Expected by the Romans While the Blessed Virgin was on earth, the Jews were awaiting their mysterious Christ precisely during this same period of time. But what is even more surprising is to discover that other people were also experiencing a time of waiting at exactly the same time. We have unequivocal testimonies of the most accurate nature on this universal expectancy for the One who was to emerge from Judea. From two of the greatest Latin historians, Tacitus and Suetonius, we also learn how the Romans were stirred up at the approach of a century which we were to call "the first century after Christ." Tacitus wrote in his Historiae: "Most were convinced that the ancient books of the priests predicted that, around this time, the East would grow more powerful. And that the rulers of the world would emerge from Judea." In the same way, Suetonius says, in his Life of Vespasian: "Throughout the East, an idea was gaining currency: the consistent and very ancient view that it was to be written in the world's destiny that from Judea would emerge the rulers of the world." These two historians were writing at the end of the first century and at the beginning of the second, without being able to know of the triumph, still to come, of He who would indeed be the "ruler" of the western world.