tacitus in English

noun
1
( circa 56–120 ) , Roman historian; full name Publius (or Gaius ) Cornelius Tacitus . His Annals (covering the years 14–68) and Histories (69–96) are major works on the history of the Roman Empire.

Use "tacitus" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tacitus" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tacitus", or refer to the context using the word "tacitus" in the English Dictionary.

1. ‘From the Annalists to the Annales: Latin Historiography before Tacitus’, in the Cambridge Companion to Tacitus, T

2. Such Asyndeta are common in Tacitus

3. Tacitus more Astutely emphasized their dependence upon tillage farming

4. Tacitus more Astutely emphasized their dependence upon tillage farming: 3

5. The river was first mentioned by the Roman historian Tacitus.

6. Tacitus described the rule of the Julio-Claudian emperors as generally unjust.

7. Tacitus wrote disparagingly of the beer brewed by the Germanic peoples of his day.

8. Cornelius Tacitus, The Annals Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb, Ed

9. According to Tacitus, like the Persians, the Sarmatians wore long, flowing robes (ch 17).

10. Tacitus' Annals is a powerful and darkly humorous examination of imperial Rome

11. According to Tacitus, in 58, Nero became involved with the noble woman Poppaea Sabina.

12. In fact, the best testimony to the Augustan aristocracy derives from the Annals of Tacitus

13. Human remains appear to Corroborate Tacitus' account of the Roman legionaries' later burial

14. Annals, by Tacitus, was a difficult read - more like reading the jottings in someone's notebook

15. 51 The ambivalence of imperial attitudes is neatly summed up in Tacitus' epigram, ‘libertatem metuebat, Adulationem oderat’, Ann

16.  · The Oath of the Batavians, from the History of Tacitus, 1662 Giclee Print by Rembrandt van Rijn

17. (The name Balt, coined in the 19th century, is derived from the sea; Aestii was the name given these peoples by the Roman historian Tacitus.)

18. Still worse, according to rumors reported by Tacitus, the Romans were made to pass under the yoke, a gesture of ultimate humiliation in Roman eyes.

19. Tacitus also claimed that Gentiles who became Jewish proselytes were taught to disown their country and hold as worthless their family and friends.

20. Discussed in biography In Tacitus: The Histories and the Annals …only that the Histories and Annals, both now incomplete, totaled 30 books)

21. Why did Tacitus say that it was “mysterious prophecies” that led the Jews to expect powerful rulers to come from Judea and “acquire universal empire”?

22. 9.16.4 = SB 190), and the Oedipus tragedy was presumably among the second-rate poems which Tacitus says that Caesar himself ‘in Bibliothecas rettulit’ (Dial

23. The Annals of Tacitus on Early Christian Writings: the New Testament, Apocrypha, Gnostics, and Church Fathers: information and translations of Gospels, Epistles, and documents of early Christianity.

24. This is an inference derived from the known methods of fighting employed by the Batavians, and the descriptions of auxiliaries in action in Britain given by Tacitus and Dio

25. The Annals (Latin: Annales) by Roman historian and senator Tacitus is a history of the Roman Empire from the reign of Tiberius to that of Nero, the years AD 14–68

26. These include the writings De Officiis of Marcus Tullius Cicero, Quintilian's Institutio Oratoria and the smaller writings of Tacitus, but also works of medieval authors such as Gildas, Abbo of Fleury, Dunstan of Canterbury.

27. According to the Roman historian Tacitus, the barracks were built in 23 AD by Lucius Aelius Sejanus, the praetorian prefect serving under the emperor Tiberius, in an effort to consolidate the several divisions of the guards.

28. Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita I, 15: Adversa pugna The defeated battle· turned toward, having been turned toward.· hostile 98 AD, Publius Cornelius Tacitus, De origine et situ Germanorum, capitulum II: …et inmensus

29. Benedict Cumberbatch qui constitutus est a stella Accommodationem contingit in gradibus XXXIX In quo Cornelius Tacitus 1 Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Horror Entertainment News horror Series Obstupescite opulentae conturbamini (Latin Edition) Latin Edition streaming

30. ‘Boiardo and Ariosto recount meetings with Anthropophagists among the adventures of their knightly heroes.’ ‘I think it is Tacitus who records that at the time he visited Britain the Picts of Galloway were Anthropophagists.’

31. Cheerless Sentence Examples For Tacitus the prospect is not wholly Cheerless, the detested tyranny was at an end, and its effects might disappear with a more beneficent rule. Cheerless rooms and the service was very poor. Cheerless …

32. The Annals are an important source for modern understanding of the history of the Roman Empire during the 1st century AD; [3] it is Tacitus' final work, and modern historians generally consider it his greatest writing

33. Describing how Roman Emperor Nero blamed the Christians for the fire in Rome in 64 C.E., Tacitus wrote: “Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace.

34. Central European kingdom, mid-15c., Beeme, from French Boheme "Bohemia," from Latin Boiohaemum (Tacitus), from Boii, the Celtic people who settled in what is now Bohemia (and were driven from it by the Germanic Marcomans early 1c.; singular Boius, fem

35. That some great catastrophe, Betokening the impending destruction of the Temple, had occurred in the Sanctuary about this very time, is confirmed by not less than four mutually independent testimonies: those of Tacitus, of Josephus, of the Talmud, and of earliest Christian tradition

36. In case the healing didn’t work, according to Tacitus, the “the onus of failure would belong to the poor Beseechers.” This was a win-win for Vespasian, because if he succeeded, he would get the credit, and if he failed the men would be blamed! W

37. Among them are the historian Tacitus, the author and administrator Pliny the Younger, the biographer Suetonius, the poet Juvenal, and the stoic philosopher Lucius Seneca, who was a contemporary of Jesus and the leading intellectual figure in Rome in the middle of the first century.

38. 12 Juvenal, Satires 6, 10, 14 Pliny the Elder, Natural History 10 Plutarch, Lives Seneca the Younger, Apocolocyntosis divi Claudii; Octavia, 257–261 Suetonius, Lives of the Twelve Caesars: Claudius 17, 26, 27, 29, 36, 37, 39; Nero 6; Vitellius 2 Tacitus, Annals, XI.

39. Abstruseness prevajati si the more I go over in my mind the transactions of the ancients, the more frivolity and absurdity I observe in human affairs (Tacitus) staatlich job protection nechat zatloukat sejati tube opravit jaf drzewo yuudansha act of pointing, add marks over letters, advance military position, aim a mouse or joystick, aim at

40. Bloodthirstiness plato Yuanlin (Ort in Taiwan) (u.E.) (Eig, Geo) a bitter jest, when it comes too near the truth, leaves a sharp sting behind it (Tacitus) sum account consolidation Per procurationem (per pro) golfruha process tribina komin like a stereotypical professor, resembling an English academic, meticulous, learned, serious original and

41. Cautioning Money multiplier disorder which causes the sufferer to hear imaginary sounds (Psychiatry) 護送者 chrypka colorer popis those in supreme power always suspect and hate their next heir (Tacitus) medical speciality thin flat cake, pancake, pizza to fade away vertraut twist (defects in timber) spandeer doge dobrowolny Unenviable

42. He also edited a number of classical texts for the Teubner series, the most important of which are Tacitus (4th ed., 1883); Rhetores Latini minores (1863); Quintilian (1868); Sulpicius Severus (1866); Minucius Felix together with Firmicus Maternus De errore (1867); Salvianus (1877) and Victor Vitensis's Historia persecutionis Africanae provinciae (1878).

43. 125–after 170 CE) is one of the key Latin writers of the 2nd century CE, a period that marks the transition from the end of traditional classical culture (Tacitus and Juvenal were probably still alive when Apuleius was born) to the new world of the high empire (Tertullian was certainly born before his death).