Tiberius in Smiths Bible Dictionary
            (in full, Tiberius Claudius Nero), the second Roman emperor, 
successor of Augustus, who began to reign A.D. 14 and reigned 
until A.D. 37. He was the son of Tiberius Claudius Nero and 
Livia, and hence a stepson of Augustus. He was born at Rome on 
the 18th of November, B.C. 45. He became emperor in his fifty-
fifth year, after having distinguished himself as a commander 
in various wars, and having evinced talents of a high order as 
an orator and an administrator of civil affairs. He even 
gained the reputation of possessing the sterner virtues of the 
Roman character, and was regarded as entirely worthy of the 
imperial honors to which his birth and supposed personal 
merits at length opened the way. Yet, on being raised to the 
supreme power, he suddenly became, or showed himself to be a 
very different man. His subsequent life was one of inactivity, 
sloth and self-indulgence. He was despotic in his government, 
cruel and vindictive in his disposition. He died A.D. 37, at 
the age of 78, after a reign of twenty-three years. Our 
Saviour was put to death in the reign of Tiberius.
                          
 Read More about Tiberius in Smiths Bible Dictionary