Object Metadata
Leading Mutineers in Germania are captured, tried by the tribunes and hacked to pieces by their own legions.

Related Conflict :Mutinies of Legions in Germania and Pannonia (14 AD)
Perpetrator (Group) :
  • Roman Army of Tiberius Origin: Mixed Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: commander/general
  • Roman Army of Tiberius Origin: Mixed Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: soldier, Reaction: encouragement
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    Victim (Group) :
  • Roman Mutineers in Germania Origin: Mixed Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: soldier, Direct Consequence: death
  •  
    Third Party (Person) :
  • Caius Caetronius Origin: Roman Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: commander/general
  • Germanicus Iulius Caesar Origin: Roman Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: commander/general, Reaction: doing nothing/standing by
  •  
    Level :intrasocial
    Source :Cornelius Tacitus, Annals 1.44 Paste CTS-Link
    Time Periode :Roman Empire
    Century :A.D. 1
    Year :A.D. 14
     
    Context :mutiny
    jurisdictional
    Motivation :tactical/strategical
    social
    emotional
    Application :cutting
     
    Original Text :discurrunt mutati et seditiosissimum quemque vinctos trahunt ad legatum legionis primae C. Caetronium, qui iudicium et poenas de singulis in hunc modum exercuit. stabant pro contione legiones destrictis gladiis: reus in suggestu per tribunum ostendebatur: si nocentem adclamaverant, praeceps datus trucidabatur. et gaudebat caedibus miles tamquam semet absolveret; nec Caesar arcebat, quando nullo ipsius iussu penes eosdem saevitia facti et invidia erat.
     
    Translation :Away they hurried hither and thither, altered men, and dragged the chief mutineers in chains to Caius Caetronius, commander of the first legion, who tried and punished them one by one in the following fashion. In front of the throng stood the legions with drawn swords. Each accused man was on a raised platform and was pointed out by a tribune. If they shouted out that he was guilty, he was thrown head-long and cut to pieces. The soldiers gloated over the blood-shed as though it gave them absolution. Nor did Cæsar check them, seeing that without any order from himself the same men were responsible for all the cruelty and all the odium of the deed
     
    Edition :Annales ab excessu divi Augusti. Cornelius Tacitus. Charles Dennis Fisher. Clarendon Press. Oxford. 1906.

    Complete Works of Tacitus. Tacitus. Alfred John Church. William Jackson Brodribb. Sara Bryant. edited for Perseus. New York. : Random House, Inc. Random House, Inc. reprinted 1942.
     
     
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    Created at :2024-02-20 : 08:55:26
    Last changed :2024-02-23 : 09:34:27
    MyCoRe ID :Antiquity_violence_00014109
    Static URL :https://ml-s-eris.rrz.uni-hamburg.de/receive/Antiquity_violence_00014109