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Browsing named entities in a specific section of C. Suetonius Tranquillus, Divus Claudius (ed. Alexander Thomson). Search the whole document.
Found 6 total hits in 2 results.
Ostia (Italy) (search for this): life cl., chapter 38
Sensible of his being subject to passion and resentment, he excused himself in both instances by a proclamation, assuring the public that " the former should be short and harmless, and the latter never without good cause."
After severely reprimanding the people of Ostia
for not sending some boats to meet him upon his entering the mouth of the Tiber, in terms which might expose them to the public resentment, he wrote to Rome that he had been treated as a private person; yet immediately afterwards he pardoned them, and that in a way which had the appearance of making them satisfaction, or begging pardon for some injury he had done them.
Some people who addressed him unseasonably in public, he pushed away with his own hand.
He likewise banished a person who had been secretary to a quaestor, and even a senator who had filled the office of praetor.
without a hearing, and although they were innocent; the former only because he had treated him with rudeness while he was in a private station
Tiber (Italy) (search for this): life cl., chapter 38
Sensible of his being subject to passion and resentment, he excused himself in both instances by a proclamation, assuring the public that " the former should be short and harmless, and the latter never without good cause."
After severely reprimanding the people of Ostia
for not sending some boats to meet him upon his entering the mouth of the Tiber, in terms which might expose them to the public resentment, he wrote to Rome that he had been treated as a private person; yet immediately afterwards he pardoned them, and that in a way which had the appearance of making them satisfaction, or begging pardon for some injury he had done them.
Some people who addressed him unseasonably in public, he pushed away with his own hand.
He likewise banished a person who had been secretary to a quaestor, and even a senator who had filled the office of praetor.
without a hearing, and although they were innocent; the former only because he had treated him with rudeness while he was in a private station