The AnnalsMachine readable text


The Annals
By Tacitus
Translated by: Alfred John Church William Jackson Brodribb
New York: Random House, Inc. Random House, Inc. reprinted 1942



Perseus Documents Collection Table of Contents



Complete Works of Tacitus

BOOK 1

A.D. 14, 15

BOOK II

A.D. I6I9

BOOK III

A.D. 20, 21, 22

BOOK IV

A.D. 2328

BOOK V

A.D. 2931

BOOK VI

A.D. 3237

Book XI

A.D. 47, 48

BOOK XII

A.D. 4854

BOOK XIII

A.D. 5458

BOOK XIV

A.D. 5962

BOOK XV

A.D. 6265

BOOK XVI

A.D. 65, 66


Funded by The Annenberg CPB/Project

A.D. 5962

 

Ch. 65

That same year Nero was believed to have destroyed by poison two of his most powerful freedmen, Doryphorus, on the pretext of his having opposed the marriage with Poppa, Pallas for still keeping his boundless wealth by a prolonged old age. Romanus had accused Seneca in stealthy calumnies, of having been an accomplice of Caius Piso, but he was himself crushed more effectually by Seneca on the same charge. This alarmed Piso, and gave rise to a huge fabric of unsuccessful conspiracies against Nero.