Book
1 1| practices were pleasing to my Romans, my country (without them)
2 1| forego my examples of my Romans. If their way of living
3 1| they engaged in with the Romans under Matus and Spendius
4 1| just concluded with the Romans? And in the time of our
5 1| of losing the State. My Romans ((as I have said)), as long
6 1| her of it. They cite the Romans, who by their own arms lost
7 1| become a sea one. And my Romans, knowing how to combat on
8 1| and from the Empire of the Romans, in which it is seen that
9 1| FABRIZIO: I would imitate the Romans: I would take the more wealthy,
10 2| them select the best. The Romans divided their infantry into
11 2| that this is true, that the Romans did not have the staff,
12 2| and relate how much the Romans used the sword for offense,
13 2| heavily for defense as did the Romans, but in the offense relied
14 2| Sarisse and the difficulty the Romans had in overcoming them.
15 2| power in their pikes. The Romans ((in addition to the arms))
16 2| infantry and the cavalry, my Romans occupied all the world,
17 2| armies, he says, “but the Romans were superior in virtu,
18 2| stalwart resistance. But the Romans sustained and overcame the
19 2| equally) useless. They (the Romans) could safely assault towns,
20 2| over the other, that the Romans could overcome both the
21 2| remembered how I said the Romans were armed, you would not
22 2| half to be armed as the Romans, and the other half as the
23 2| infantry with shields like the Romans, and two thousand pikes
24 2| while on the other side the Romans did not total more than
25 2| divided the world with the Romans: the other, that I would
26 2| opposite to that of the Romans, as the Parthians fought
27 2| full of uncertainties. The Romans, it may be recalled, were
28 2| tight; for in the latter the Romans were superior, but in the
29 2| continue on those which the Romans and Greeks had organized
30 2| thing, that although the Romans esteemed much their own
31 2| training they gave to the Romans before the infantry were
32 2| afterwards seemed light. The Romans wanted their soldiers to
33 2| well are taken away. The Romans, therefore, arranged that
34 2| was called a Legion by the Romans, a Phalanx by the Greeks,
35 2| also necessary for, as the Romans show, although they knew
36 2| In Italy, there were the Romans, the Samnites, the Tuscans,
37 2| although in comparison with the Romans, very few others were noted,
38 2| them. The horsemen of the Romans were likewise alone: it
39 2| That, therefore, which the Romans did, and that which the
40 3| narrate how the Greeks and the Romans arranged the ranks in their
41 3| was practiced best by the Romans. In explaining this method,
42 3| I want to tell how the Romans divided each Legion into
43 3| rank into the other, as the Romans, but one man took the place
44 3| made it more immobile. The Romans, in the beginning, also
45 3| good as that of the ancient Romans is demonstrated by the many
46 3| which are the arms of the Romans. I have divided the Battalion
47 3| into ten Companies, as the Romans (divided) the Legion into
48 3| the battle, as they (the Romans did). And thus, as the arms
49 3| engagement in imitation of the Romans, just as they had two Legions,
50 3| told you before, as the Romans had about twenty thousand
51 3| Alexander the Great and the Romans used horns and trumpets,
52 3| is it reasonable that the Romans, after the first assault,
53 4| Hence it happened that the Romans almost always sought open
54 4| were able to overcome the Romans. And it appears to me, according
55 4| overcome or tire out the Romans, thinking afterwards with
56 4| overcome the already tired Romans. In the encounter with this
57 4| than in flight, won. Many Romans, not so much in order to
58 4| after he had defeated the Romans at Cannae, lost the Empire
59 4| of their dead and so few Romans, believing they had had
60 4| coming to war with the Romans, placed his encampment on
61 4| engagement with them; but the Romans went to meet him on that
62 5| he came to harm from the Romans in Italy, passed through
63 5| had been victorious. The Romans, however, who were Princes
64 5| besieged in Sparta by the Romans, set fire to part of his
65 5| stop the passage of the Romans, who had already entered
66 6| should protect them. But the Romans did not encamp safely so
67 6| From this resulted that the Romans were always able to have
68 6| of their encampment. The Romans, therefore, where the site
69 6| I have wanted that the Romans be imitated, I will not
70 6| often told you that the Romans had two Legions of Roman
71 6| soldiers in their armies than Romans, except for cavalry, which
72 6| prudent, and because thus the Romans did in good part, I would
73 6| the manner observed by the Romans. I would also leave behind
74 6| variations in the sites. But the Romans made the places strong with
75 6| In cases like this, the Romans assigned this method of
76 6| you want to imitate the Romans, you have to assign the
77 6| observed with diligence by the Romans, Claudius Nero could not,
78 6| Religion.~BATTISTA: Did the Romans permit women to be in their
79 6| in their encampments, the Romans wanted to be able to employ
80 6| None the less, when the Romans joined together two consular
81 6| you have to note that the Romans and Greeks had made war
82 6| you want to imitate the Romans and Greeks, the number of
83 6| winter time. And because the Romans wanted to avail themselves
84 7| besieged City, as were the Romans, when their castle of Casalino
85 7| first onrush, with which the Romans often occupied many towns,
86 7| give him a castle of the Romans, and that he should feign
87 7| City, as happened to the Romans when the Gauls besieged
88 7| in the way in which the Romans took the City of the Veienti:
89 7| encounter. Nothing gave the Romans more honor in the war against
90 7| was being besieged by the Romans at the same time Rome was
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