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Tacitus, Germania. Chapter 26.

26. Of lending money on interest and increasing it by compound interest they know nothing; a more effectual safeguard than if it were prohibited.

Land proportioned to the number of inhabitants is occupied by the whole community in turn, and afterwards divided among them according to rank. A wide expanse of plains makes the partition easy. They till fresh fields every year, and they have still more land than enough; with the richness and extent of their soil, they do not labirously exert themselves in planting orchards, inclosing meadows, and watering gardens. Corn is the only produce requred from the earth; hence even the year itself is not divided by them into as many seasons as with us. Winter, spring, and summer have both a meaning and a name; the name and blessings of autumn are alike unknown.

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Tacitus, Germania - translated by Alfred Lord Church and William Jackson Brodribb.

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place  time  topic  people  language

Ancient Germany - Ancient/1st century CE - General history - Germans - Latin translation

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