Histories, The (Historiae)a work by the Roman historian Tacitus. Originally twelve or fourteen books long, they dealt with the period AD 69–96, from Galba to Domitian, but only the first four books and part of the fifth survive, covering the events of the ‘Year of the Four Emperors’, 69, and the first nine months or so of 70. They were published, perhaps in instalments, between AD 105 and 108, and were written before the Annals. Portions were revised by the Younger Pliny, who sometimes furnished Tacitus with material, e.g. the account of the eruption of Vesuvius in AD 79 which caused the death of Pliny's uncle and namesake.
Book 1 opens with a survey of how, after the prosperous security of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, the empire is shaken by palace conspiracies, sudden murders, the armies moving on Rome from the frontiers, the frontiers themselves overrun by barbarians, the times ‘rich in tragedies, terrible with battles, torn by civil strife’; even the Capitol is set on fire by citizens. It describes the brief reign of Galba, his adoption of Piso Licinianus, and the intrigues of Otho with the military which brought about the murder of Galba and Piso and his own accession (69). Tacitus brilliantly portrays the emperor Galba, his mediocrity, ‘rather free from vices than endowed with virtues’, the stinginess which was his undoing, his high birth and military reputation thanks to which he would have been judged ‘equal to the imperial office had he not held it’, capax imperii nisi imperasset. The narrative passes to the mutinous conduct of the legions in Germany, their adoption of Vitellius as emperor, the movement of his forces under Valens and Caecina, the negotiations between Otho and Vitellius, the shifting allegiances of provinces and legions, and the outbreak of civil war.
Book 2. Tacitus turns to the important role that the commanders Vespasian and Titus were playing in the East, where, except for the resistance of Jerusalem, the war against the Jews had been concluded. Vespasian and Mucianus, governor of Syria, decide to await developments. Tacitus then returns to events in Italy, the fighting around Bedriacum (on the road between Verona and Cremona), and the suicide of Otho, death seeming the only honourable course open to him. The reign of Vitellius is described, the emperor's sloth and gluttony, the disorder in the legions, the wasteful administration, and the threat of the advance of Vespasian's forces under Mucianus.
Book 3 describes the operations of Vespasian's generals against Vitellius, the siege and the terrible sack and burning of Cremona, the fighting in Rome between partisans of the opposing forces, which leads to the burning of the Capitol, the final capture of the city, and the end of Vitellius, discovered wandering forlornly in the deserted palace and put to death (December 69). The author's gift for sombre depiction is seen at its best in this book.
Book 4 and the surviving portion of book 5 are occupied with the reign of Vespasian, the rising of the Batavians under Civilis, and the expedition of Titus against Jerusalem (the account of the siege is lost).




