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Annals (Tacitus)

The Annals (Latin: Annales) by Roman historian and senator Tacitus[1] is a history of the Roman Empire from the reign of Tiberius to that of Nero, the years AD 14–68.[2] The Annals are an important source for modern understanding of the history of the Roman Empire during the 1st century AD.[3] Tacitus' final work, modern historians generally consider it his magnum opus[4] which historian Ronald Mellor says represents the "pinnacle of Roman historical writing".[5]

First page of books XI–XVI of Tacitus' Annals (Venice: Vindelinus de Spira, ca. 1471/72)

Tacitus' Histories and Annals together amounted to 30 books, although some scholars disagree about which work to assign some books to, traditionally 14 are assigned to Histories and 16 to Annals. Of the 30 books referred to by Jerome about half have survived.[2]

Modern scholars believe that as a Roman senator, Tacitus had access to Acta Senatus—the Roman senate's records—which provided a solid basis for his work.[4] Although Tacitus refers to part of his work as "my annals", the title of the work Annals used today was not assigned by Tacitus himself, but derives from its year-by-year structure.[2][3] The name of the current manuscript seems to be "Books of History from the Death of the Divine Augustus" (Ab Excessu divi Augusti Historiarum Libri).

Background and structure edit

 
The Fire of Rome, July 64, during the reign of Nero, by Karl von Piloty, 1861.

The Annals was Tacitus' final work and provides a key source for modern understanding of the history of the Roman Empire from the beginning of the reign of Tiberius in AD 14 to the end of the reign of Nero, in AD 68.[3] Tacitus wrote the Annals in at least 16 books, but books 7–10 and parts of books 5, 6, 11 and 16 are missing.[3]

The period covered by the Histories (written before the Annals) starts at the beginning of the year AD 69, i.e. six months after the death of Nero and continues to the death of Domitian in 96.[3] It is not known when Tacitus began writing the Annals, but he was well into writing it by AD 116.[2] Modern scholars believe that as a senator, Tacitus had access to Acta Senatus, the Roman senate's records, thus providing a solid basis for his work.[4]

Together the Histories and the Annals amounted to 30 books.[2] These thirty books are referred to by Saint Jerome, and about half of them have survived.[2] Although some scholars differ on how to assign the books to each work, traditionally fourteen are assigned to Histories and sixteen to the Annals.[2] Tacitus' friend Pliny referred to "your histories" when writing to him about his earlier work.[2] Although Tacitus refers to part of his work as "my annals", the title of the work Annals used today was not assigned by Tacitus himself, but derives from its year-by-year structure.[2][3]

Of the sixteen books in Annals, the reign of Tiberius takes up six books, of which only Book 5 is missing. These books are neatly divided into two sets of three, corresponding to the change in the nature of the political climate during the period.[3]

The next six books are devoted to the reigns of Caligula and Claudius. Books 7 through 10 are missing. Books 11 and 12 cover the period from the treachery of Messalina to the end of Claudius' reign.

The final four books cover the reign of Nero and Book 16 cuts off in the middle of the year AD 66.[3] This leaves the material that would have covered the final two years of Nero's reign lost.[2]

Content and style edit

Tacitus documented a Roman imperial system of government. Tacitus chose to start his work with the death of Augustus Caesar in AD 14, and his succession by Tiberius.[4]

As in the Histories, Tacitus maintains his thesis of the necessity of the Principate. He says again that Augustus gave and warranted peace to the state after years of civil war, but on the other hand he shows us the dark side of life under the Caesars. The history of the beginning of the principate is also the history of the end of the political freedom that the senatorial aristocracy, which Tacitus viewed as morally decadent, corrupt, and servile towards the emperor, had enjoyed during the republic. During Nero's reign there had been a widespread diffusion of literary works in favor of this suicidal exitus illustrium virorum ("end of the illustrious men"). Again, as in his Agricola, Tacitus is opposed to those who chose useless martyrdom through vain suicides.

In the Annals, Tacitus further improved the style of portraiture that he had used so well in the Historiae. Perhaps the best portrait is that of Tiberius, portrayed in an indirect way, painted progressively during the course of a narrative, with observations and commentary along the way filling in details.[2] Tacitus portrays both Tiberius and Nero as tyrants who caused fear in their subjects.[2] But while he views Tiberius as someone who had once been a great man, Tacitus considers Nero as simply despicable.[2]

Provenance and authenticity edit

 
Corvey Abbey in Germany, where Annals 1–6 were discovered.[6]

Since the 18th century, at least five attempts have been made to challenge the authenticity of the Annals as having been written by someone other than Tacitus, Voltaire's criticism being perhaps the first.[7] Voltaire was generally critical of Tacitus and said that Tacitus did not comply with the standards for providing a historical background to civilization.[8] In 1878, John Wilson Ross and, in 1890, Polydore Hochart suggested that the whole of the Annals had been forged by the Italian scholar Poggio Bracciolini (1380–1459).[9][10][11] According to Robert Van Voorst this was an "extreme hypothesis" which never gained a following among modern scholars.[11]

The provenance of the manuscripts containing the Annals goes back to the Renaissance. While Bracciolini had discovered three minor works at Hersfeld Abbey in Germany in 1425, Zanobi da Strada (who died in 1361) had probably earlier discovered Annals 11–16 at Monte Cassino where he lived for some time.[6][12] The copies of Annals at Monte Cassino were probably moved to Florence by Giovanni Boccaccio (1313–1375), a friend of da Strada, who is also credited with their discovery at Monte Cassino.[12][13][14] Regardless of whether the Monte Cassino manuscripts were moved to Florence by Boccaccio or da Strada, Boccaccio made use of the Annals when he wrote Commento di Dante c. 1374 (before the birth of Poggio Bracciolini), giving an account of Seneca's death directly based on the Tacitean account in Annals book 15.[15][16] Francis Newton states that it is likely that Annals 11–16 were in Monte Cassino during the first half of the rule of Abbot Desiderius (1058–1087) who later became Pope Victor III.[17] Annals 1–6 were then independently discovered at Corvey Abbey in Germany in 1508 by Giovanni Angelo Arcimboldi, afterwards Archbishop of Milan, and were first published in Rome in 1515 by Beroaldus, by order of Pope Leo X, who afterwards deposited the manuscript in the Medicean Library in Florence.[6]

Content edit

Books
Books[18] Subjects
1 Death and funeral of Augustus; accession of Tiberius. Drusus and the mutiny of the Pannonian legions. Germanicus and the mutiny of the German legions.
2 War in Germania continued. Libo Drusus, Piso, and Asinius Gallus oppose Tiberius. Tacfarinas's revolt. Germanicus is posted to Asia Minor, followed by his death.
3 Germanicus' funeral. Domestic politics and legal matters of Rome. Beginning of the Gallic Wars. Tacfarinas's revolt continued. Rise of Sejanus who poisons Drusus.
4 Tacfarinas' revolt ends. Fall of Sejanus. War in Thrace. Agrippina makes moves. Tiberius abandons the capital for Campania. Fire on the Coelian Hill in Rome. Condemnation of Titius Sabinus.
5 Death of Empress Livia (book incomplete).
6 Parthian War. Fire on the Aventine Hill in Rome. Death of Tiberius.
11 Claudius becomes emperor. Prosecutions of Suillius. Turmoil in Armenia. Corbulo settles a Frisian revolt. Senatorial rights extended to the provinces. Execution of Messalina.
12 Claudius remarries, and adopts Nero. Adjustments with Parthia. The pomerium enlarged. Invasion of Britain continues with a campaign against Caratacus. Disorders in Armenia. Draining of Fucine Lake. Death of Claudius.
13 Nero becomes emperor; the murder of Britannicus. Continued trouble with Parthia over Armenia. Rome meets disaster in Armenia, saved by Corbulo. Wars with and among Germans continue.
14 Nero murders his mother Agrippina. Neronia founded. Corbulo betters the course of Rome in Armenia. In Britain, the Icenian revolt under Boudicca. Criminal trials and political purges in Rome. Murder of Rubellius Plautus and Octavia.
15 Roman defeat in Armenia, although "spun" as a victory; followed, however, by a further adjustment with Parthia in which the Parthian king Tiridates travels to Rome to become a nominal vassal of Rome. The Great Fire of Rome. Pisonian conspiracy fails.
16 Nero plots against Stoicists. Paetus and Soranus are murdered.

In popular culture edit

In Donna Leon's third Commissario Brunetti novel Dressed for Death (1994), the protagonist reads Tacitus' Annals in his spare time in the evenings, and various references to that material are made throughout the novel.

In Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita Tacitus’ Annals is referenced, as the MASSOLIT editor Berlioz asserts that its mention of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ is a spurious interjection, added later, and not written by Tacitus.

In Jorge Luis Borges' short story The Garden of Forking Paths, when Yu Tsun, the main character, takes the train to carry out his final mission in the fictitious town of Ashgrove, among the few persons he encounters on the train is a young man fervently reading Tacitus’ Annals.

Tacitus is also mentioned briefly in The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe, volume VI, chapter VIII.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Tacitus; Church, Alfred John; Brodribb, William Jackson. The Annals (109 A.C.E.).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m The Annals: The Reigns of Tiberius, Claudius, and Nero by Cornelius Tacitus and J. C. Yardley ISBN 0-19-282421-X Oxford pages ii to xxvii
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Tacitus and the Writing of History by Ronald H. Martin 1981 ISBN 0-520-04427-4 pages 104–105
  4. ^ a b c d The annals by Cornelius Tacitus, Anthony John Woodman 2004 ISBN 0-87220-558-4 pages x to xx
  5. ^ Mellor, Ronald (2010). Tacitus' Annals. Oxford: Oxford University press. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-19-515192-3.
  6. ^ a b c Latin Literature: A History by Gian Biagio Conte, Don P. Fowler, Glen W. Most and Joseph Solodow (Nov 4, 1999) ISBN 0-8018-6253-1 Johns Hopkins University Press page 543
  7. ^ Clarence W. Mendell, Tacitus: The Man And His Work (Yale University Press/Oxford University Press, 1957) page 219.
  8. ^ The Classical Foundations of Modern Historiography by Arnaldo Momigliano and Riccardo Di Donanto ISBN 0-520-07870-5 Univ California Press 1992 page 127
  9. ^ John Wilson Ross, Tacitus and Bracciolini: The Annals Forged In The XVth Century ISBN 978-1-4068-4051-3. Originally published London: Diprose and Bateman, 1878.
  10. ^ Polydore Hochart 1890, De L'Authenticité Des Annales Et Des Histoires de Tacite republished by Bibliobazar, 2009 ISBN 1-103-22125-6
  11. ^ a b Robert Van Voorst Jesus Outside the New Testament: An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence 2000 ISBN 0-8028-4368-9 page 42
  12. ^ a b Medieval Italy: An Encyclopedia by Christopher Kleinhenz (Nov 2003) ISBN 0-415-93931-3 page 1174
  13. ^ The Scriptorium and Library at Monte Cassino, 1058–1105 by Francis Newton (29 Apr 1999) ISBN 0-521-58395-0 Cambridge University Press page 327
  14. ^ The Fortunes of Apuleius by Julia Haig Gaisser (Jan 3, 2008) ISBN 0-691-13136-8 Princeton University Press pages 93–94
  15. ^ The Deaths of Seneca by James Ker ISBN 0-19-538703-1 Oxford University Press 2009 page 201
  16. ^ Boccaccio's Expositions on Dante's Comedy by Giovanni Boccaccio, Michael Papio 2009 ISBN 0-8020-9975-0 University of Toronto Press page 233, also see PDF file 2019-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ The Scriptorium and Library at Monte Cassino, 1058–1105 by Francis Newton (29 Apr 1999) ISBN 0-521-58395-0 Cambridge University Press pages 104–105
  18. ^ Thayer, Bill. "Tacitus". Lacus Curtius. University of Chicago. Retrieved 13 April 2023.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  •   Works related to The Annals at Wikisource
  •   Quotations related to Tacitus at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to The Annals at Wikimedia Commons
  •   The Annals public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Annals 15.20-23, 33-45 at Dickinson College Commentaries - Latin text with notes and vocabulary
  • Owen, Matthew and Ingo Gildenhard. Tacitus, Annals, 15.20-23, 33-45. Latin Text, Study Aids with Vocabulary, and Commentary. Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers. 2013. http://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0035
  • Tacitus and his manuscripts

annals, tacitus, annals, redirects, here, academic, publication, american, academy, political, social, science, american, academy, political, social, science, annals, annals, latin, annales, roman, historian, senator, tacitus, history, roman, empire, from, rei. The Annals redirects here For the academic publication by the American Academy of Political and Social Science see American Academy of Political and Social Science The Annals The Annals Latin Annales by Roman historian and senator Tacitus 1 is a history of the Roman Empire from the reign of Tiberius to that of Nero the years AD 14 68 2 The Annals are an important source for modern understanding of the history of the Roman Empire during the 1st century AD 3 Tacitus final work modern historians generally consider it his magnum opus 4 which historian Ronald Mellor says represents the pinnacle of Roman historical writing 5 First page of books XI XVI of Tacitus Annals Venice Vindelinus de Spira ca 1471 72 Tacitus Histories and Annals together amounted to 30 books although some scholars disagree about which work to assign some books to traditionally 14 are assigned to Histories and 16 to Annals Of the 30 books referred to by Jerome about half have survived 2 Modern scholars believe that as a Roman senator Tacitus had access to Acta Senatus the Roman senate s records which provided a solid basis for his work 4 Although Tacitus refers to part of his work as my annals the title of the work Annals used today was not assigned by Tacitus himself but derives from its year by year structure 2 3 The name of the current manuscript seems to be Books of History from the Death of the Divine Augustus Ab Excessu divi Augusti Historiarum Libri Contents 1 Background and structure 2 Content and style 3 Provenance and authenticity 3 1 Content 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksBackground and structure edit nbsp The Fire of Rome July 64 during the reign of Nero by Karl von Piloty 1861 The Annals was Tacitus final work and provides a key source for modern understanding of the history of the Roman Empire from the beginning of the reign of Tiberius in AD 14 to the end of the reign of Nero in AD 68 3 Tacitus wrote the Annals in at least 16 books but books 7 10 and parts of books 5 6 11 and 16 are missing 3 The period covered by the Histories written before the Annals starts at the beginning of the year AD 69 i e six months after the death of Nero and continues to the death of Domitian in 96 3 It is not known when Tacitus began writing the Annals but he was well into writing it by AD 116 2 Modern scholars believe that as a senator Tacitus had access to Acta Senatus the Roman senate s records thus providing a solid basis for his work 4 Together the Histories and the Annals amounted to 30 books 2 These thirty books are referred to by Saint Jerome and about half of them have survived 2 Although some scholars differ on how to assign the books to each work traditionally fourteen are assigned to Histories and sixteen to the Annals 2 Tacitus friend Pliny referred to your histories when writing to him about his earlier work 2 Although Tacitus refers to part of his work as my annals the title of the work Annals used today was not assigned by Tacitus himself but derives from its year by year structure 2 3 Of the sixteen books in Annals the reign of Tiberius takes up six books of which only Book 5 is missing These books are neatly divided into two sets of three corresponding to the change in the nature of the political climate during the period 3 The next six books are devoted to the reigns of Caligula and Claudius Books 7 through 10 are missing Books 11 and 12 cover the period from the treachery of Messalina to the end of Claudius reign The final four books cover the reign of Nero and Book 16 cuts off in the middle of the year AD 66 3 This leaves the material that would have covered the final two years of Nero s reign lost 2 Content and style editTacitus documented a Roman imperial system of government Tacitus chose to start his work with the death of Augustus Caesar in AD 14 and his succession by Tiberius 4 As in the Histories Tacitus maintains his thesis of the necessity of the Principate He says again that Augustus gave and warranted peace to the state after years of civil war but on the other hand he shows us the dark side of life under the Caesars The history of the beginning of the principate is also the history of the end of the political freedom that the senatorial aristocracy which Tacitus viewed as morally decadent corrupt and servile towards the emperor had enjoyed during the republic During Nero s reign there had been a widespread diffusion of literary works in favor of this suicidal exitus illustrium virorum end of the illustrious men Again as in his Agricola Tacitus is opposed to those who chose useless martyrdom through vain suicides In the Annals Tacitus further improved the style of portraiture that he had used so well in the Historiae Perhaps the best portrait is that of Tiberius portrayed in an indirect way painted progressively during the course of a narrative with observations and commentary along the way filling in details 2 Tacitus portrays both Tiberius and Nero as tyrants who caused fear in their subjects 2 But while he views Tiberius as someone who had once been a great man Tacitus considers Nero as simply despicable 2 Provenance and authenticity edit nbsp Corvey Abbey in Germany where Annals 1 6 were discovered 6 Since the 18th century at least five attempts have been made to challenge the authenticity of the Annals as having been written by someone other than Tacitus Voltaire s criticism being perhaps the first 7 Voltaire was generally critical of Tacitus and said that Tacitus did not comply with the standards for providing a historical background to civilization 8 In 1878 John Wilson Ross and in 1890 Polydore Hochart suggested that the whole of the Annals had been forged by the Italian scholar Poggio Bracciolini 1380 1459 9 10 11 According to Robert Van Voorst this was an extreme hypothesis which never gained a following among modern scholars 11 The provenance of the manuscripts containing the Annals goes back to the Renaissance While Bracciolini had discovered three minor works at Hersfeld Abbey in Germany in 1425 Zanobi da Strada who died in 1361 had probably earlier discovered Annals 11 16 at Monte Cassino where he lived for some time 6 12 The copies of Annals at Monte Cassino were probably moved to Florence by Giovanni Boccaccio 1313 1375 a friend of da Strada who is also credited with their discovery at Monte Cassino 12 13 14 Regardless of whether the Monte Cassino manuscripts were moved to Florence by Boccaccio or da Strada Boccaccio made use of the Annals when he wrote Commento di Dante c 1374 before the birth of Poggio Bracciolini giving an account of Seneca s death directly based on the Tacitean account in Annals book 15 15 16 Francis Newton states that it is likely that Annals 11 16 were in Monte Cassino during the first half of the rule of Abbot Desiderius 1058 1087 who later became Pope Victor III 17 Annals 1 6 were then independently discovered at Corvey Abbey in Germany in 1508 by Giovanni Angelo Arcimboldi afterwards Archbishop of Milan and were first published in Rome in 1515 by Beroaldus by order of Pope Leo X who afterwards deposited the manuscript in the Medicean Library in Florence 6 Content edit Books Books 18 Subjects1 Death and funeral of Augustus accession of Tiberius Drusus and the mutiny of the Pannonian legions Germanicus and the mutiny of the German legions 2 War in Germania continued Libo Drusus Piso and Asinius Gallus oppose Tiberius Tacfarinas s revolt Germanicus is posted to Asia Minor followed by his death 3 Germanicus funeral Domestic politics and legal matters of Rome Beginning of the Gallic Wars Tacfarinas s revolt continued Rise of Sejanus who poisons Drusus 4 Tacfarinas revolt ends Fall of Sejanus War in Thrace Agrippina makes moves Tiberius abandons the capital for Campania Fire on the Coelian Hill in Rome Condemnation of Titius Sabinus 5 Death of Empress Livia book incomplete 6 Parthian War Fire on the Aventine Hill in Rome Death of Tiberius 11 Claudius becomes emperor Prosecutions of Suillius Turmoil in Armenia Corbulo settles a Frisian revolt Senatorial rights extended to the provinces Execution of Messalina 12 Claudius remarries and adopts Nero Adjustments with Parthia The pomerium enlarged Invasion of Britain continues with a campaign against Caratacus Disorders in Armenia Draining of Fucine Lake Death of Claudius 13 Nero becomes emperor the murder of Britannicus Continued trouble with Parthia over Armenia Rome meets disaster in Armenia saved by Corbulo Wars with and among Germans continue 14 Nero murders his mother Agrippina Neronia founded Corbulo betters the course of Rome in Armenia In Britain the Icenian revolt under Boudicca Criminal trials and political purges in Rome Murder of Rubellius Plautus and Octavia 15 Roman defeat in Armenia although spun as a victory followed however by a further adjustment with Parthia in which the Parthian king Tiridates travels to Rome to become a nominal vassal of Rome The Great Fire of Rome Pisonian conspiracy fails 16 Nero plots against Stoicists Paetus and Soranus are murdered In popular culture editIn Donna Leon s third Commissario Brunetti novel Dressed for Death 1994 the protagonist reads Tacitus Annals in his spare time in the evenings and various references to that material are made throughout the novel In Mikhail Bulgakov s The Master and Margarita Tacitus Annals is referenced as the MASSOLIT editor Berlioz asserts that its mention of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ is a spurious interjection added later and not written by Tacitus In Jorge Luis Borges short story The Garden of Forking Paths when Yu Tsun the main character takes the train to carry out his final mission in the fictitious town of Ashgrove among the few persons he encounters on the train is a young man fervently reading Tacitus Annals Tacitus is also mentioned briefly in The Mysteries of Udolpho by Ann Radcliffe volume VI chapter VIII See also editTacitean studies Tacitus on Jesus Virius Nicomachus Flavianus who wrote a lost historical work entitled Annals probably a continuation of Tacitus work References edit Tacitus Church Alfred John Brodribb William Jackson The Annals 109 A C E a b c d e f g h i j k l m The Annals The Reigns of Tiberius Claudius and Nero by Cornelius Tacitus and J C Yardley ISBN 0 19 282421 X Oxford pages ii to xxvii a b c d e f g h Tacitus and the Writing of History by Ronald H Martin 1981 ISBN 0 520 04427 4 pages 104 105 a b c d The annals by Cornelius Tacitus Anthony John Woodman 2004 ISBN 0 87220 558 4 pages x to xx Mellor Ronald 2010 Tacitus Annals Oxford Oxford University press p 23 ISBN 978 0 19 515192 3 a b c Latin Literature A History by Gian Biagio Conte Don P Fowler Glen W Most and Joseph Solodow Nov 4 1999 ISBN 0 8018 6253 1 Johns Hopkins University Press page 543 Clarence W Mendell Tacitus The Man And His Work Yale University Press Oxford University Press 1957 page 219 The Classical Foundations of Modern Historiography by Arnaldo Momigliano and Riccardo Di Donanto ISBN 0 520 07870 5 Univ California Press 1992 page 127 John Wilson Ross Tacitus and Bracciolini The Annals Forged In The XVth Century ISBN 978 1 4068 4051 3 Originally published London Diprose and Bateman 1878 Polydore Hochart 1890 De L Authenticite Des Annales Et Des Histoires de Tacite republished by Bibliobazar 2009 ISBN 1 103 22125 6 a b Robert Van Voorst Jesus Outside the New Testament An Introduction to the Ancient Evidence 2000 ISBN 0 8028 4368 9 page 42 a b Medieval Italy An Encyclopedia by Christopher Kleinhenz Nov 2003 ISBN 0 415 93931 3 page 1174 The Scriptorium and Library at Monte Cassino 1058 1105 by Francis Newton 29 Apr 1999 ISBN 0 521 58395 0 Cambridge University Press page 327 The Fortunes of Apuleius by Julia Haig Gaisser Jan 3 2008 ISBN 0 691 13136 8 Princeton University Press pages 93 94 The Deaths of Seneca by James Ker ISBN 0 19 538703 1 Oxford University Press 2009 page 201 Boccaccio s Expositions on Dante s Comedy by Giovanni Boccaccio Michael Papio 2009 ISBN 0 8020 9975 0 University of Toronto Press page 233 also see PDF file Archived 2019 01 28 at the Wayback Machine The Scriptorium and Library at Monte Cassino 1058 1105 by Francis Newton 29 Apr 1999 ISBN 0 521 58395 0 Cambridge University Press pages 104 105 Thayer Bill Tacitus Lacus Curtius University of Chicago Retrieved 13 April 2023 Further reading editSyme Ronald 1958 Tacitus Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814327 3 Damon Cynthia 2012 Tacitus Annals Penguin Classics ISBN 9780140455649External links edit nbsp Works related to The Annals at Wikisource nbsp Quotations related to Tacitus at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to The Annals at Wikimedia Commons nbsp The Annals public domain audiobook at LibriVox Annals 15 20 23 33 45 at Dickinson College Commentaries Latin text with notes and vocabulary Owen Matthew and Ingo Gildenhard Tacitus Annals 15 20 23 33 45 Latin Text Study Aids with Vocabulary and Commentary Cambridge UK Open Book Publishers 2013 http doi org 10 11647 OBP 0035 Tacitus and his manuscripts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Annals Tacitus amp oldid 1199014479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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