Quoting History
“The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws.” — Tacitus ⚖️
Tacitus captured how corrupt systems mask rot with legal complexity.
When accountability fades, the rulebook swells.
Quoting History
“The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws.” — Tacitus ⚖️
Tacitus captured how corrupt systems mask rot with legal complexity.
When accountability fades, the rulebook swells.
All things atrocious and shameless flock from all parts to Rome.
– Tacitus
𝗪𝗜𝗞𝗜𝗣𝗘𝗗𝗜𝗔 𝗣𝗜𝗖𝗧𝗨𝗥𝗘 𝗢𝗙 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗗𝗔𝗬
✧ The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis ✧
The Conspiracy of Claudius Civilis is an oil painting by the Dutch painter Rembrandt, produced around 1661–62. It depicts an episode from Tacitus's Histories of the Batavian rebellion (AD 69–70), led by the one-eyed chieftain Claudius Civilis. The painting was commissioned by the city council of Amsterd...
#Rembrandt #Tacitus #Amsterdam #Stockholm #Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Conspiracy_of_Claudius_Civilis
(1/n)
*"They plunder, they butcher, they ravish, they make it desert and call it peace.
They make it desert and they call it peace."* #Tacitus
We need more astute and globally aware, inspired leaders like "her excellency, #MiaAmoreMley, Prime Minister, Prime Minister and Minister for National Security and the Public Service and
Minister for Finance, Economic Affairs and Investment of #Barbados."
Her address to the #UN assembly is simply brilliant:
Hört auf #Tacitus!
Agricola’s Crossings
Over the past few weeks since I wrote a post about the account by Tacitus of a potential Roman invasion of Ireland led by Agricola I’ve been thinking about a couple of open questions and digging around in various commentaries to try to shed light on them. Both of these pertain to the first section of Part 24 of the account, which is in the fifth year of his Agricola’s campaigning
Quinto expeditionum anno nave prima transgressus1 ignotas ad id tempus gentis crebris simul ac prosperis proeliis domuit; eamque partem2 Britanniae quae Hiberniam aspicit copiis instruxit...
The first question relates to transgessus meaning “crossed”. Where did he cross? I remembered all the way back to school days reading some of this, and found the following in Vol. 1 of the Latin textbook we used back then (Wilding’s Latin Course for Schools). On page 68 of that tome we find the following as part of an exercise to translate from Latin to English:
Agricola copias Clanoventae, ubi ora Britanniae ad Hiberniam spectat...
Clanoventae is a Roman name for the town of Ravenglass, near the Cumbrian coast. At the time I took this to be a direct quote from Tacitus, but it isn’t. Obviously Wilding made that bit up! There is evidence of substantial Roman activity at Ravenglass, but none that this was the place he placed the troops intended for a possible invasion of Ireland. Moreover, the actual quote from Tacitus makes it clear that he “crossed” with ships, but that doesn’t seem right when you look at the location (marked with the red thingy):
It’s quite a long way to “cross” from there to modern-day Scotland, and in any case what you would see from there is first and foremost the Isle of Man. From there he could definitely see both Britain and Ireland, but as far as I know there’s little or non direct evidence of Roman activity there, though the Romans did know it through trading interactions. They called it Insula Manavia. Tacitus does not use place names very often – there are only half-a-dozen – in the entire book about Agricola but it seems to me he would not have confused it with Hibernia.
Putting my school textbook away and turning to other commentaries, I didn’t find any real consensus but the best bet is that what Agricola crossed was the Solway Firth, and where he crossed from could well have been Maryport, also a well-known Roman military site (called Alauna). There is no direct evidence for that either, though, and the earliest directly dated evidence of significant activity there is much later, around 122AD. Agricola’s incursion to Scotland was around 81 AD.
If Agricola did cross the Solway Firth he and his army would have landed in what is now Dumfries and Galloway. Most commentaries now believe that the place from which he could see Ireland would be the Rhinns of Galloway, the hammer-shaped peninsula to the West of Stranraer. Now that isn’t the part of Scotland closest to Ireland – that would be the Mull of Kintyre, much further North – but it is pretty close, and it certainly does face across the Irish Sea with nothing in the way.
There is also plenty of evidence of Roman activity near Stranraer, including a settlement and fort in a place known to them as Rerigonium. There are also traces of a Roman road. That is important because, to the Romans, roads were primarily military structures, meant to facilitate the movement of troops and supplies quickly. Had the Romans ever invaded Ireland they would have built an extensive network of roads, as they did in England.
It seems to me that Rerigonium would have been a good choice of place to launch the putative invasion. Loch Ryan would have provided a natural harbour for the ships that would take troops the short distance to Ireland and it’s not difficult to imagine a Roman legion embarking there.
P.S. When I was a lad there were regular ferries from Stranraer to Belfast and back, but now they operate to and from Cairnryan, about 6 miles further up Loch Ryan.
#Agricola #Clanoventae #latin #Maryport #Ravenglass #RomanBritain #Tacitus
Tacitus on Agricola in Scotland about Ireland
Some years ago I came across a blog post relating to the discovery of a fortified settlement at Drumanagh (near Dublin) where Roman coins and goods have been found. It might have been a Roman military site, but in my mind it could equally well have been a Celtic settlement and the finds might have been loot from elsewhere.
I do find it a bit hard to believe that no Romans ever set foot in Ireland, though, and Drumanagh may well have been some sort of trading post or temporary fort for a reconnaissance mission. If that site is Roman, and that was all there was, then it didn’t amount to a full invasion and there’s certainly nothing like the roads or other infrastructure that’s so common in England and Wales.
I thought about this when at the weekend I was “reorganising” my bookshelves (by which I mean changing from one form of disorganization to another), when I came across some old Latin textbooks that included excerpts from the book De vita et moribus Iulii Agricolae which was written by Publius Cornelius Tacitus (Tacitus to you). The Agricola of the title was Gnaeus Julius Agricola, Roman Governor of Britain from around AD 77 until 85. He also happened to be the father-in-law of Tacitus, which probably accounts for the sycophantic tone of some of the writing.
The availability of this book is interesting in itself because only a solitary codicil survived the Roman Era. It eventually became a very popular source in old-fashioned British grammar schools at which Latin was compulsory, as it was at the one I went to, partly because it related to Britain and partly because of the author’s very concise and direct prose which makes much of it quite easy to translate. We didn’t read the whole book at school, but excerpts cropped up regularly to illustrate various grammatical constructions and introduce new vocabulary.
You can find the full Latin text here and an English translation here. I tried Google translate on some passages and it was terrible.
Anyway, as an exercise to my erudite readers I here include sections 23 to 26 which describe part of Agricola’s adventures in Scotland, followed by some comments. Before doing so it is worth mentioning a bit of the context. Agricola’s military campaigns at this time were often carried out in the first instance by water. Scotland was very much bandit country and slogging through the terrain on foot would have led to multiple ambushes and pitched battles.
[23] Quarta aestas obtinendis quae percucurrerat insumpta; ac si virtus exercituum et Romani nominis gloria pateretur, inventus in ipsa Britannia terminus. Namque Clota et Bodotria diversi maris aestibus per inmensum revectae, angusto terrarum spatio dirimuntur: quod tum praesidiis firmabatur atque omnis propior sinus tenebatur, summotis velut in aliam insulam hostibus.
[24] Quinto expeditionum anno nave prima transgressus ignotas ad id tempus gentis crebris simul ac prosperis proeliis domuit; eamque partem Britanniae quae Hiberniam aspicit copiis instruxit, in spem magis quam ob formidinem, si quidem Hibernia medio inter Britanniam atque Hispaniam sita et Gallico quoque mari opportuna valentissimam imperii partem magnis in vicem usibus miscuerit. Spatium eius, si Britanniae comparetur, angustius nostri maris insulas superat. Solum caelumque et ingenia cultusque hominum haud multum a Britannia differunt; [in] melius aditus portusque per commercia et negotiatores cogniti. Agricola expulsum seditione domestica unum ex regulis gentis exceperat ac specie amicitiae in occasionem retinebat. Saepe ex eo audivi legione una et modicis auxiliis debellari obtinerique Hiberniam posse; idque etiam adversus Britanniam profuturum, si Romana ubique arma et velut e conspectu libertas tolleretur.
[25] Ceterum aestate, qua sextum officii annum incohabat, amplexus civitates trans Bodotriam sitas, quia motus universarum ultra gentium et infesta hostilis exercitus itinera timebantur, portus classe exploravit; quae ab Agricola primum adsumpta in partem virium sequebatur egregia specie, cum simul terra, simul mari bellum impelleretur, ac saepe isdem castris pedes equesque et nauticus miles mixti copiis et laetitia sua quisque facta, suos casus attollerent, ac modo silvarum ac montium profunda, modo tempestatum ac fluctuum adversa, hinc terra et hostis, hinc victus Oceanus militari iactantia compararentur. Britannos quoque, ut ex captivis audiebatur, visa classis obstupefaciebat, tamquam aperto maris sui secreto ultimum victis perfugium clauderetur. Ad manus et arma conversi Caledoniam incolentes populi magno paratu, maiore fama, uti mos est de ignotis, oppugnare ultro castellum adorti, metum ut provocantes addiderant; regrediendumque citra Bodotriam et cedendum potius quam pellerentur ignavi specie prudentium admonebant, cum interim cognoscit hostis pluribus agminibus inrupturos. Ac ne superante numero et peritia locorum circumiretur, diviso et ipso in tris partes exercitu incessit.
[26] Quod ubi cognitum hosti, mutato repente consilio universi nonam legionem ut maxime invalidam nocte adgressi, inter somnum ac trepidationem caesis vigilibus inrupere. Iamque in ipsis castris pugnabatur, cum Agricola iter hostium ab exploratoribus edoctus et vestigiis insecutus, velocissimos equitum peditumque adsultare tergis pugnantium iubet, mox ab universis adici clamorem; et propinqua luce fulsere signa. Ita ancipiti malo territi Britanni; et nonanis rediit animus, ac securi pro salute de gloria certabant. Ultro quin etiam erupere, et fuit atrox in ipsis portarum angustiis proelium, donec pulsi hostes, utroque exercitu certante, his, ut tulisse opem, illis, ne eguisse auxilio viderentur. Quod nisi paludes et silvae fugientis texissent, debellatum illa victoria foret.
In [23], around 80 AD, we find that Agricola saw advantage in conquering Scotland as far as the Firth of Clyde (Clota) and Firth of Forth (Bodotria) because the tide would bring his ships a long way inland and they were separated by only a narrow stretch of land. He claims he would have gone further had he had the resources needed to do so.
[24] is the interesting one in light of the introduction to this piece . The fifth year of campaigning would have been 81 AD, long before the construction of Hadrian’s Wall. It says that Agricola crossed in his flagship (literally in the first ship, nave prima). It then goes to say that he garrisoned that part of Britain which faces Hibernia (i.e. Ireland) not out of fear but in hopes of further action. This is because he felt that Ireland offered a strategic connection between the provinces of Britain and Spain.
(Some people think that the garrison Agricola formed for his putative future action, ostensibly an invasion of Ireland, was at Ravenglass in modern-day Cumbria, rather than Scotland, but it might have been further North; nobody really knows. I remember as a kid seeing Ireland from the Mull of Kintyre and was told that on a clear day you could see as far as the mountains in Donegal from there.)
Tacitus goes on to say that (my emphasis):
Ireland is smaller in size when compared to Britain, but larger than the islands of the Mediterranean. The soil, the climate and the character and manners of its inhabitants differ little from those of Britain, while its approaches and harbours are better known through trade and commerce. We also learn that Agricola has a friendly Irish chieftain in tow, who has been turfed out of his own land.
Agricola had given sanctuary to a minor chieftain driven from home by faction, and held him, under the cloak of friendship, until occasion demanded. My father-in-law often said that with one legion and a contingent of auxiliaries Ireland could be conquered and held; and that it would be useful as regards Britain also, since Roman troops would be everywhere, and the prospect of independence would fade from view.
So Agricola felt that people of Hibernia and Britain were similar and the effect of conquering the former would be to snuff out any hopes of independence in the latter. Either the planned invasion never happened, or Agricola tried it, got his fingers burnt and Tacitus chose to omit it from his account. This seems unlikely because Agricola had enough on his plate dealing with the Scottish campaign without diverting a legion to Ireland.
Anyway, the second emphasized section explains that Ireland’s ports were well known through trade and commerce, so one can infer that Romans were familiar enough to have landed there to trade, etc. I think Drumanagh was probably just one of many such stations.
In [25], a year later. Agricola is already campaigning beyond the Firth of Forth using a combination of naval and land-based forces. The Britons were wrong-footed by the Romans’ use of the sea, but mounted attacks against Roman forts. At the end of this section, Agricola, hearing that his force is about to be attacked, divides his army into three divisions and advances.
I included [26] because it mentions the Ninth Legion (in the accusative case, nonam legionem) because they are being attacked. The Ninth Legion has been the source of much speculation as the “Lost Legion”, as it disappears entirely from the historical record after about 120 AD. This unit was in the thick of the action, many times and was almost wiped out in 61 AD during the rebellion of Boudica and in other rebellions. According to Tacitus it was one of the three parts of Agricola’s army in 83 AD, though it was described as “especially weak” (maxime invalidem), and was in trouble there too, but was eventually rescued by the other two divisions. It doesn’t explain why the Ninth was the most weakened. Had it suffered more casualties than the rest of Agricola’s army or was it just not as well trained? Was part of it left as the garrison described in [24]? Could it have participated in an abortive invasion of Ireland the year before, got badly mauled in the process, and hadn’t recovered to full strength?
Bearing in mind that Tacitus wanted to portrary Agricola in a positive light, perhaps the complete rescue of the Ninth described in the text was exaggerated and its already weakened state was worsened still further by this battle? It wasn’t here that the Lost Legion was lost, however, as it cropped up elsewhere in Britain until at least 108 AD, twenty-five years later, and perhaps as late as 120 AD elsewhere on the continent. I’m not a historian but it seems to me that a plausible explanation of the fate of the Ninth Legion is that it was broken up into detachments and gradually dispersed, rather than being wiped out in one calamitous battle.
#Agricola #Drumanagh #GnaeusJuliusAgricola #History #LifeOfAgricola #NinthLegion #PubliusCorneliusTacitus #RomanBritain #Tacitus
Computer simulations with #SimThyr enhance our understanding of the physiology of hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid feedback control. This applies, for example, to the evolution of #TACITUS syndrome.
To quote #Tacitus 'They make a desert and call it peace'. In due course they might be able to claim that it always was desert and that no one had ever lived there. And later still perhaps plant settlers there and claim that it was their - the settlers' - ingenuity that 'made the desert bloom' .
US & Israel Destroyed Syria & Called it Peace
https://consortiumnews.com/2024/12/13/us-israel-destroyed-syria-called-it-peace/
Netanyahu’s ambition to transform the region through war, which dates back almost three decades, is playing out in front of our eyes, writes Jeffrey Sachs. By Jeffrey D. Sachs Common Dreams In the famous lines of Tacitus, Roman historian, “To…
#Politics #Afghanistan #BidenAdministration #Commentary #Iraq #Israel #Lebanon #Libya #Neoconservatism #Palestine #Pentagon #Syria #Turkey #U.s. #UntilThisDayHistoricalPerspectivesOnTheNews #AlQaeda #GeneralWesleyClark #GlobalWarOnTerrorism #IsraeliPrimeMinisterBenjaminNetanyahu #JeffreySachs #Mujahideen #OsamaBinLaden #PresidentBarackObama #Tacitus
I found a nice hardcover book of Tacitus (Annals and Histories). It is from 1952, the Britannica/University of Chicago Great (Western) Books series. It’s a readable enough translation, although absolutely no footnotes or appendices.
Anyway, I’ve never read it, so my knowledge of the period is from listening to the History of Rome podcast a decade ago.
I might pop back to my used bookstore and see what else they have.
#History #Rome #Roman #Tacitus #HistoryOfRome #GreatBooks #Reading
#KI #Übersetzungen #DerMeisterUndMargarita
#Geschichte
(10/n)
...Tja und #Tacitus bezeichnet ihn eben nicht als #Präfekt, sondern #Prokurator (sh. oben).
Ja und zwischenzeitlich ist seit 1961 bewiesen, daß selbst #Tacitus falsch lag:
"...S TIBERIÉVM / [PO]NTIVS PÌLATVS / [PRAEF]ECTUS IVDAE[A]E ...
Der 👉Fund belegt, dass die korrekte Bezeichnung für das von #Pilatus ausgeübte Amt Präfekt war und nicht, wie bei den Statthaltern von Judäa ab Mitte des 1. Jahrhunderts...
#KI #Übersetzungen #DerMeisterUndMargarita
#Geschichte
(9/n)
...in der Regel dem Senatoren- oder dem Ritterstand." 4)
Soweit so gut, bis man den Wiki-Eintrag weiterliest und auf #Tacitus stösst:
"«Auctor nominis eius Christus Tiberio imperitante per 👉procuratorem Pontium Pilatum👈 supplicio adfectus erat.»
„Der Urheber jenes Namens, Christus, wurde während der Regierung des Tiberius durch den 👉Prokurator Pontius Pilatus👈 hingerichtet.“
– Tacitus"..
4)
https://de.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pr%C3%A4fekt_(R%C3%B6misches_Reich)
This article from a newly digitised and published online Vol. 14 No. 3 of the EAZ examines the historical significance and scholarly reception of Tacitus' Germania, tracing its publication history and discussing interpretations ranging from political commentary to ethnographic study.
#Tacitus #Germania #PublicationHistory #EAZ #EAZArchives
https://doi.org/10.54799/AILV9769