The Annals — Cornelius Tacitus

The Annals
Cornelius TacitusOxford University Press - Classics
The Annals
Cornelius TacitusSuch is Tacitus obituary of Tiberius and he is no less caustic in his opinion of the weak and cuckolded Claudius and the artist Nero The Annals is a gripping account of the Roman emperors who followed Augustus the founder of the imperial system and of the murders sycophancy plotting and oppression that marked this period in Rome Tacitus provides the earliest and most detailed account of Boudicca s rebellion in Britain and his history also relates the great fire of Rome in the reign of Nero and the persecution of the Christians that followed He deplores the depravity of the emperors whose behaviour he sees as proof of the corrupting force of absolute power J C Yardley s translation is vivid and accurate and Anthony A Barrett s introduction and notes provide invaluable historical and cultural context

Oxford University Press - Classics
Such is Tacitus obituary of Tiberius and he is no less caustic in his opinion of the weak and cuckolded Claudius and the artist Nero The Annals is a gripping account of the Roman emperors who followed Augustus the founder of the imperial system and of the murders sycophancy plotting and oppression that marked this period in Rome Tacitus provides the earliest and most detailed account of Boudicca s rebellion in Britain and his history also relates the great fire of Rome in the reign of Nero and the persecution of the Christians that followed He deplores the depravity of the emperors whose behaviour he sees as proof of the corrupting force of absolute power J C Yardley s translation is vivid and accurate and Anthony A Barrett s introduction and notes provide invaluable historical and cultural context

Oxford University Press - Classics
Such is Tacitus obituary of Tiberius and he is no less caustic in his opinion of the weak and cuckolded Claudius and the artist Nero The Annals is a gripping account of the Roman emperors who followed Augustus the founder of the imperial system and of the murders sycophancy plotting and oppression that marked this period in Rome Tacitus provides the earliest and most detailed account of Boudicca s rebellion in Britain and his history also relates the great fire of Rome in the reign of Nero and the persecution of the Christians that followed He deplores the depravity of the emperors whose behaviour he sees as proof of the corrupting force of absolute power J C Yardley s translation is vivid and accurate and Anthony A Barrett s introduction and notes provide invaluable historical and cultural context