Agricola and Germany
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U Lužického semináře 10, Malá Strana
Book information
Oxford Univ Press
UK
2009
Reissue
Paperback
160
Standard
312740
978-0-19-953926-0
0-19-953926-X
Statesmen; Rome; Biography; Early works to 1800.
Annotation
Cornelius Tacitus, Rome's greatest historian and the last great writer of classical Latin prose, produced his first two books in AD 98. He was inspired to take up his pen when the assassination of Domitian ended `fifteen years of enforced silence'. The first products were brief: the biography of his late father-in-law Julius Agricola and an account of Rome's most dangerous enemies, the Germans. Since Agricola's claim to fame was that as governor for seven years he had completed the conquest of Britain, begun four decades earlier, much of the first work is devoted to Britain and its people. The second is the only surviving specimen from the ancient world of an ethnographic study. Each in its way has had immense influence on our perception of Rome and the northern `barbarians'.
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