Book, Chapter
1 1, II | after forty years his [the tyrants] heirs were driven out and
2 1, XVI | Princes who have become Tyrants in their country), I say
3 1, XXVII| planned to eliminate all the Tyrants who were occupying the lands
4 1, XXXV | Rome, who in time became Tyrants, and without any regard
5 1, XL | Whence it arises that those Tyrants who have the general public
6 1, LVIII| Emperors and from among other Tyrants and Princes, where so much
7 2, II | should have persecuted the Tyrants with so much hatred and
8 3, VI | slaughter, and in this way tyrants die.~The dangers incurred
9 3, VI | against Diodes and Hippias, Tyrants of Athens. They killed Diodes,
10 3, VI | Plato, conspired against the Tyrants Clearchus and Satirus: they
11 3, VI | nor anyone: rather those [tyrants] who remain become more
12 3, VI | country, Thebes, [from the Tyrants] faced all the difficulties:
13 3, VI | only conspired against two Tyrants, but against ten: not only
14 3, VI | have easy access to the Tyrants, but he was also a rebel:
15 3, VI | come to Thebes, kill the Tyrants, and free the country. Yet,
16 3, VI | Charon, counsellor or the Tyrants, through whom he had an
17 3, VI | order to make themselves Tyrants, called a Spartan army to
18 3, XXVI | causes of the ruin of the Tyrants, places the injury they
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