Tacitus
The World Traders' Tacitus
Lecture was inaugurated in 1988 and is now believed to be the largest event of
its type in the City of London. It is held annually and provides the Company with
an opportunity to demonstrate to a wider audience its concern with issues affecting
world trade. It takes its name from the Roman senator Publius Cornelius Tacitus
who was born in about AD 56 and may have survived the emperor Trajan who died
in AD 117. His Roman education, with its elaborate series of exercises in different
kinds of public speaking, turned him into an impressive and famous orator, and
one of the extant works attributed to him, the "Dialogue on Orators",
is a discussion of oratorial style. It was Tacitus who, in his "Life of Agricola",
described "Londinium" as "a town of highest repute and a busy emporium
for trade and traders". Agricola, who was the Governor of Roman Britain,
was also the father in law of Tacitus.
This notable event has attracted important speakers of prestige and distinction
in diverse fields concerned with world trade. All previous lecturers (with their
positions at the time, and the titles of their lectures) together with transcripts
of the lectures since 2000, may be found
by clicking the link - Previous Lectures, to the left.