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Alphabetical [« »] accusation 23 accusations 8 accuse 5 accused 61 accuser 20 accusers 31 accusing 4 | Frequency [« »] 63 secret 63 spirit 62 during 61 accused 61 family 61 order 61 woman | Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus Annals Concordances accused |
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1 I, 57| with drawn swords. Each accused man was on a raised platform 2 I, 97| proconsul of Bithynia, was accused of treason by his quaestor, 3 I, 98| he quietly allowed the accused to be acquitted of the charges 4 II, 34| family of Scribonii, was accused of revolutionary schemes. 5 II, 35| He at once pounced on the accused, went to the consuls, and 6 II, 37| mysterious significance. When the accused denied this, it was decided 7 II, 65| grand-niece of Augustus, was accused of treason by an informer 8 II, 65| unfavourable speeches she was accused of having uttered against 9 II, 86| Pandus, whom Rhescuporis accused of being his personal enemy, 10 II, 87| plight, to Rome. He was accused before the Senate by the 11 II, 89| infernal deities. Piso too was accused of sending emissaries to 12 II, 103| had fixed a day for the accused and his prosecutors. ~ ~ 13 III, 11| the inquiry. This even the accused did not refuse, fearing, 14 III, 12| to the pleadings of the accused, and finally referred the 15 III, 13| Germanicus, on what the accused rested his hopes, and how 16 III, 15| still I would not hinder the accused from producing all the evidence 17 III, 32| and Cneius Pompeius, was accused of pretending to be a mother 18 III, 32| the imperial house. The accused was defended by her brother 19 III, 48| mind that, whenever men are accused of extortion, most of the 20 III, 54| meditated war against us. The accused was accordingly outlawed, 21 III, 68| penalty was invoked on the accused. ~ ~ 22 III, 92| pro-consul of Asia, was accused by our allies of extortion; 23 III, 98| Ennius, a Roman knight, was accused of treason, for having converted 24 IV, 17| temper. Carsidius Sacerdos, accused of having helped our enemy 25 IV, 20| the case was heard and the accused condemned. The cities of 26 IV, 25| to his own disgrace. The accused begged a brief respite, 27 IV, 25| Rome a commonwealth. The accused either said nothing, or, 28 IV, 29| Quintus Granius accused Piso of secret treasonable 29 IV, 31| Augusta and Urgulania. The accused tried the steel in vain, 30 IV, 37| destroy himself. But the accused with fearless spirit, looked 31 IV, 40| rewards whenever a person accused of treason put an end to 32 IV, 46| This was enough to ruin the accused; and then too the emperor 33 IV, 50| the people of Cyzicus were accused of publicly neglecting the 34 IV, 58| reproached in regard to accused persons, punished Aquilia 35 V, 9| the most pitiable, to be accused for friendship's sake or 36 VI, 5| Latinius Latiaris, accuser and accused, both alike objects of execration, 37 VI, 14| Where they could not be accused of grasping at political 38 VI, 25| richest man in Spain, was next accused of incest with his daughter, 39 VI, 31| had proved fatal to the accused before he could be convicted 40 VI, 56| Marcianus, a senator, who was accused of treason by Caius Gracchus, 41 VI, 73| Publius Vitellius, had been accused of treason by Laelius Balbus. 42 XI, 2| was heard. There Suilius accused him of corrupting the troops, 43 XI, 2| was at this last that the accused broke silence, and burst 44 XI, 3| old friendship with the accused, and of their joint homage 45 XI, 37| and crushed before she was accused. The critical point was 46 XII, 25| Claudius, without hearing the accused, first reminded the Senate 47 XIII, 5| confining the accuser and the accused within the same walls, let 48 XIII, 11| a senator, whom a slave accused, or of Julius Densus, a 49 XIII, 27| Next Pallas and Burrus were accused of having conspired to raise 50 XIII, 27| company. Burrus, though accused, gave his verdict as one 51 XIII, 32| whenever freedmen were accused by their patrons, they were 52 XIII, 39| Britain with an ovation, was accused of some foreign superstition 53 XIII, 40| Cossutianus Capito was accused by the people of Cilicia; 54 XIV, 60| consul-elect, proposed that the accused should be deprived of his 55 XIV, 86| prolonged old age. Romanus had accused Seneca in stealthy calumnies, 56 XV, 24| stated his opinion that the accused ought to be expelled from 57 XV, 68| and bade him summon the accused. ~ ~ 58 XV, 69| dagger about which he was accused, had of old been regarded 59 XV, 93| they had of having been accused. Atilla, the mother of Annaeus 60 XVI, 11| When the accused knew this and saw that he 61 XVI, 30| futile, and useless to the accused, as it would be fatal to