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Alphabetical    [«  »]
eminence 3
eminent 2
emissaries 1
emperor 40
emperors 9
empire 27
employed 4
Frequency    [«  »]
42 those
41 made
41 one
40 emperor
40 maximian
40 now
40 then
Lucius Caecilius Firmianus Lactantius
On the manner in which the persecutors died

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emperor

   Chapter
1 II | In the latter days of the Emperor Tiberius, in the consulship 2 II | beginning of the reign of the Emperor Nero, they occupied themselves 3 V | that although he had an emperor for his son, he found no 4 V | spoils of their captived emperor in a Persian temple, they 5 VI | the fate of the captived emperor, yet, being of a nature 6 VII | military force than any sole emperor had done in times past. 7 IX | Galerius got the title of emperor, his father-in-law having 8 XI | not even then could the emperor be prevailed upon to yield 9 XIV | another way to gain on the emperor. That he might urge him 10 XV | authority at court and with the emperor, were slain. Presbyters 11 XVII | December; and suddenly the emperor, unable to bear the Roman 12 XVII | no one would believe the emperor alive, until, on the kalends 13 XVIII | wished for the title of emperor, there was nothing to hinder 14 XVIII | for me, while I continued emperor, long and diligent have 15 XIX | chariot; and then this old emperor, like a veteran soldier 16 XX | Constantius, to the dignity of emperor, with the title of brother, 17 XXIV | after supper, when the emperor was gone to rest, he hasted 18 XXIV | and escaped. Next day the emperor, having purposely remained 19 XXV | Constantine in the quality of emperor. He hesitated long whether 20 XXV | in life, should be named emperor, and that Constantine, instead 21 XXV | instead of the title of emperor, to which he had been named, 22 XXVI | Maxentius had been declared emperor at Rome. The cause was this: 23 XXVII | thus did he, once a Roman emperor, but now the ravager of 24 XXIX | into the city. The rebel emperor, and unnatural parent and 25 XXX | forfeited the respect due to an emperor and a father-in-law, grew 26 XXX | allow the bed-chamber of the emperor to be left open, and to 27 XXX | murdered instead of the emperor. At the dead of night Maximian 28 XXXI | imperial treasury, that the emperor might be enabled to perform 29 XXXII | Licinius to the dignity of emperor, and he would no longer 30 XXXII | have the appellation of emperor.~ 31 XXXVIII| unworthy of the bed of the emperor. Whenever a woman resisted, 32 XXXVIII| imitated the example of the emperor, and violated with impunity 33 XXXVIII| for, and obtained from the emperor by way of free gift. Nor 34 XLII | disgrace which no former emperor had ever seen, and, trader 35 XLIV | advanced, but without their emperor, and they crossed the bridge. 36 XLIV | Constantine was acknowledged as emperor, with great rejoicings, 37 XLVI | towards heaven. Then the emperor uttered the prayer, and 38 XLVI | would presently abandon an emperor parsimonious in his donatives, 39 XLVII | or fled; for now that the emperor himself had deserted, there 40 L | Valeria immediately fled. The Emperor Severus left a son, Severianus,


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