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 1  Int,   5, p.   xx    |      the establishment of the Roman Empire, whose Heads both
 2  III,   2, p.  110    | Augustus then being the first Roman Emperor, and Herod, who
 3  III           119(30)|        spei~ra, equivalent of Roman "manipulus" (Polyb. xi.
 4  III           121(36)|       Loeb Series. (See Dill, Roman Society from Nero to Marcus
 5  III,   5, p.  130    | should take possession of the Roman Empire, and the Queen of
 6  III           130(51)|      Christianity outside the Roman Empire, p. 11, Cambridge,
 7  III,   5, p.  133    |      conspiracy to invade the Roman Empire? Or that human nature,
 8  III,   7, p.  161    |   other nations who are under Roman rule. And no one could deny
 9   VI,  20, p.   41    |     was born, being the first Roman to subjugate Egypt, captured
10   VI,  20, p.   41    |      that they came under the Roman power, laws, and enactments,
11  VII,   1, p.   58    |       date by the rule of the Roman Emperor over all nations,
12  VII,   1, p.   61    |   their feet, by means of the Roman razor, that is to say their (
13  VII,   1, p.   61    |       their glory through the Roman rule. ~Aquila translates, "
14  VII,   1, p.   61    |   prophecy here refers to the Roman Empire. For (d) we see them
15  VII,   1, p.   61    |       to shine throughout the Roman Empire on all mankind, and
16  VII,   1, p.   61    |   among all the nations under Roman rule. It was therefore to
17  VII,   1, p.   68    |    with the prophecy, for the Roman Empire absorbed them concurrently
18  VII,   1, p.   69    |  considering whether here the Roman Empire is not meant, if
19  VII,   1, p.   69    |   probable that here also the Roman Empire is intended, through
20  VII,   1, p.   71    |  Siloam that went softly, the Roman army came under God's direction
21  VII,   1, p.   72    |      me into the hands of the Roman Empire: and figuratively
22  VII,   1, p.   76    |      the Jews up to (339) the Roman Empire and Tiberius. For
23  VII,   2, p.   80    |    with His coming, the first Roman Emperor, (b) Augustus, conquered
24 VIII,   1, p.  106    |    governors appointed in the Roman Empire over nations, their
25 VIII,   1, p.  107    |      and their power is named Roman, and the rule of them all
26 VIII,   1, p.  108    |      king by Augustus and the Roman Senate. For Herod was son
27 VIII,   2, p.  126    |      reign of Cyrus up to the Roman Empire, when Pompeius (392)
28 VIII,   2, p.  126    |       when Pompeius (392) the Roman general attacked Jerusalem
29 VIII,   2, p.  126    |    paid taxes, and obeyed the Roman enactments. ~At this period,
30 VIII,   2, p.  129    |   each other, Pompey, the (c) Roman general, attacked Jerusalem,
31 VIII,   2, p.  129    |     the Jewish kingdom by the Roman senate, being the first
32 VIII,   2, p.  129    |     from Darius to Pompey the Roman general. ~And if you reckon
33 VIII,   2, p.  130    |      up to King Herod and the Roman Emperor Augustus, in whose
34 VIII,   2, p.  131    |       which time Augustus the Roman Emperor, in the fifteenth
35 VIII,   2, p.  133    |           Valerius Gratus the Roman General, after closing the
36 VIII,   2, p.  134    |      in saying, too, that the Roman general and his army arc
37 VIII,   2, p.  134    |      I think the camps of the Roman rulers are meant, who governed
38 VIII,   3, p.  141    |      loved to interpret, is a Roman farm like the rest of the
39 VIII,   3, p.  141    |     other time but during the Roman Empire, from our Saviour'
40 VIII,   4, p.  144    |     the world. And before the Roman days under Persians or Macedonians
41 VIII,   4, p.  145    |      Titus and Vespasian, the Roman Emperors, it was utterly
42   IX,   3, p.  157    |    Hebrews disguised the  ./. Roman Empire, which grew concurrently
43   IX,  17, p.  187    |  power, that had lasted until Roman times, that our Saviour'
44   IX,  17, p.  188    |      during the period of the Roman Empire the old dissensions
45    X,   1, p.  193    |    and the second time in the Roman war against the Jews. For
46    X,   6, p.  213    |      wrath in the time of the Roman Empire would attack them,
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