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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
In the 1957 volume of Greece & Rome the Camden Professor of Ancient History in the University of Oxford gave readers a preview of certain opinions subsequently developed in the two volumes of his study of Tacitus.
page 95 note 1 Syme, R., ‘How Tacitus came to History’, Greece & Rome, N.s. iv, no. 2 (1957), 160–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 95 note 2 Syme, R., Tacitus (Oxford, 1958).Google Scholar
page 95 note 3 Syme, , Greece & Rome (loc. cit.), 165.Google Scholar
page 95 note 4 Op. cit. 166.
page 95 note 5 Op. cit. 165–6.
page 96 note 1 Tacitus, , Agricola, ed. Ogilvie, R. M. & Richmond, I. (Oxford, 1967), 39. 2 (p. 118).Google Scholar
page 96 note 2 Tacitus, , op. cit. 41. 2–42. 2 (pp. 119–20).Google Scholar
page 97 note 1 With some diffidence I venture to differ here from my friend Mr. Ogilvie, . On p. 285Google Scholar he accepts that the new fortified limes frontier system was pioneered by Domitian in the campaign of A.d. 83 in the Taunus district: thus it is unlikely that the use is generalized yet as he suggests ad loc. on p. 292. So I render it specifically. Again, on his own showing that the bellum Germanicum of ILS 1006 was the rising of Saturninus on the Rhine in a.d. 88 (p. 291) it is hard to confine ripa to Danube, as he does on p. 292.
page 97 note 2 Syme, , op. cit. 164.Google Scholar
page 98 note 1 Agricola, 42. 4 (p. 120)Google Scholar. Cf. Syme, , op. cit. 163.Google Scholar
page 98 note 2 Syme, , Tacitus, 622–4.Google Scholar
page 98 note 3 Syme, , op. cit. 492–503.Google Scholar
page 98 note 4 Syme, , op. cit. 498.Google Scholar
page 98 note 5 Tacitus, , Annals, i. 53.Google Scholar
page 98 note 6 Tacitus, , Annals, iv. 59 and 67Google Scholar; v. 4.
page 99 note 1 Agricola, 6. 2 (p. 96).Google Scholar
page 99 note 2 Agricola, 9. 6 (p. 98).Google Scholar
page 99 note 3 Syme, , Tacitus, 133–6; 144–56.Google Scholar
page 99 note 4 Tacitus, , Histories, i. 49.Google Scholar