[1] Eō in tempore Nerō Antiī agēns nōn ante in urbem regressus est quam domuī eius, quā Palātium et Maecēnātīs hortōs continuāverat, ignis propinquāret. neque tamen sistī potuit quīn et Palātium et domus et cūncta circum haurīrentur. [2] sed sōlācium populō exturbātō ac profugō campum Mārtis ac monumenta Agrippae, hortōs quīn etiam suōs patefēcit et subitāria aedificia extrūxit quae multitūdinem inopem acciperent; subvectāque ūtēnsilia ab Ōstiā et propinquīs mūnicipiīs pretiumque frūmentī minūtum usque ad ternōs nummōs. [3] quae quamquam populāria in inritum cadēbant, quia pervāserat rūmor ipsō tempore flagrantis urbis inīsse eum domesticam scaenam et cecinisse Troiānum excidium, praesentia mala vetustīs clādibus adsimulantem.

Essay

39.1

After his protestations of devotion to the city in chapter 36, it is not to Nero’s credit that he is not in Rome at the time of the fire but staying in his luxury villa at Antium. As we saw. . .[full essay]

Study Questions

39.1:

  • What is the case of Antii?
  • To what imperial residence does Tacitus refer here? What is the Palatium?
  • Parse haurirentur and explain its mood.

39.2:

  • How does solacium fit into this sentence grammatically?
  • What is Ostia?

39.3:

  • State and explain the case of ipso tempore.
  • Parse adsimulantem. With which word is it agreeing in this sentence?

Stylistic Appreciation:

How does this passage present a fascinating account of Nero’s reaction to the Fire?

Discussion Point:

What are we to make of Tacitus’ sudden change of tack in his treatment of Nero? Is your picture of the emperor altered by this chapter? ‘Fiddling while Rome burns’ has become proverbial: is it fair that Nero should be best remembered in this context? What elements of Nero’s response to the fire are recognizable from modern disaster relief? Nero’s practical and popular relief measures failed to alter public perception of the emperor: why? Can you think of other historical or modern examples, in which practical relief measures and political campaigning became intertwined?

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Suggested Citation

Mathew Owen and Ingo Gildenhard, Tacitus, Annals, 15.20–23, 33–45. Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 2013. ISBN: 978-1-78374-003-1. DCC edition, 2016. https://dcc.dickinson.edu/tacitus-annals/15-39