Classics: Classics collection contents
About the Classics collection
Greek Hist. Overview
Art & Arch. Catalogs
Other Tools & Lexica
Plot: sites in this book sites in this document dates in this document
Display text chunked by: book chapter (default)
Contents: BOOK 1A.D. 14, 15BOOK IIA.D. I6—I9BOOK IIIA.D. 20, 21, 22BOOK IVA.D. 23—28BOOK VA.D. 29—31BOOK VIA.D. 32—37Book XIA.D. 47, 48BOOK XIIA.D. 48—54BOOK XIIIA.D. 54—58BOOK XIVA.D. 59—62BOOK XVA.D. 62—65BOOK XVIA.D. 65, 66 |
Tacitus, The Annals
BOOK XIV: A.D. 59—62
Editions and translations: Latin | English
Your current position in the text is marked in red. Click anywhere on the line to jump to another position.
XXIX. In the consulship of Cæsonius Pætus and Petronius Turpilianus, a serious disaster was sustained in Britain, where Aulius Didius, the emperor's legate, had merely retained our existing possessions, and his successor Veranius, after having ravaged the Silures in some trifling raids, was prevented by death from extending the war. While he lived, he had a great name for manly independence, though, in his will's final words, he betrayed a flatterer's weakness; for, after heaping adulation on Nero, he added that he should have conquered the province for him, had he lived for the next two years. Now, however, Britain was in the hands of Suetonius Paulinus, who in military knowledge and in popular favour, which allows no one to be without a rival, vied with Corbulo, and aspired to equal the glory of the recovery of Armenia by the subjugation of Rome's enemies. He therefore prepared to attack the island of Mona which had a powerful population and was a refuge for fugitives. He built flat-bottomed vessels to cope with the shallows, and uncer- [p. 337] tain depths of the sea. Thus the infantry crossed, while the cavalry followed by fording, or, where the water was deep, swam by the side of their horses.
Preferred URL for linking to this page: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Tac.+Ann.+14.29
This text is based on the following book(s): Complete Works of Tacitus. Tacitus. Alfred John Church. William Jackson Brodribb. Sara Bryant. edited for Perseus. New York: Random House, Inc. Random House, Inc. reprinted 1942.
|