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 1  Int,   8, p.   xx    |     version, first published at Rome in 1498. ~Of the four later
 2  Int,   8, p.   xx    |       Latin version of Donatus (Rome, 1498) was reprinted at
 3  III           120(34)|           He joined Plotinus at Rome, and earlier in Eusebius'
 4  III,   5, p.  134    |     crucified head downwards at Rome,58 Paul beheaded,59 and
 5  III,   7, p.  159    |    noble cities—I mean in Royal Rome, in Alexandria, and Antioch,
 6  III,   7, p.  161    |         under the one empire of Rome, but only from the times
 7  III,   7, p.  161    |     among men synchronized with Rome's attainment of the acme
 8   VI,  20, p.   41    |      them." Thus the kingdom of Rome seems to be meant, which
 9  VII,   1, p.   61    |    prophets would be popular in Rome itself, and among all the
10  VII,   1, p.   71    |     this world, or the power of Rome actually dominant, to which
11 VIII,   1, p.  102    |        nation became subject to Rome. And then instead of their
12 VIII,   1, p.  103    |    authority over the Jews from Rome. ~After these observations,
13 VIII,   1, p.  107    |          are not all drawn from Rome nor from the seed of Remus
14 VIII,   1, p.  108    |        changed to submission to Rome, and to the Gentile Herod,
15 VIII,   1, p.  109    |     this lain under the heel of Rome? For the Christ of God was
16 VIII,   2, p.  119    |         of Augustus, Emperor of Rome, and of Herod the foreign
17 VIII,   2, p.  126    |    whole city became subject to Rome, so that thenceforward it
18 VIII,   2, p.  129    |       Aristobulus a prisoner to Rome, bestowing the High-Priesthood
19 VIII,   2, p.  129    |       from that date subject to Rome. Then after this, Herod, (
20 VIII,   4, p.  143    |         to Augustus, Emperor of Rome, amounts to the seven and
21   IX,   3, p.  157    | probably disguising the city of Rome under the name of Ros, because
22   IX,   3, p.  157    |        which are now subject to Rome; and by Thobel Josephus
23    X,   6, p.  214    |      Vespasian were Emperors of Rome, so that they could no longer
24   XV           236    |  Collection of Ancient Writers. Rome, 1825, tom. 1, par. 2, p.
25   XV           237    |      subdues everything, so did Rome crush and subdue. And after
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