 5th cent. CE) Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna/acta urbis Found in books: Bruun and Edmondson (2015) 60 |
13. Epigraphy, Cil, None Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Bruun and Edmondson (2015) 60 |
14. Diodorus Siculus, Culex, 21-22 Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Ando (2013) 165 |
15. Epigraphy, Ils, 1499, 9119, 4778 Tagged with subjects: •nan Found in books: Ando (2013) 165 |
16. Epigraphy, Illrp-S, 38 Tagged with subjects: •acta diurna/acta urbis Found in books: Bruun and Edmondson (2015) 60 |