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Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus |  | Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus: Encyclopedia II - Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus |  | Tacitus was able to consult the official sources of the Roman state: the acta senatus (the minutes of the session of the Senate) and the acta diurna populi Romani (a collection of the acts of the government and news of the court and capital). He could read the collections of speeches by some emperors, such as Tiberius and Claudius. Generally, Tacitus was a scrupulous historian who paid careful attention to his historical works. The minor inacurracies occurring in the Annals might be due to the fact that Tacitus died befo ...
See also:Tacitus, Tacitus - Biography, Tacitus - Descent and place of birth, Tacitus - Public life marriage and literary career, Tacitus - Works, Tacitus - Major works, Tacitus - Minor works, Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus, Tacitus - Literary style, Tacitus - Approach to history, Tacitus - Prose style, Tacitus - Studies and reception history, Tacitus - Notes |  | | Tacitus, Tacitus - Approach to history, Tacitus - Biography, Tacitus - Descent and place of birth, Tacitus - Literary style, Tacitus - Major works, Tacitus - Minor works, Tacitus - Notes, Tacitus - Prose style, Tacitus - Public life marriage and literary career, Tacitus - Studies and reception history, Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus, Tacitus - Works, Republic (Plato): Tacitus' critique of "model state" philosophies., Tacitus on Jesus: a well-known passage from the Annals mentions the death of Christ (Ann., xv 44). |  | |
|  |  | Tacitus: Encyclopedia II - Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus
Tacitus - The sources of Tacitus
Tacitus was able to consult the official sources of the Roman state: the acta senatus (the minutes of the session of the Senate) and the acta diurna populi Romani (a collection of the acts of the government and news of the court and capital). He could read the collections of speeches by some emperors, such as Tiberius and Claudius. Generally, Tacitus was a scrupulous historian who paid careful attention to his historical works. The minor inacurracies occurring in the Annals might be due to the fact that Tacitus died before completely finishing (and supposedly final proofreading) of this work. He used a great variety of historical and literary sources as well; he used them with freedom and he chose from varied sources of varied tendency.
Tacitus cites some of his sources directly, among them Pliny the Elder, who had written Bella Germaniae and an historical work which was the continuation of that of Aufidius Bassus. Tacitus could use some collections of letters (epistolarium) and various notes. He also took some information from the works of the historical genre named exitus illustrium virorum. These were a collection of books on and by those who opposed the emperors. They tell of the sacrifice of the martyr to freedom, especially the men who committed suicide, following the theory of the Stoics. Tacitus used these materials to give a dramatic tone to his stories, while he placed no value on the theory of the suicides. These suicides seem, to him, ostentatious and politically useless, while, on the other hand he is sometimes over the hill about the "swansong" speeches of some of those about to commit suicide, for example Cremutius Cordus' speech in Ann. IV, 34-35.
Other related archives100, 102, 105, 112, 113, 116, 117, 125, 14, 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, 56, 57, 5th-century, 66, 68, 69, 70, 77, 78, 81, 82, 88, 89, 93, 96, 97, 98, Asia, Agricola (book), Ammianus Marcellinus, Anatolia, Ann., Annals, Annals (Tacitus), Antonia, Aufidius Bassus, Augustan History, Augustus, Augustus Caesar, Baltic Sea, Belgica, Book of Zechariah, Britain, Britons, Caligula, Caria, Celtic, Christ, Cicero, Claudius, De vita Iulii Agricolae, Dialogus, Dialogus de oratoribus, Domitian, Fenni, Flavian, Flavians, Gallia Narbonensis, Gallo-Roman, Germania, Germania (book), Germanic tribes, Gnaeus Julius Agricola, Golden, Golden Age, Great Jewish Revolt, Hadrian, Herodotus, Hispania, Histories, Histories (Tacitus), Jerome, Jews, Julia Agricola, Julio-Claudian, Julius Caesar, Latin, Marcus Claudius Tacitus, Mark Antony, Martial, Mylasa, N.H., Nero, Nerva, Octavia Minor, Persian Gulf, Pliny the Elder, Pliny the Younger, Plutarch, Praetorian Guard, Quintilian, Red Sea, Republic, Republic (Plato), Roman, Roman Emperors, Roman Empire, Roman Senate, Sallust, Sejanus, Senate, September 18, Sibylline Books, Sidonius Apollinaris, Silver Age, Silver Ages, Stoics, Tacitean studies, Tacitus on Jesus, Thucydides, Tiberius, Titus, Trajan, Vespasian, Year of Four Emperors, antiquity, apathy, aristocratic, class, classical literature, cognomen, corruption, cursus honorum, decadence, dissimulation, empire, epigrammatic, equestrian, ethnographic, figure of speech, first of his family, free speech, freedman, gens Cornelia, historians, hunting, hypocrisy, law, lawyer, legion, neutral point of view, orator, patrician, politics, power, praenomen, praetor, primary documents, proconsul, procurator, psyches, quaestor, quindecemviri sacris faciundis, realpolitik, republican, rhetoric, senator, suffect consul, tyranny, younger Pliny
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "The sources of Tacitus", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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