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6 results for "seleuceia"
1. Suetonius, Vespasianus, 8 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22
2. Tacitus, Annals, 2.42 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22
2.42. Ceterum Tiberius nomine Germanici trecenos plebi sestertios viritim dedit seque collegam consulatui eius destinavit. nec ideo sincerae caritatis fidem adsecutus amoliri iuvenem specie honoris statuit struxitque causas aut forte oblatas arripuit. rex Archelaus quinquagesimum annum Cappadocia potiebatur, invisus Tiberio quod eum Rhodi agentem nullo officio coluisset. nec id Archelaus per superbiam omiserat, sed ab intimis Augusti monitus, quia florente Gaio Caesare missoque ad res Orientis intuta Tiberii amicitia credebatur. ut versa Caesarum subole imperium adeptus est, elicit Archelaum matris litteris, quae non dissimulatis filii offensionibus clementiam offerebat, si ad precandum veniret. ille ignarus doli vel, si intellegere crederetur, vim metuens in urbem properat; exceptusque immiti a principe et mox accusatus in senatu, non ob crimina quae fingebantur sed angore, simul fessus senio et quia regibus aequa, nedum infima insolita sunt, finem vitae sponte an fato implevit. regnum in provinciam redactum est, fructibusque eius levari posse centesimae vectigal professus Caesar ducentesimam in posterum statuit. per idem tempus Antiocho Commagenorum, Philopatore Cilicum regibus defunctis turbabantur nationes, plerisque Romanum, aliis regium imperium cupientibus; et provinciae Syria atque Iudaea, fessae oneribus, deminutionem tributi orabant. 2.42.  For the rest, Tiberius, in the name of Germanicus, made a distribution to the populace of three hundred sesterces a man: as his colleague in the consulship he nominated himself. All this, however, won him no credit for genuine affection, and he decided to remove the youth under a show of honour; some of the pretexts he fabricated, others he accepted as chance offered. For fifty years King Archelaus had been in possession of Cappadocia; to Tiberius a hated man, since he had offered him none of the usual attentions during his stay in Rhodes. The omission was due not to insolence, but to advice from the intimates of Augustus; for, as Gaius Caesar was then in his heyday and had been despatched to settle affairs in the East, the friendship of Tiberius was believed unsafe. When, through the extinction of the Caesarian line, Tiberius attained the empire, he lured Archelaus from Cappadocia by a letter of his mother; who, without dissembling the resentment of her son, offered clemency, if he came to make his petition. Unsuspicious of treachery, or apprehending force, should he be supposed alive to it, he hurried to the capital, was received by an unrelenting sovereign, and shortly afterwards was impeached in the senate. Broken, not by the charges, which were fictitious, but by torturing anxiety, combined with the weariness of age and the fact that to princes even equality — to say nothing of humiliation — is an unfamiliar thing, he ended his days whether deliberately or in the course of nature. His kingdom was converted into a province; and the emperor, announcing that its revenues made feasible a reduction of the one per cent sale-tax, fixed it for the future at one half of this amount. — About the same time, the death of the two kings, Antiochus of Commagene and Philopator of Cilicia, disturbed the peace of their countries, where the majority of men desired a Roman governor, and the minority a monarch. The provinces, too, of Syria and Judaea, exhausted by their burdens, were pressing for a diminution of the tribute.
3. Josephus Flavius, Jewish Antiquities, 17.13.2-17.13.3, 18.2.5, 19.5.1 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22
4. Josephus Flavius, Jewish War, 2.7.3, 7.7.1-7.7.2 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22
5. Cassius Dio, Roman History, 60.8.1 (2nd cent. CE - 3rd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22
60.8.1.  Next he restored Commagene to Antiochus, since Gaius, though he had himself given him the district, had taken it away again; and Mithridates the Iberian, whom Gaius had summoned and imprisoned, was sent home again to resume his throne.
6. Epigraphy, Ils, 9200  Tagged with subjects: •seleuceia on the calycadnos (in cilicia) Found in books: Merz and Tieleman (2012) 22