hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Julian (Pennsylvania, United States) 12 0 Browse Search
Nero (Ohio, United States) 10 0 Browse Search
Julian (North Carolina, United States) 8 0 Browse Search
Vestal (New York, United States) 6 0 Browse Search
Julian (West Virginia, United States) 6 0 Browse Search
Arcadian (Michigan, United States) 4 0 Browse Search
Germans (Pennsylvania, United States) 4 0 Browse Search
Sibyl (Iowa, United States) 4 0 Browse Search
The Cave (Alabama, United States) 2 0 Browse Search
Old Camp (Nevada, United States) 2 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Cornelius Tacitus, The Annals (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb). Search the whole document.

Found 3 total hits in 1 results.

Julian (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): book 1, chapter 8
On the first day of the Senate he allowed nothing to be discussed but the funeral of Augustus, whose will, which was brought in by the Vestal Virgins, named as his heirs Tiberius and Livia. The latter was to be admitted into the Julian family with the name of Augusta; next in expectation were the grand and great-grandchildren. In the third place, he had named the chief men of the State, most of whom he hated, simply out of ostentation and to win credit with posterity. His legacies were not beyond the scale of a private citizen, except a bequest of forty-three million five hundred thousand sesterces "to the people and populace of Rome," of one thousand to every prætorian soldier, and of three hundred to every man in the legionary cohorts composed of Roman citizens. Next followed a deliberation about funeral honours. Of these the most imposing were thought fitting. The procession was to be conducted through "the gate of triumph," on the motion of Gallus Asinius; the titles o