Titus and Berenice
Tacitus
Histories 2.1–2, 81
ca. 100–110
Titus Vespasianus had been dispatched by his father from Judaea. [ . . . ] These considerations and others like them made him waver between hope and fear; but hope finally won. Some believed that he turned back because of his passionate longing to see again Queen Berenice; and the young man’s heart was not insensible to Berenice, but his feelings…
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The Early Roman Period in History and Memory
1st Century BCE–3rd Century CE
Rome's subjugation of Judea was characterized by shifts in Roman policy and major Jewish revolts against the Roman Empire.
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Women and the Herodian Dynasty
1st Century BCE–1st Century CE
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Queen Berenice
1st–4th Centuries
Creator Bio
Tacitus
56–120
Publius Cornelius Tacitus was a Roman senator and historian of the Roman Empire. His two most influential works, Histories and Annals, span the period from the death of Augustus in 14 CE to the death of Domitian in 96 CE and include an overview of Roman rule in Judea through the First Jewish Revolt (66–73 CE). Tacitus was trained in rhetoric early in his career and later withdrew from public office to devote his time exclusively to writing.
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