|
 |
|
Medieval Sourcebook: Tacitus: Germania
Tacitus, an important Roman historian, wrote the most detailed early description of the Germans at then end of the first century CE.. In doing so, be warned, he
was commenting on the Rome of his own time, as much as on the German themselves. [eng]
|
 |
|
Tacite et les juifs
Dossier présenté en Licence de Lettres Classiques. Une analyse plus détaillée de
l'argumentation de Tacite, les
affirmations de Tacite sur ce peuple.
[fra]
|
 |
|
Ancient History Sourcebook: Tacitus: The End of the Republic
Escribing how the civil war and proscriptions (mass executions of
political opponents) had destroyed the Republic. [eng]
|
 |
|
The Tacitus Home Page, Dept. of Classics, College of Arts and Humanities, University of Maryland at College Park
Hic auctorem, qui nos lacte humanitatis et sapientiae nutrit, nos ad libertatis amorem ducit, invenisti. Habe
tamen patientiam, si placet, dum hoc folium construo. Si tu me de hac pagina monere potes, aut, si tu quaestiones habes, tum mihi epistulam
scribe (imam partem huius folii vide, si placet, si cognoscere cupis quo me invenire potes). Hoc folium est studientibus de Tacito, de omnibus
ordinibus, et pupilis et professoribus Latinarum litterarum. Spero fore ut hoc folium in futuro opera Taciti, (Annales I et IV, et Agricola)
habiturum sit. [lat]
|
 |
|
Athena Review 1,1
Description by Tacitus of Boudicca's Rebellion. [eng]
|
 |
|
The Internet Classics Archive | The Annals by Tacitus
The Annals by Tacitus, part of the Internet Classics Archive. Book I-XVI. [eng]
|
 |
|
Biographies: Tacitus
P
ublius or Gaius Cornelius Tacitus (AD 56 - c. 120), was probably the greatest historian and one of the greatest prose
stylists who wrote in the Latin language. His main works are the Historiae (Histories), concerning the Roman Empire
from AD 69 to 96, and the Annals, dealing with the empire in the period from AD 14 to 68. [eng]
|
 |
|
|