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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



10588
Tacitus, Annals, 3.27
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1. Tacitus, Annals, 3.28, 4.32-4.33, 13.33, 14.5 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

3.28.  Then came Pompey's third consulate. But this chosen reformer of society, operating with remedies more disastrous than the abuses, this maker and breaker of his own enactments, lost by the sword what he was holding by the sword. The followed twenty crowded years of discord, during which law and custom ceased to exist: villainy was immune, decency not rarely a sentence of death. At last, in his sixth consulate, Augustus Caesar, feeling his power secure, cancelled the behests of his triumvirate, and presented us with laws to serve our needs in peace and under a prince. Thenceforward the fetters were tightened: sentries were set over us and, under the Papia-Poppaean law, lured on by rewards; so that, if a man shirked the privileges of paternity, the state, as universal parent, might step into the vacant inheritance. But they pressed their activities too far: the capital, Italy, every corner of the Roman world, had suffered from their attacks, and the positions of many had been wholly ruined. Indeed, a reign of terror was threatened, when Tiberius, for the fixing of a remedy, chose by lot five former consuls, five former praetors, and an equal number of ordinary senators: a body which, by untying many of the legal knots, gave for the time a measure of relief. 4.32.  I am not unaware that very many of the events I have described, and shall describe, may perhaps seem little things, trifles too slight for record; but no parallel can be drawn between these chronicles of mine and the work of the men who composed the ancient history of the Roman people. Gigantic wars, cities stormed, routed and captive kings, or, when they turned by choice to domestic affairs, the feuds of consul and tribune, land-laws and corn-laws, the duel of nobles and commons — such were the themes on which they dwelt, or digressed, at will. Mine is an inglorious labour in a narrow field: for this was an age of peace unbroken or half-heartedly challenged, of tragedy in the capital, of a prince careless to extend the empire. Yet it may be not unprofitable to look beneath the surface of those incidents, trivial at the first inspection, which so often set in motion the great events of history. 4.33.  For every nation or city is governed by the people, or by the nobility, or by individuals: a constitution selected and blended from these types is easier to commend than to create; or, if created, its tenure of life is brief. Accordingly, as in the period of alternate plebeian domice and patrician ascendancy it was imperative, in one case, to study the character of the masses and the methods of controlling them; while, in the other, those who had acquired the most exact knowledge of the temper of the senate and the aristocracy were accounted shrewd in their generation and wise; so to‑day, when the situation has been transformed and the Roman world is little else than a monarchy, the collection and the chronicling of these details may yet serve an end: for few men distinguish right and wrong, the expedient and the disastrous, by native intelligence; the majority are schooled by the experience of others. But while my themes have their utility, they offer the minimum of pleasure. Descriptions of countries, the vicissitudes of battles, commanders dying on the field of honour, such are the episodes that arrest and renew the interest of the reader: for myself, I present a series of savage mandates, of perpetual accusations, of traitorous friendships, of ruined innocents, of various causes and identical results — everywhere monotony of subject, and satiety. Again, the ancient author has few detractors, and it matters to none whether you praise the Carthaginian or the Roman arms with the livelier enthusiasm. But of many, who underwent either the legal penalty or a form of degradation in the principate of Tiberius, the descendants remain; and, assuming the actual families to be now extinct, you will still find those who, from a likeness of character, read the ill deeds of others as an innuendo against themselves. Even glory and virtue create their enemies — they arraign their opposites by too close a contrast. But I return to my subject. 13.33.  The same year saw many on their trial. Publius Celer, one of the number, indicted by the province of Asia, the Caesar could not absolve: he therefore held the case in abeyance until the defendant died of old age; for in his murder (already recorded) of the proconsul Silanus, Celer had to his credit a crime of sufficient magnitude to cover the rest of his delinquencies. A charge had been laid by the Cilicians against Cossutianus Capito, a questionable and repulsive character, who had assumed that the same chartered insolence which he had exhibited in the capital would be permitted in a province. Beaten, however, by the tenacity of the prosecution, he finally threw up his defence, and was sentenced under the law of extortion. On behalf of Eprius Marcellus, from whom the Lycians were claiming reparation, intrigue was so effective that a number of his accusers were penalized by exile, on the ground that they had endangered an innocent man. 14.5.  A starlit night and the calm of an unruffled sea appeared to have been sent by Heaven to afford proof of guilt. The ship had made no great way, and two of Agrippina's household were in attendance, Crepereius Gallus standing not far from the tiller, while Acerronia, bending over the feet of the recumbent princess, recalled exultantly the penitence of the son and the re-entry of the mother into favour. Suddenly the signal was given: the canopy above them, which had been heavily weighted with lead, dropped, and Crepereius was crushed and killed on the spot. Agrippina and Acerronia were saved by the height of the couch-sides, which, as it happened, were too solid to give way under the impact. Nor did the break-up of the vessel follow: for confusion was universal, and even the men accessory to the plot were impeded by the large numbers of the ignorant. The crew then decided to throw their weight on one side and so capsize the ship; but, even on their own part, agreement came too slowly for a sudden emergency, and a counter-effort by others allowed the victims a gentler fall into the waves. Acerronia, however, incautious enough to raise the cry that she was Agrippina, and to demand aid for the emperor's mother, was despatched with poles, oars, and every nautical weapon that came to hand. Agrippina, silent and so not generally recognised, though she received one wound in the shoulder, swam until she was met by a few fishing-smacks, and so reached the Lucrine lake, whence she was carried into her own villa.
2. Tacitus, Histories, 1.1, 1.14-1.16, 1.18-1.19, 4.1 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

4.1.  The death of Vitellius was rather the end of war than the beginning of peace. The victors ranged through the city in arms, pursuing their defeated foes with implacable hatred: the streets were full of carnage, the fora and temples reeked with blood; they slew right and left everyone whom chance put in their way. Presently, as their licence increased, they began to hunt out and drag into the light those who had concealed themselves; did they espy anyone who was tall and young, they cut him down, regardless whether he was soldier or civilian. Their ferocity, which found satisfaction in bloodshed while their hatred was fresh, turned then afterwards to greed. They let no place remain secret or closed, pretending that Vitellians were in hiding. This led to the forcing of private houses or, if resistance was made, became an excuse for murder. Nor was there any lack of starvelings among the mob or of the vilest slaves ready to betray their rich masters; others were pointed out by their friends. Everywhere were lamentations, cries of anguish, and the misfortunes that befall a captured city; so that the citizens actually longed for the licence of Otho's and Vitellius's soldiers, which earlier they had detested. The generals of the Flavian party, who had been quick to start the conflagration of civil war, were unequal to the task of controlling their victory, for in times of violence and civil strife the worst men have the greatest power; peace and quiet call for honest arts.


Subjects of this text:

subject book bibliographic info
adjudication,adjudicating Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
augustus Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79; Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
case Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
corrupt Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
cyclical schemas of history Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
decline,historical,moral decline Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 78, 79
decline,historical Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 78, 79, 83
elites Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79
family Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
flavians Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 78
freedmen,roman vs. german Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
golden age Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 78, 79, 83
image Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
imperial adjudication Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
inversion,tacitean Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
judge Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
jurisdiction Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
law Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
literature Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
livy Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79
morality,tacitus on Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
mos Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
nero Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
nostalgia Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
periodisation of history Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
politics,in tacitus germania Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
power Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
princeps Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
progress,historical Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
property Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
province Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
reversal Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79
rome and romans,and germans Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
sallust Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79
senate Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
senator,senatorial Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
suffering,suffering as discipline Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
tacitus,germania Gruen (2011), Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 163
tacitus Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
teleology\n,view of history Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 79
temporal terminology\n,saeculum Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 83
triumvirate' Tuori (2016), The Emperor of Law: The Emergence of Roman Imperial Adjudication<, 183
vespasian Crabb (2020), Luke/Acts and the End of History, 78