Book, Chapter
1 1, XIX | was his virtu, that having conquered and beaten down all his
2 1, XXI | armies in the field and conquered them: and whoever writes
3 1, XXII | Romans confessed himself conquered and promised obedience to
4 1, XXIV | great, having by his virtu conquered the Curatii. None the less
5 1, XXIX | Captain who by his virtu has conquered an Empire for his Lord,
6 1, XXIX | against the French, had conquered and won that Kingdom, and
7 1, XXIX | of the enemy that Scipio conquered, from the reputation which
8 1, LIII | Giacomini, who, not having conquered Pisa as he promised and
9 2, I | Volscians and the Equii conquered by the Romans, and so as
10 2, III | happened in Sparta, which had conquered all the Cities of Greece,
11 2, IV | governors, and having been conquered by armies under Roman command,
12 2, VI | and not to impoverish the [conquered] country and his own country.
13 2, XVII | those places that can be conquered by assault, the dangers
14 2, XIX | they expose them to being conquered by whoever assaults them.
15 2, XIX | there, and will avenge the conquered world. If, therefore, the
16 2, XXIII| cruelly against those whom you conquered and who gave themselves
17 2, XXVII| Alexander the Great had already conquered all the Orient, the Republic
18 3, XX | human power, could not be conquered, was conquered by an example
19 3, XX | could not be conquered, was conquered by an example of humanity,
20 3, XXXVI| Roman army (which having conquered the world, all other armies
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