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Alphabetical [« »] hottest 1 hour 4 hours 2 house 135 household 13 households 1 houses 31 | Frequency [« »] 136 caesar 136 long 135 father 135 house 135 state 134 agrippina 132 every | Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances house |
Book, Par.
1 I, 3| Caius and Lucius, into the house of the Caesars; and before 2 I, 3| now a young man, in his house; but he did it that he might 3 I, 4| own position, that of his house, and the general tranquillity. 4 I, 4| been reared in an imperial house; consulships and triumphs 5 I, 5| Livia had surrounded the house and its approaches with 6 I, 7| divulge the secrets of her house or the counsels of friends, 7 I, 9| went with him to the Senate House. He sent letters to the 8 I, 13| days at Nola in the same house and room as his father Octavius. 9 I, 15| mother, terrible to the house of the Caesars as a stepmother. 10 I, 96| Augustus, who in every great house were associated into a kind 11 I, 99| that the foundations of his house had been weakened by the 12 I, 99| paid him the value of his house, for he liked to spend money 13 I, 102| Senator should enter the house of a pantomime player, that 14 II, 34| his imperial cousins, his house crowded with ancestral busts, 15 II, 36| the highest rank, went to house after house, entreating 16 II, 36| rank, went to house after house, entreating his relatives, 17 II, 36| the doors of the Senate House, and leaning on his brother 18 II, 38| the Senate. Meanwhile his house was surrounded with soldiers; 19 II, 42| rose to leave the Senate House. Tiberius was much excited, 20 II, 43| litter to the emperor's house; nor did Piso give way, 21 II, 43| question her at her own house, although the Vestal virgins, 22 II, 46| the doors of the Senate House, the Senate then sitting 23 II, 46| hereditary possession of our house, I was satisfied if my narrow 24 II, 47| order that we might in this house increase our private business 25 II, 47| for a senator, when the house has met on other matters, 26 II, 48| show any pity, though the house of Hortensius sank into 27 II, 65| though she was to Caesar's house. Adultery, it was thought, 28 II, 84| the gods of their common house, and to the hospitable board. 29 II, 112| still further depressed the house of Germanicus. ~ ~ 30 II, 115| impaired the honour of his house by a divorce. The emperor 31 III, 10| provoked men's anger was his house towering above the forum, 32 III, 14| and exclude him from my house, and I shall avenge a personal 33 III, 15| inquiry into his death in this house instead of in the forum, 34 III, 18| people in front of the Senate House, threatening violence if 35 III, 19| was conveyed back to his house, where, seemingly by way 36 III, 23| blood of a most unhappy house."~ ~ 37 III, 25| who had dishonoured the house of Augustus, still remained. 38 III, 32| concerning the imperial house. The accused was defended 39 III, 41| polluted the nobility of his house and to have yet further 40 III, 42| up the wealth which that house enjoyed to a boundless extent. ~ ~ 41 III, 52| threshold of the Senate House, Annia Rufilla, whom he 42 III, 64| to an adjacent country house. There by his own hand he 43 III, 64| mutually inflicted wounds. The house was fired over their heads, 44 III, 68| his vanity read it in the house of Publius Petronius before 45 III, 81| be set up in the Senate House in letters of gold, was 46 IV, 1| and prosperity for his own house, for he counted Germanicus' 47 IV, 4| ambition in the imperial house with its many princes, a 48 IV, 10| Tiberius, he went to the Senate house during the whole time of 49 IV, 13| the father of the Julian house, all the Alban kings, Romulus, 50 IV, 14| was dining at his son's house. Thus deceived, the old 51 IV, 23| was never friendly to the house of Germanicus, was then 52 IV, 29| that he kept poison in his house and wore a dagger whenever 53 IV, 31| delay Tiberius went to the house and inspected the chamber, 54 IV, 56| marriage rends, so to say, the house of the Caesars into two 55 IV, 70| sustained by the imperial house, came the first step towards 56 IV, 77| were dining in a country house called "The Cave," between 57 IV, 82| statue of Tiberius in the house of one Junius, a senator, 58 IV, 86| forsaken after its fall the house of which he had been the 59 IV, 86| went continually to his house, and imparted to him his 60 IV, 87| streets, drew him to his house and to the room, as if he 61 IV, 93| taken possession of the house of one Cruptorix, once a 62 V, 1| that he brought her to his house actually pregnant, not allowing 63 V, 4| and that the fall of the house of Germanicus might one 64 V, 4| being plotted against his house. And so that day passed 65 VI, 2| whenever he entered the Senate House. The man had actually believed 66 VI, 2| threshold of the Senate House? His life was not of so 67 VI, 20| honourable, though plebeian house, at Rome. Though he was 68 VI, 28| make use of the top of the house and of the confidence of 69 VI, 28| precipitous path (for the house stood on rocks), and then, 70 VI, 33| sons, and filled his whole house with bloodshed, so might 71 VI, 34| speak, the walls of his house and display his grandson 72 VI, 39| even the members of that house whose morals were corrupt, 73 VI, 42| forbid the person their house, and so put an end to friendship. " 74 VI, 43| Scaurus, as befitted the old house of the Aemilii, forestalled 75 VI, 46| consent, a scion of the house of Arsaces should show himself 76 VI, 57| bloodshed as it streamed from house to house, and the strokes 77 VI, 57| it streamed from house to house, and the strokes of the 78 VI, 60| the prosperity of their house, Tiberius had withheld, 79 VI, 66| actual power was in the house of Abdageses. ~ ~ 80 VI, 71| successor outside of his house, he feared that the memory 81 VI, 78| descended from the Claudian house, though his mother passed 82 VI, 78| admitted as a stepson into the house of Augustus, he had to struggle 83 VI, 78| the emperor's now heirless house for twelve years, and the 84 XI, 1| rouse nations allied to his house. Claudius made no further 85 XI, 4| that they had lent their house for the meetings of Mnester 86 XI, 6| himself in the advocate's house, on ascertaining his collusion 87 XI, 15| numerous retinue to his house, she haunted his steps, 88 XI, 19| but one scion of the royal house, Italicus by name, who lived 89 XI, 19| heart on the honours of his house. "Never before," he said, " 90 XI, 45| his order, the paramour's house was thrown open and the 91 XII, 1| Messalina shook the imperial house; for a strife arose among 92 XII, 3| rank, the scion of a noble house and a link to unite the 93 XII, 3| the Caesars to some other house.~ ~ 94 XII, 6| a niece into an uncle's house. It was positively incest, 95 XII, 59| that not a member of his house might be without kingly 96 XII, 75| convulsing the whole imperial house, with far greater disgrace 97 XIII, 5| dangerously formidable. In his house there should be nothing 98 XIII, 15| mothers of the imperial house had been seen to glitter, 99 XIII, 16| wickedness of that ill-starred house, of her own marriage, to 100 XIII, 17| expulsion from his father's house and from supreme power. 101 XIII, 20| what had been Antonia's house; and whenever he went there 102 XIII, 22| single person from an enemy's house, and this the night with 103 XIII, 41| But the honour of a noble house was further increased by 104 XIII, 53| had been a paramour in his house. Was it to be thought a 105 XIII, 59| style were grand; at his house everything worthy of the 106 XIV, 6| was the name of a country house, washed by a bay of the 107 XIV, 7| lake, and so entered her house. ~ ~ 108 XIV, 11| Anicetus then surrounded the house with a guard, and having 109 XIV, 13| Misenum, near the country house of Caesar the Dictator, 110 XIV, 30| reclining at dinner in his house named Sublaqueum on the 111 XIV, 38| from private judges to its house, were to incur the same 112 XIV, 42| put his kingdom and his house out of the reach of wrong. 113 XIV, 42| plundered by centurions, his house by slaves, as if they were 114 XIV, 55| has been murdered in his house by the treachery of slaves, 115 XIV, 60| when he was dining at the house of Ostorius Scapula. He 116 XIV, 79| received possession of the house of Burrus and of the estates 117 XIV, 80| am about to give to the house of the Caesars a lawful 118 XIV, 83| brought, as she was, into a house where she had nothing but 119 XV, 1| is the glory of a private house to keep its own, it is the 120 XV, 47| so to say, as his private house. Of these entertainments 121 XV, 49| the fire approached his house, which he had built to connect 122 XV, 49| devouring the palace, the house, and everything around it. 123 XV, 59| descendant of the Calpurnian house, and embracing in his connections 124 XV, 61| on the stage, or when his house was in flames and he was 125 XV, 66| and shut himself up in his house or gardens, used to go to 126 XV, 67| betrayal began from the house of Scaevinus. The day before 127 XV, 75| sought the retirement of his house, and there fortified his 128 XV, 77| evening, surrounded the house with troops of soldiers, 129 XV, 90| youths. For Vestinus had a house towering over the Forum, 130 XV, 92| thanks to the gods, deck his house with laurels, prostrate 131 XVI, 7| war and revolt from the House of the Caesars. And that 132 XVI, 16| barred every exit from the house, disclosed the emperor's 133 XVI, 28| him to enter the Senate house said that they counted confidently 134 XVI, 31| the senators entered their house. A speech from the emperor 135 XVI, 32| him the decrees of this house, the offices of State, the