Tacitus, Cornelius Publius (Gaius) Cornelius Tacitus was born in 56 A.D, either in Gallia cisalpina or in Gallia Narbonensis. His Annals deal with the period from the death of Augustus in A.D. 14 to the end of Nero's reign in A.D. 68. The Annals originally comprised at least 16 books, but some of them are lost. Tacitus grew up in a comfortable environment, and he studied rhetorics in Rome. Due to his excellent education, he started a career as a lawyer. He married the daughter of Agricola, a consul, which paved the way for his political career. Subsequently he became quaestor and praetor. Then he even became responsible for the Sibylline books within a college of priests. Finally he returned to Rome and became a consul in the reign of emperor Nerva. His literary works show his great talent and education in prose writing. He died in ca. A.D. 120.
Herzog, C. M. C. M. Herzog, geboren in St. Pölten, Austria; Studium begonnen Spanisch, abgeschlossen Englisch, Französisch an der Universität Wien; Italienisch, Neugriechisch; Studien der Antike: Latein, Altgriechisch; Studien der chinesischen Sprache und Kultur; Arabisch, Hebräisch; ehemals Autor für das Wiener Journal (06/1993-06/94); Beiträge für Literaturzeitschrift etcetera 67/2017, "Nezha und das tosende Meer", etcetera 71/2018, "Meine arabische Quelle aus dem Qur'an"; etcetera 72/2018, "Der Götterschmied" (Lyrik). Ab urbe condita (Autor: Titus Livius, Latein, Ed. C. M. Herzog), Libri XXXIX-XLI, XLII-XLV, XLVI-CXL; Herodoti Historiae, Liber I (Autor: Herodotus Halicarnasseus, Altgriechisch, Ed. C. M. Herzog); Cornelii Taciti Annalium libri I-VI (Autor: Cornelius Tacitus, Latein, Ed. C. M. Herzog).