The Annals, Tacitus
The Annals, Tacitus
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The Annals
The Reigns of Tiberius, Claudius, and Nero

Author: Tacitus, Anthony A. Barrett, J.C. Yardley

Narrator: Nigel Patterson

Unabridged: 19 hr 5 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/17/2020


Synopsis

Here is a lively new translation of Cornelius Tacitus's timeless history of three of Rome's most memorable emperors. Tacitus, who condemns the depravity of these rulers, which he saw as proof of the corrupting force of absolute power, writes caustically of the brutal and lecherous Tiberius, the weak and cuckolded Claudius, and "the artist" Nero. In particular, his gripping account of the bloody reigns of Tiberius and Nero brims with plots, murder, poisoning, suicide, uprisings, death, and destruction. The Annals also provides a vivid account of the violent suppression of the revolt led by Boudicca in Britain, the great fire of Rome under Nero, and the subsequent bloody persecution of the Christians.

About Tacitus

Tacitus was a senator and a historian of the Roman Empire. Tacitus is considered to be one of the greatest Roman historians. He lived in what has been called the Silver Age of Latin literature, and is known for the brevity and compactness of his Latin prose, as well as for his penetrating insights into the psychology of power politics.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Roy on October 28, 2017

Posterity grants everybody the glory he is due. In preparation for my trip to Rome, I decided that it was finally time to read Tacitus. I had been meaning to for a long while. Edward Gibbon, my favorite historian, always spoke of Tacitus in terms of deep reverence; and when your idols have idols,......more

Goodreads review by Paul on June 15, 2024

The annual ups and downs of ordinary life in Imperial Rome sometimes seem just as important to the Roman historian Tacitus as are the world-shaking historical events that typically make the history books – wars and disasters and so forth. And yet Tacitus has his reasons for focusing, in his book The......more

Goodreads review by David on September 26, 2015

A Game of Rome 27 September 2015 As I was reading this for the second time I simply could not believe how brutal this piece of literature was, and what is more impressive is that it is based on real life events. It is authors like Tacitus that make me want to throw modern historical fiction into the......more

Goodreads review by J.G. Keely on April 01, 2011

The great benefit of a republic is the slowness with which it moves. In America or Rome, the long, careful consideration of matters by fractious, embittered rivals tend to assure that the only measures which pass are those which are beneficial, or those which are useless. In a dictatorship, much mor......more