>>Jesus never existed
5 Roman emperors wrote about Christos and the problems that Pilatay (phon.) executing Christos, caused for Rome
2 Roman Historians documented how Rome handled the aftermath of the execution
1 official Roman senate scribe documented events as they impacted Rome
3 more Roman Emperors made official laws calling for the rounding up, torturing and killing of Christos’ followers.
Several Roman governors wrote to Rome asking if Rome had an official position on dealing with the aftermath of Christos’ execution
1 high up Hebrew general who had lead in the Jewish-Roman wars wrote about Christos’ execution.
1 Hebrew historian documented events surrounding and after the execution of Christos as an eyewitness, including naming other eyewitnesses and documenting what happened to all of them.
4 Jewish lay people documented Christos’ life and events leading up to the execution as eyewitnesses.
These were contemporary documentations, with all of these accounts written within 70 years of Christos’ execution, while the last eyewitnesses were still alive.
There is more contemporary, corroborative and historical evidence of Christos than there is for Hatshepsut, Cleopatra, or Boudicca, COMBINED.
Tacitus, the premier Roman historian who is accepted as canon by all scholars of history, gives us everything - and the only account anywhere- that we know of Boudicca in a few short paragraphs, and is our source of information to tell us that Nero blamed the great fire on Christians so he could round them up. He wrote his canonical, historical annals of Rome with great detail in many volumes and included events surrounding Christos’ execution from Romes perspective, within 70 years of the execution.
Even if you disregard the eyewitness accounts and the Jewish accounts as corroborating Tacitus, you are left with Tacitus which no one refutes, and the Roman emperors bitching about the problems Pilate caused them by executing Christos and the senate scribe and the governors. Tiberius was the first complainer about Christos’ execution in a letter to one of his governors, written 7 years after the execution. He further wrote he was taking no official position on the followers unless they were being seditious. The governor wrote back he was killing Christos followers anyway because they were spreading.
That was in 40 AD.