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Your search returned 130 results in 45 document sections:
Cornelius Tacitus, The History (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb), BOOK
II, chapter 6 (search)
Cornelius Tacitus, The History (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb), BOOK
II, chapter 81 (search)
Cornelius Tacitus, The History (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb), BOOK
II, chapter 82 (search)
Cornelius Tacitus, The History (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb), BOOK
III, chapter 6 (search)
Antonius, as he hurried with
the veteran soldiers of the cohorts and part of the cavalry to invade Italy, was accompanied by Arrius Varus, an energetic
soldier. Service under Corbulo, and successes in Armenia, had gained for him this reputation; yet it was
generally said, that in secret conversations with Nero he had calumniated
Corbulo's high qualities. The favour thus infamously acquired made him a
centurion of the first rank, yet the ill-gotten prosperity of the moment
afterwards turned to his destruction. Primus and Varus, having occupied Aquileia, were joyfully welcomed in the neighbourhood,
and in the towns of Opitergium and Altinum. At Altinum a force was
left to oppose the Ravenna fleet, the defection of
which from Vitellius was not yet known. They next attached to their party
Patavium and Ateste. There
they learnt that three cohorts, belonging to Vitellius, and the Sebonian
Horse had taken up a position at the Forum Alieni, where they had thrown a
bridge across
Sallust, Conspiracy of Catiline (ed. John Selby Watson, Rev. John Selby Watson, M.A.), chapter 16 (search)
C. Suetonius Tranquillus, Divus Augustus (ed. Alexander Thomson), chapter 21 (search)
He made his first campaign, as a military tribune, in the Cantabrian war.A. U. C. 728.
Afterwards he led an army into the East,A.U.C. 734 where he restored the kingdom of Armenia to Tigranes; and seated on a tribunal, put a crown upon his head.
He likewise recovered from the Parthians the standards which they had taken from Crassus.
He next governed, for nearly a year, the province of Gallia Comata, which was then in great disorder, on account of the incursions of the barbarians, and the feuds of the chiefs.
He afterwards commanded in the several wars against the Rhaetians, Vindelicians, Pannonians, and Germans.
In the Rhaetian and Vindelician wars, he subdued the nations in the Alps; and in the Pannonian wars the Bruci, and the Dalmatians.
In the German war, he transplanted into Gaul forty thousand of the enemy who had submitted, and assigned them lands near the banks of the Rhine.
For these actions, he entered the city with an ovation, but riding in a chariot, and is said by some t
From Ostia, journeying along the coast of Campania, he halted awhile on receiving intelligence of Augustus's being taken ill, but this giving rise to a rumour that he stayed with a view to something extraordinary, he sailed with the wind almost full against him, and arrived at Rhodes, having been struck with the pleasantness and healthiness of the island at the time of his landing there in his return from Armenia.
Here contenting himself with a small house, and a villa not much larger, near the town, he led entirely a private life, taking his walks sometimes about the Gymnasia,
The Gymnasia were places of exercise, and received their name from the Greek word signifying naked, because the contending parties wore nothing but drawers.
without any lictor or other attendant, and returning the civilities of the Greeks with almost as much complaisance as if he had been upon a level with them.
One morning, in settling the course of his daily excursion, he happened to say, that he should vi
Returning to the island, he so far abandoned all care of the government, that he never filled up the decuriae of the knights, never changed any military tribunes or prefects, or governors of provinces, and kept Spain and Syria for several years without any consular lieutenants. He likewise suffered Armenia to be seized by the Parthians, Mcesia by the Dacians and Sarmatians, and Gaul to be ravaged by the Germans: to the great disgrace, and no less danger, of the empire.