Object Metadata
Scribonius Libo Drusus commits suicide after being accused of conspiracy against Tiberius.

Perpetrator (Person) :
Perpetrator (Group) :
  • Origin: Unknown Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: slave/servant, Reaction: shock
  •  
    Victim (Person) :
  • Marcus Scribonius Libo Drusus Origin: Roman Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: upper class, Direct Consequence: death
  •  
    Third Party (Person) :
  • Tiberius Caesar Augustus Origin: Roman Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: monarch/ruler, Reaction: other
  • Origin: Unknown Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: slave/servant
  • Third Party (Group) :
  • Roman Army of Tiberius Origin: Mixed Gender: Male, Age: adult, Activity: soldier
  •  
    Level :intrapersonal
    Source :Cornelius Tacitus, Annals 2.31 Paste CTS-Link
    Time Periode :Roman Empire
    Century :A.D. 1
    Year :A.D. 16
    Month :September
    Day :13
    Season :Autum
     
    Context :jurisdictional
    conspiracy
    suicide
    Motivation :emotional
    political
    Application :stabbing
    Weapon :sword
    Long-Term Consequence :financial reward
    execution
     
    Original Text :cingebatur interim milite domus, strepebant etiam in vestibulo ut audiri, ut aspici possent, cum Libo ipsis quas in novissimam voluptatem adhibuerat epulis excruciatus vocare percussorem, prensare servorum dextras, inserere gladium. atque illis, dum trepidant, dum refugiunt, evertentibus adpositum cum mensa lumen, feralibus iam sibi tenebris duos ictus in viscera derexit. ad gemitum conlabentis adcurrere liberti, et caede visa miles abstitit. accusatio tamen apud patres adseveratione eadem peracta, iuravitque Tiberius petiturum se vitam quamvis nocenti, nisi voluntariam mortem properavisset.
     
    Translation :Meanwhile his house was surrounded with soldiers; they crowded noisily even about the entrance, so that they could be heard and seen, when Libo, whose anguish drove him from the very banquet he had prepared as his last gratification, called for a minister of death, grasped the hands of his slaves, and thrust a sword into them. In their confusion, as they shrank back, they overturned the lamp on the table at his side, and in the darkness, now to him the gloom of death, he aimed two blows at a vital part. At the groans of the falling man his freedmen hurried up, and the soldiers, seeing the bloody deed, stood aloof. Yet the prosecution was continued in the Senate with the same persistency, and Tiberius declared on oath that he would have interceded for his life, guilty though he was, but for his hasty suicide.
     
    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.
     
    Remark :date: The date is given in 2.32, to be celebrated as a public holiday.
    long-term consequence: Libo's property was divided among his accusers; due to their involvement in the supposed conspiracy, magicians were driven from italy or even killed. (2.32)
     
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    Created at :2024-03-17 : 11:56:43
    Last changed :2024-03-27 : 10:24:36
    MyCoRe ID :Antiquity_violence_00014307
    Static URL :https://ml-s-eris.rrz.uni-hamburg.de/receive/Antiquity_violence_00014307