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Alphabetical [« »] emperor 472 emperors 14 emphatically 1 empire 63 empires 3 employed 6 employment 1 | Frequency [« »] 64 italy 64 me 64 provinces 63 empire 63 number 63 person 63 secret | Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances empire |
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1 I, 1| strife, subjected it to empire under the title of "Prince." 2 I, 3| a son, as a colleague in empire and a partner in the tribunitian 3 I, 3| an ambition to extend the empire, or for any adequate recompense. 4 I, 7| condition," he said, "of holding empire is that an account cannot 5 I, 9| possession to the expectation of empire. He looked also at public 6 I, 13| beginning of his assumption of empire and the close of his life, 7 I, 13| were the boundaries of the empire; the legions, provinces, 8 I, 16| considerations, the greatness of the empire, his distrust of himself. " 9 I, 16| added a counsel, that the empire should be confined to its 10 I, 18| admitting that he undertook empire, but yet ceasing to refuse 11 I, 35| the Drusi, to control the empire of the Roman people? Why 12 I, 43| believed that had he obtained empire, he would have restored 13 I, 45| and, should he wish for empire, they showed themselves 14 I, 55| of his own majesty, the empire of Rome that of our other 15 I, 61| quit the head-quarters of empire or to imperil himself and 16 I, 70| Rhodes. When he obtained the empire, he left her in banishment 17 II, 41| With the growth of the empire private wealth too," he 18 II, 54| Caesars, Tiberius acquired the empire, he enticed Archelaus by 19 II, 79| the limits of the Roman empire, which now extends to the 20 II, 118| but in the height of her empire's glory, had fought, indeed, 21 III, 26| last man marked out for empire by public opinion, expectation 22 III, 50| the extremities of their empire. How often had the Divine 23 III, 65| magnified the greatness of the empire, and said it would be undignified 24 III, 77| which Servius Galba rose to empire, had been practised with 25 IV, 5| then were the limits of our empire. ~ ~ 26 IV, 16| leading her to dream of empire. Livia availed herself of 27 IV, 33| nations were rending the empire of Rome and that therefore 28 IV, 44| about the enlargement of the empire, such is my theme. Still 29 IV, 57| to him the functions of empire; envy towards himself would 30 IV, 94| extreme frontiers of the empire. Fear at home had filled 31 VI, 27| some day have a taste of empire." He thus hinted at a brief 32 VI, 50| leader expatiated on the empire of the East, and the renown 33 VI, 65| meanwhile Ctesiphon, the seat of empire, was their chosen destination. 34 VI, 71| hesitated about bequeathing the empire, first, between his grandsons. 35 VI, 77| first possession of the empire, when suddenly news came 36 XI, 10| the highest questions of empire being uncertain, lesser 37 XI, 14| by adoption heir to the empire with the surname of Nero. 38 XI, 15| and, at last, as though empire had passed to another, the 39 XI, 29| recruited our exhausted empire. Are we sorry that the Balbi 40 XI, 40| indeed in possession of the empire, whether Silius was still 41 XI, 46| victim had Silius obtained empire. ~ ~ 42 XII, 16| inglorious reign, and then the empire of Parthia passed to his 43 XII, 27| those who had enlarged the empire were permitted also to extend 44 XII, 35| disturb also the peace of our empire. For an immense host of 45 XII, 44| herself a partner in the empire which her ancestors had 46 XII, 74| who could give her son empire but could not endure that 47 XIII, 1| boyhood and had gained the empire by crime, to a man of mature 48 XIII, 5| right administration of empire. "His boyhood," he said, " 49 XIII, 24| and every other step to empire. Only let the man come forward 50 XIII, 63| every department of the empire as admirable as if Thrasea 51 XIII, 65| that the dissolution of the empire must ensue if the revenues 52 XIV, 1| and was so far from having empire that he had not even his 53 XIV, 10| declared that that day gave him empire, and that a freedman was 54 XIV, 16| had aimed at a share of empire, and at inducing the praetorian 55 XIV, 59| there must be an end of the empire, replied that the State 56 XIV, 71| treading the threshold of empire. But perhaps you count yourself 57 XV, 15| the rivals of the Roman empire, were, it seemed, equally 58 XV, 40| who value the reality of empire and disregard its empty 59 XV, 61| the approaching end of empire, and the importance of choosing 60 XV, 65| any greatness and seize an empire, which would be promptly 61 XV, 84| to be murdered, and the empire handed over to Seneca, as 62 XVI, 15| he hinted, grasping at empire and prying into the destinies 63 XVI, 25| freedom, to overturn the empire; should they destroy it,