Book, Chapter
1 Gre | written, or you to me that having written I have not satisfied
2 Gre | not erred on this one in having selected you, to whom above
3 1 | and Cities, than from not having a real understanding of
4 1, I | them [for] that sea not having issue, where those people
5 1, I | were afflicting Italy, not having ships with which they could
6 1, II | so ordered that without having need of correcting them,
7 1, II | of unhappiness which [not having fallen to a prudent lawmaker]
8 1, II | against the Prince, and having destroyed him, they obeyed
9 1, II | themselves, and in the beginning [having in mind the past tyranny]
10 1, II | changeability of fortune [for] never having experienced bad [fortune],
11 1, II | him being yet fresh [and] having destroyed the oligarchic
12 1, II | who make laws prudently having recognized the defects of
13 1, II | merited more praise for having similar constitutions is
14 1, II | came to be more stable, having a part of all those forms
15 1, III | the Senate [the Tarquins having been driven out], and that
16 1, III | the nobility feared, and having fear that the maltreated
17 1, V | part in the Republic, [and] having this club in their hands,
18 1, V | the Tribunes of the Plebs having this authority in their
19 1, V | in their hands, [and] the having of one Consul from the Plebs
20 1, V | accusation, that Menenius having made a harangue [speech]
21 1, V | People: And then the cause having been pleaded, he was absolved;
22 1, VI | and the Senate. Now these having continued up to the time
23 1, VI | among the modern, [both] having been previously mentioned
24 1, VI | form of Government], for having taken refuge on those rocks
25 1, VI | in Sparta, and the path having been closed to those who
26 1, VI | and the laws of Lycurgus having acquired such reputation
27 1, VI | desire authority, and not having the dominion, nor fear of
28 1, VI | Venice, the first of which having subjected almost all of
29 1, VI | entirely.~Similarly Venice having occupied a great part of
30 1, VI | lead you to do; so that having established a Republic adept
31 1, VII | provisions, and the Senate having sent to Sicily for grain,
32 1, VII | resulted that he [Valori] having no fear except from some
33 1, VII | those who opposed him not having any regular way or repressing
34 1, VII | injury to himself only, but having to extinguish it by extraordinary
35 1, VII | through such means without having the Spanish army [called]
36 1, VII | sides would have ceased having that desire which was the
37 1, VII | of external force, for having the remedy at home it was
38 1, VII | history, which refers to there having been in Chiusi [Clusium],
39 1, VIII | for the welfare of Rome by having saved the Campidoglio [Capitol],
40 1, VIII | they are punished, they having places open to them to hear
41 1, VIII | an enterprise because of having been corrupted; and of yet
42 1, IX | into Roman history, not having yet made any mention of
43 1, IX | of this Republic, or of [having regard for] her institutions,
44 1, IX | that exist among them, yet having once understood this, they
45 1, IX | inferior in strength, and not having anyone to whom he could
46 1, XI | he [Marcus] from fear of having sworn withdrew the accusation
47 1, XI | Kingdom, therefore, is not in having a Prince who governs prudently
48 1, XI | believed him without they having seen anything extraordinary
49 1, XII | and with the Priests of having become bad and without Religion;
50 1, XII | is solely the Church, for having acquired and held temporal
51 1, XII | to occupy Italy, and not having permitted that another should
52 1, XIII | these. The Roman people having created the Tribunes with
53 1, XIII | and pestilence and famine having occurred there that year,
54 1, XIV | but some of the Pollari having told certain soldiers that
55 1, XIV | not so much for the one having lost and the other having
56 1, XIV | having lost and the other having won, but because the one
57 1, XV | AFFLICTING THEM~The Samnites having been routed many times by
58 1, XV | times by the Romans, and having lastly been defeated in
59 1, XV | French [Gauls], and Umbrians having also been defeated, so that “
60 1, XVI | People who could not endure having lost their liberty, he decided
61 1, XVII | took place in Rome (men having good intentions) [and which]
62 1, XVIII | judged themselves worthy, and having a refusal was ignominious:
63 1, XVIII | other evils: for the Romans having subjugated Africa and Asia,
64 1, XVIII | it, so that the people, having listened to all sides, could
65 1, XVIII | good; or that a bad one, having become Prince, wants to
66 1, XIX | the greatest good fortune, having the first King most ferocious
67 1, XIX | noted that a successor not having as much virtu as the first,
68 1, XIX | great was his virtu, that having conquered and beaten down
69 1, XIX | his father Mahomet, who having like David beaten his neighbors,
70 1, XX | able to do so much more, having the means of electing not
71 1, XXI | Pelopidas and Epaminondas, after having liberated Thebes, and rescued
72 1, XXIII | wait with large numbers, having to quarter himself for a
73 1, XXIII | places, as I have said. Having therefore lost that pass
74 1, XXIII | being like the fields and having roads not only well known
75 1, XXIII | adhered to the French forces, having been proved wrong in their
76 1, XXIV | Horatius had been very great, having by his virtu conquered the
77 1, XXIV | blame that people rather for having absolved him than for having
78 1, XXIV | having absolved him than for having wanted to condemn him: and
79 1, XXIV | citizens by their merits; and having rewarded one for having
80 1, XXIV | having rewarded one for having acted well, if that same
81 1, XXIV | it castigates him without having regard to any of his good
82 1, XXIV | the other burned his hand having erred in wanting to murder
83 1, XXIV | is also well known. For having saved the Campidoglio from
84 1, XXVII | lands of the Church. And having arrived at Perugia with
85 1, XXVII | correctly, did not dare (even having a justifiable opportunity)
86 1, XXVIII | Athens, for her liberty having been taken away by Pisistratus
87 1, XXVIII | no other reason than for having the name of the Tarquins,
88 1, XXVIII | Tarquins, and the other having only given suspicion by
89 1, XXIX | expedition, where that Captain (having won) has acquired great
90 1, XXIX | do this thinks of either having him die or taking away from
91 1, XXIX | fashion, that in a brief time, having been reduced to no rank,
92 1, XXIX | ought to reward, and of having suspicion of those in whom
93 1, XXIX | one was never pardoned for having always preserved a hostile
94 1, XXIX | much less than do Princes, having less reason for suspicion,
95 1, XXX | to avoid the necessity of having to live with suspicion or
96 1, XXXI | otherwise put to death for having lost the engagement, it
97 1, XXXI | therefore, that the ignominy of having lost would be a great punishment
98 1, XXXI | returning to Rome and for not having despaired of Roman affairs.~
99 1, XXXI | Fabius put to death for having, against his command, combatted
100 1, XXXIII | expert in civil affairs, and having made the first error in
101 1, XXXIV | anything, but in many cases having to act together) that the
102 1, XXXV | and because of this not having anyone to observe them,
103 1, XXXV | times: but when either from having been deceived or for some
104 1, XXXVI | still holds that a Citizen having had a high rank would be
105 1, XXXVI | indulged in more freely, not having men around them in whose
106 1, XXXVII | necessity, that they soon (having obtained that) begun to
107 1, XXXVII | calling out the army, or by having that Tribune who proposed
108 1, XXXVII | them, nor either faction having further confidence in them,
109 1, XXXVII | plague thy Nobility, not having any remedy, turned their
110 1, XXXVII | their favor to Sulla, and having made him Head of their party,
111 1, XXXVIII| themselves from necessity, having the enemy upon them, they
112 1, XXXVIII| their permission, so that having once disobeyed from necessity,
113 1, XXXVIII| King Louis XII of France having retaken Milan, wanting to
114 1, XXXVIII| mind [perfidy]; but not having [the City] he could promise
115 1, XXXVIII| MDII [1502] when Arezzo having rebelled, Monsignor Imbault
116 1, XXXIX | time.~The City of Florence, having after the year XCIV [1494]
117 1, XL | laws upon them. These men having gone and returned, they
118 1, XL | new nature and new genius, having before that time been held
119 1, XL | themselves civilly, not having more than ten Lictors who
120 1, XL | authority, none the less, having to punish a Roman Citizen
121 1, XL | and in the armies, which, having come together with the remnants
122 1, XL | the Tribunate. The Ten having been created, it seemed
123 1, XL | in them, the Tyrant not having riches and honors enough
124 1, XL | sure of a few Nobles, and having the People as a friend,
125 1, XLIV | esteemed that, the Plebs not having their chiefs among them,
126 1, XLIV | convene with the Senate. And having requested that [the Senators]
127 1, XLIV | resigned their Magistracy: and having arrived on the mountain
128 1, XLV | WHO GOVERNS IT~The accord having taken place and Rome restored
129 1, XLV | that he was not worthy of having that [right of] appeal which
130 1, XLV | after ninety four [1494], having had its State [Government]
131 1, XLV | security of the Citizens having had a law enacted which
132 1, XLV | able to excuse it. This, having uncovered his ambitions
133 1, XLV | begin to be apprehensive of having done a capital evil, will
134 1, XLVI | OTHERS~The Roman People having recovered their liberty, [
135 1, XLVI | recovered their liberty, [and] having returned to their original
136 1, XLVI | their original rank, and having obtained even greater reputation
137 1, XLVI | rank, and his greatness not having been obviated at the beginning,
138 1, XLVII | People (as was said above) having become annoyed with the
139 1, XLVII | Plebs with the Nobility: and having come to this decision, he
140 1, XLVII | people to talk to them; and having shut up the Senate in the
141 1, XLVII | from them [the Senate], having them all shut up under his
142 1, XLVII | and no other government having been instituted, but rather
143 1, XLVII | of things, but from their having been perverted and corrupted
144 1, XLIX | existed in liberty. For having become arbiters of the customs
145 1, XLIX | City of Florence which, for having had its beginnings subject
146 1, XLIX | to the Roman Empire, and having always existed under the
147 1, XLIX | true record, without ever having a State [Government] by
148 1, L | So that the Senate not having any other remedy had recourse
149 1, LI | to the fighting men, it having been the military custom
150 1, LII | for him: for Marcantonio having been judged an enemy of
151 1, LII | enemy of the Senate, and having gathered together that great
152 1, LIII | anyone (as occurs sometimes, having been deceived before either
153 1, LIII | any of his merits but for having promised throughout all
154 1, LIII | Antonio Giacomini, after having defeated Bartolomeo D’Alvino
155 1, LIII | enterprises: for the People having expected victory, if defeat
156 1, LIII | Antonio Giacomini, who, not having conquered Pisa as he promised
157 1, LV | to Apollo: which plunder having come into the hands of the
158 1, LV | effect, the Senate afterwards having taken other ways and means
159 1, LV | part is lacking) as from having a King who keeps them united,
160 1, LV | abundant possessions, without having any care either to cultivate
161 1, LVI | being so full of spirits, having an intelligence which by
162 1, LVI | foresee future events, and having compassion for men, so that
163 1, LVII | causes other than their having lost either their liberty
164 1, LVIII | Manlius Capitolinus, who, having condemned him to death,
165 1, LIX | it happened that later, having been routed by his enemies
166 1, LIX | forces and his army; Pompey, having been routed by Caesar in
167 1, LX | it happens (the multitude having to elect him) that he should
168 2 | old) which they remember having seen in their youth. And
169 2 | much of the world after having destroyed the Eastern Roman
170 2 | and their old age, they having known and seen the latter
171 2 | can accomplish them.~And having in the discourses of the
172 2, I | was made, that the Romans having subdued all the peoples [
173 2, II | recovered its power, and, having laid hands on the nobility,
174 2, II | esteeming them greatly, and having placed the highest good
175 2, III | mentioned above; for Rome, from having enlarged the population
176 2, IV | their leader Bellovesus, and having defeated and driven out
177 2, IV | no other reason than from having acquired that dominion which
178 2, IV | themselves subjects of those who, having been accustomed to live
179 2, IV | to be subjects, and from having Roman governors, and having
180 2, IV | having Roman governors, and having been conquered by armies
181 2, IV | within themselves, the City having become greatly populated
182 2, V | has resulted from their having maintained the Latin language,
183 2, V | which was done by force, having to write this new law in
184 2, V | mountains and rugged, who, not having any knowledge of antiquity,
185 2, V | three ways, so that men having been chastised and reduced
186 2, VI | PROCEEDED IN MAKING WAR~Having discussed how the Romans
187 2, VI | engagement with them, and having waged and won the battle, [
188 2, VI | and won the battle, [and], having imposed heavier conditions
189 2, VIII | seek a new country. And having made such a decision, they
190 2, VIII | Cimbrians came into Italy, who having overcome several Roman armies,
191 2, VIII | from anything else than of having been thus named by the new
192 2, VIII | occupiers of Africa, refers to having read letters written on
193 2, VIII | occupying some place, and having occupied it, to maintain
194 2, VIII | they are forced to go out, having many things which drive
195 2, IX | Campanians being hard pressed and having recourse to Rome, beyond
196 2, X | Venetians a few years ago also, having their Treasury full of treasure,
197 2, X | and not by soldiers; for having undertaken the proceeding
198 2, XI | they were worthy.~¶ And having in the present chapter discussed
199 2, XII | Croesus gave to Cyrus when, having arrived at the confines
200 2, XII | can be saved of your army having places of refuge near, as
201 2, XIV | almost always better (matters having been brought to the point
202 2, XV | themselves from the Romans. For having foreseen this bad mood that
203 2, XV | Lodovico, so that the King having already achieved his victory,
204 2, XV | weakness, none the less having a new opportunity for a
205 2, XVI | armies resulted from their having fought together a long time,
206 2, XVI | fought together a long time, having the same language, the same
207 2, XVI | they were overcome (for not having further reinforcements)
208 2, XVI | The captains of our times, having abandoned entirely the organization
209 2, XVI | makes it very weak from having too few men in the depth
210 2, XVII | cannot harm him, so that by having to raise it and draw it
211 2, XVII | being on higher ground, and having that convenience and space
212 2, XVII | insufficiently high, and the French having a slight advantage of terrain,
213 2, XVII | and routed them without having any impediment from that
214 2, XVIII | where the Roman army already having given way, made their cavalry
215 2, XVIII | be paid by them, and not having subjects of whom they could
216 2, XVIII | and a squadron of cavalry having gone out from the town to
217 2, XVIII | Lombardy, whence the Duke having at that time Carmignuola
218 2, XVIII | finding them immovable, having lost many of his men, he
219 2, XVIII | suffering any injury, and having entered therein could easily
220 2, XIX | this resulted from their having wanted to acquire but not
221 2, XIX | as they had less excuse, having seen the methods which the
222 2, XIX | the Romans employed, and having been able to follow their
223 2, XX | much more than I will: but having talked of it at length elsewhere,
224 2, XX | to pass it over entirely, having found in Titus Livius (as
225 2, XXI | results to the Prince who, not having at hand his ministers, judges
226 2, XXI | For (everyone knows) Genoa having been occupied by the French
227 2, XXIII | the bad procedure of not having well measured their strength,
228 2, XXIII | afterwards by Camillus, who having constrained them to give
229 2, XXIII | arms of the Romans, and having placed guards throughout
230 2, XXIII | the towns of Latium, and having taken hostages from all,
231 2, XXIV | because of the pride of having the fortress. And from experience
232 2, XXIV | harm and ruin to both, not having given thought because of
233 2, XXIV | them. Pope Julius, after having driven out the Bentivogli
234 2, XXIV | forces to recover it, and having recovered it, he had a fortress
235 2, XXIV | which they wanted to hold, having taken them by violent means,
236 2, XXIV | in your power (the town having revolted) you should have
237 2, XXIV | not have a good army, then having fortresses throughout his
238 2, XXV | extinguish the name of Rome. And having raised an army and made
239 2, XXVI | Captain of the Persians, having for a long time besieged
240 2, XXVI | decided to depart, and having already broken up his camp,
241 2, XXVI | came upon the walls; and having become haughty from [the
242 2, XXVI | Roman legions left at Capua having conspired against the Capuans,
243 2, XXVI | place, and this conspiracy having given rise to sedition,
244 2, XXVII | peace with the Romans, for, having won, they were able to do
245 2, XXVII | powerful in those times for having their City situated on water
246 2, XXVII | But those people of Tyre having become haughty, not only
247 2, XXVII | arms in their favor; and having entered the plain and not
248 2, XXVII | discovering anyone, and having a scarcity of provisions,
249 2, XXVII | the people of Florence, having become haughty, did not
250 2, XXVII | in jeopardy without first having tried every other remedy,
251 2, XXVII | in war; which afterwards having been refused, he did not
252 2, XXVIII | For the people of Clusium having sent to Rome for aid, the
253 2, XXVIII | accustomed to act than to speak, having arrived there as the Gauls
254 2, XXVIII | greater, because the Gauls having complained to the Roman
255 2, XXVIII | justice, for their Ambassadors having sinned against the law of
256 2, XXVIII | Philip was enamored; and having several times sought that
257 2, XXIX | worthy of the Roman people, having first ordained that Camillus,
258 2, XXIX | everything for her recovery, having conducted an entire Roman
259 2, XXX | All of which resulted from having disarmed their people, and
260 2, XXX | proceeded, therefore, from having disarmed its own people,
261 2, XXX | which resulted from her having the heart well armored and
262 2, XXX | the battle at Cannae, who having magnified the things done
263 2, XXXI | with his forces into Italy, having been called there by the
264 2, XXXI | upon their faith and hope, having come into Italy, was killed
265 2, XXXI | Themistocles, the Athenian, who, having been declared a rebel, fled
266 2, XXXII | when he entered Attica, having assaulted Utica and not
267 2, XXXII | difficulty of carrying it out, having to come together with enemies
268 2, XXXIII | For Fabius, the Consul, having defeated them near Sutrium,
269 3, I | done in the assuming of it, having in that time punished those
270 3, IV | possession of that Kingdom, it having been given to him by the
271 3, V | HIM~Tarquinius Superbus having killed Servius Tullus, and
272 3, V | kingdom with security, not having to fear those things which
273 3, V | because of his son Sextus having violated Lucretia, but for
274 3, V | violated Lucretia, but for having broken the laws and governed
275 3, V | his Kingdom] tyrannically; having taken away all authority
276 3, V | had employed. So that by having filled Rome with such cruel
277 3, V | if as private citizens, having lost the State, they should
278 3, VI | do not want to talk here (having treated of this elsewhere)
279 3, VI | into their plot without having those hopes which cause
280 3, VI | the execution (from not having an easy access to the Prince)
281 3, VI | say that they who conspire having to be great men and have
282 3, VI | plot of Nelematus. A Magian having by deceit occupied the kingdom
283 3, VI | the pillow of his bed: and having gone to bathe, a favorite
284 3, VI | in an instant and without having time, to have to change
285 3, VI | for every action who, not having time to firm up their minds,
286 3, VI | an executor. To Marius (having been taken by the Minturnians)
287 3, VI | that they departed without having attempted anything, and
288 3, VI | cannot be promised without having had experience. Such confusion,
289 3, VI | Julio. That man, therefore, having observed this, arranged
290 3, VI | conspirators], short of counsel and having too late seen their error,
291 3, VI | there is Caesar, who, by having the people or Rome friendly,
292 3, VI | was avenged by them; for having driven the conspirators
293 3, VI | Pisistratus, the Athenian, having overcome the Megarians and,
294 3, VI | made mention above) not having succeeded with poison, armed
295 3, VI | killed Commodus; here, he having thrown up the poison which
296 3, VI | Guglieimo De Pazzi. The Duke, having become Tyrant of Florence,
297 3, VI | Chiano in MDI [1501], and having learned that there was a
298 3, VI | who, to show his belief in having the good will of the Citizens
299 3, IX | the times. For Hannibal having come into Italy a young
300 3, IX | his fortunes fresh, and having already twice overcome the
301 3, IX | inclines us: The other, that having prospered greatly by one
302 3, X | was forced to flee; and having learned from this experience
303 3, X | in your territory without having taken many footholds, so
304 3, X | being a good Captain and having a good army) he would have
305 3, X | Fabius did in Italy, but not having done so, it ought to be
306 3, XI | escaped that ruin; but not having armed men of such virtu
307 3, XI | and because of this not having time to separate anyone,
308 3, XI | seen that the Pope, after having recovered his possessions,
309 3, XII | necessity. The ancient Captains having recognized the virtu of
310 3, XII | for in the beginning, not having cause to fear punishment
311 3, XII | it appears to them (they having rebelled) to have given
312 3, XII | did Florence), because of having found these [neighboring]
313 3, XII | Romans: and [the Ambassadors] having returned to Samnium without
314 3, XII | part of the Veientan army having entered into the entrenchments
315 3, XII | all the Roman Captains, having already entered the City
316 3, XIII | WEAK CAPTAIN~Coriolanus, having become an exile from Rome,
317 3, XIV | former were exiles: who, having gathered an army through
318 3, XV | ARE HARMFUL~The Fidenati having revolted, and having killed
319 3, XV | Fidenati having revolted, and having killed the Colony that the
320 3, XV | the war to any; for each having his own counsel, each different
321 3, XVI | that the Athenian Republic having become superior in the Peloponnesian
322 3, XVI | the Peloponnesian war, and having checked the pride of the
323 3, XVI | Republics there is this evil of having little esteem for men of
324 3, XVI | all the City.~Many wars having occurred in our City of
325 3, XVI | Florentine Citizens all having given bad proof [of their
326 3, XVI | were to be found; so that having to select three Commissaries
327 3, XVI | ensue to the public for not having sent Antonio was not evident,
328 3, XVI | easily; for the Pisans not having provisions with which to
329 3, XVII | front of Hasdrubal, and having locked him with his army
330 3, XVII | indignity to him. But after having been made Consul and sent
331 3, XVIII | many times that (the battle having lasted until nightfall)
332 3, XVIII | lost the war, for Brutus having won on his wing, Cassius
333 3, XVIII | against the Swiss, night having fallen, that part of the
334 3, XVIII | the Consul with his army having come to an encounter with
335 3, XVIII | the enemy, and the battle having been enkindled, they fought
336 3, XVIII | strongly; the Venetians having undertaken its protection
337 3, XVIII | and both of these armies having been facing each other for
338 3, XX | accepted by Camillus, but having had the teacher stripped
339 3, XX | of chastity gave him, of having restored the young beautiful
340 3, XXII | acquires with the soldiers having, in a long rule, had effects
341 3, XXII | individually greatly desired, and having the army as his partisan,
342 3, XXIV | the Senate, and the Plebs having prolonged the Commands of
343 3, XXIV | the end of his Consulship having arrived, and as it appeared
344 3, XXV | Agrarian law especially having had so much opposition)
345 3, XXV | to liberate Minitius; and having routed and despoiled the
346 3, XVII | the holding of towns by having a divided government. First
347 3, XVII | than the other. So that, having one party of the town discontented,
348 3, XXX | happened to Camillus, who, having given many proofs [of himself]
349 3, XXX | most excellent man, hand having been made Dictator three
350 3, XXX | Dictator three times, and having always employed that rank
351 3, XXX | was caused by their not having known how or having been
352 3, XXX | not having known how or having been able to overcome this
353 3, XXXI | themselves, like those who, for having ill used that good fortune,
354 3, XXXI | although it was most grave for having been the third one, never
355 3, XXXI | defeat; for their army, after having fought, in the retreat about
356 3, XXXI | Tuscans, and his soldiers, having seen the size of the enemy
357 3, XXXII | of her [Roman] colonies, having rebelled from the Roman
358 3, XXXII | and the Latins afterwards having been defeated, they were
359 3, XXXIII | value.~The Praenestines, having taken the field against
360 3, XXXIV | his entire lifetime; for, having defended his father so extraordinarily
361 3, XXXIV | he killed his own son for having fought without permission,
362 3, XXXIV | as was given him by his having defended his father on the
363 3, XXXIV | Ticino while a youth, and be having, after the defeat at Cannae,
364 3, XXXV | direct and achieve it, and having achieved it to maintain
365 3, XXXV | called the Grand Turk, having prepared himself (according
366 3, XXXV | with a very large army, and having arrived in that very large
367 3, XXXV | will read of many Citizens having been advisors [in favor]
368 3, XXXV | defeated by Paulus Emilius, having fled with a few friends,
369 3, XXXV | suffered the punishment for having been silent when he should
370 3, XXXV | avoid the danger by not having given his counsel. I believe,
371 3, XXXVI | in the Roman army (which having conquered the world, all
372 3, XXXVI | regulated virtu, and not having anything outside of their
373 3, XXXVI | that they give proof of not having any virtu. And as everyone
374 3, XXXVII | that the army of the Gauls, having precipituously retreated
375 3, XXXVII | great renown in his times, having been assaulted by the Romans,
376 3, XXXVII | ferocity and because of having already overcome one Roman
377 3, XXXIX | CAPTAIN OUGHT TO BE ONE HAVING A KNOWLEDGE OF SITES~Among
378 3, XXXIX | Samnites, and the Consul having come to a valley where the
379 3, XXXIX | was accessible or not, and having then brought himself to
380 3, XXXIX | brought himself to it, and having the enemy around him, he
381 3, XL | the Caudine forks, who, having placed his army behind a
382 3, XL | defiles [of Claudium], where [having entered] they were quickly
383 3, XLII | Romans more gloriously for having lost, than was Pontius by
384 3, XLII | Pontius by the Samnites for having won. Here two things are
385 3, XLIII | carried away by passion, and having studied and known the ancient
386 3, XLIII | times to the Tuscans; who, having been hard pressed by the
387 3, XLIII | hard pressed by the Romans, having been routed and put to flight
388 3, XLIII | happened that the Gauls, having taken the money, did not
389 3, XLIV | in the field, decided, (having placed guards in the town
390 3, XLIV | Venetians to remain neutral, and having sought the one and the other
391 3, XLIV | his army at Bologna, and having learned of the rebellion
392 3, XLIV | Pope and the Venetians, and having one of his sons in the hands
393 3, XLV | SHOCK OF THE ENEMY, AND HAVING SUSTAINED IT, HURL THEM
394 3, XLVI | many other families, each having its own qualities apart
395 3, XLVIII | DONE UNDER DECEIT~Fulvius, having been left as Legate in the
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