SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

Tacitus, Germania. Chapter 27.

27. In their funerals there is no pomp; they simply observe the custom of burning the bodies of illustrious men with certain kinds of wood. They do not heap garments or spices on the funeral pile. The arms of the dead man and in some cases his horse are consigned to the fire. A turf mound forms the tomb. Monuments with their lofty elaborate splendour they reject as oppressive to the dead. Tears and lamentations they soon dismiss; grief and sorrow but slowly. It is thought becoming for women to bewail, for men to remember, the dead.

Such on the whole is the account which I have received of the origin and manners of the entire German people. I will now touch on the institutions and religious rites of the separate tribes, pointing out how far they differ, and also what nations have migrated from Germany into Gaul.

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

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

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

place  time  topic  people  language

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

Footer section, if any

SNAP  READING  UP  DOWN  TOP
 

 

Footer section, if any