Book
1 1| trade or profession), a thousand evils will arise every day
2 1| instance, if an army of five thousand infantry should be organized,
3 1| must be given at least ten thousand ducats a month. To begin
4 1| former Kingdom endured a thousand years without tumult and
5 2| that fifteen or twenty thousand of them would assault any
6 2| was assaulted by eighteen thousand Swiss, he sent against them
7 2| time. This man with six thousand cavalry and a few infantry
8 2| and killed all but three thousand, who, seeing themselves
9 2| men-at-arms, and with about four thousand German infantry. The Germans,
10 2| Germans. For, if in six thousand infantry ((as I shall explain
11 2| later)) I should have three thousand infantry with shields like
12 2| like the Romans, and two thousand pikes and a thousand gunners
13 2| two thousand pikes and a thousand gunners like the Germans,
14 2| army) of one hundred fifty thousand cavalry, among whom were
15 2| not total more than six thousand (cavalry) and fifteen thousand
16 2| thousand (cavalry) and fifteen thousand infantry; so that Tigranus,
17 2| very open with a seacoast a thousand miles distant, rivers two
18 2| have comprised six to eight thousand men. This number was called
19 2| composed of five or six thousand men, in ten Cohorts, I want
20 2| Companies, and compose it of six thousand men on foot; and assign
21 2| therefore, come to three thousand shield bearers; a thousand
22 2| thousand shield bearers; a thousand ordinary pikemen, and one
23 2| comprise (a number of) four thousand five hundred infantry. And
24 2| make a Battalion of six thousand men; therefore it is necessary
25 2| necessary to add another one thousand five hundred infantry, of
26 2| of whom I would make a thousand with pikes, whom I will
27 2| five Heads of Ten. To the thousand extraordinary pikemen, I
28 2| ten Companies, of three thousand shield bearers, a thousand
29 2| thousand shield bearers, a thousand ordinary pikemen, a thousand
30 2| thousand ordinary pikemen, a thousand extraordinary pikemen, five
31 2| they would come to be six thousand infantry, among whom there
32 2| whom there would be one thousand five hundred Heads of Ten,
33 2| they may have been in a thousand wars, ought always to be
34 2| in a Battalion, you add a thousand extraordinary pikemen and
35 2| although they should rebel a thousand times, are not destroyed,
36 3| wanting in a Battalion two thousand pikes, which are the arms
37 3| Macedonian Phalanxes, and three thousand swords and shield, which
38 3| cavalry and about eleven thousand infantry. They also had
39 3| consisted of twenty two thousand infantry and about two thousand
40 3| thousand infantry and about two thousand cavalry effectives, a Consul
41 3| Romans had about twenty thousand men in an Army, so too ought
42 3| both; for having placed a thousand Veliti in its wings, I would
43 3| company of six or eight thousand infantry, and for what reason
44 3| it were composed of ten thousand tanks could not employ but
45 5| who would come to be a thousand per space. And if you want
46 5| distances mentioned above. The thousand Veliti who are forward,
47 5| the plaza of the Army. The thousand Veliti that I had placed
48 6| which comprised some eleven thousand infantry of forces sent
49 6| taken two Battalions of six thousand infantry and three hundred
50 6| sized) army of twenty four thousand infantry and two thousand
51 6| thousand infantry and two thousand cavalry effectives, being
52 6| quarters which would be one thousand two hundred fifty (1250)
53 6| of infantry), each has a thousand extraordinary pikemen, and
54 6| regular battalions have two thousand extraordinary pikemen, and
55 6| extraordinary pikemen, and a thousand extraordinary pikemen, and
56 6| regular battalions have two thousand extraordinary pikemen, and
57 6| extraordinary pikemen, and a thousand extraordinary Veliti, and
58 6| comes to have to quarter six thousand infantry, all of whom I
59 6| which would quarter one thousand five hundred infantry. Turning
60 6| would also be quartered a thousand five hundred infantry: and
61 6| the army has four or six thousand soldiers more or less, rows
62 6| army had about twenty four thousand soldiers: but when a great
63 6| they assembled were fifty thousand. With this number they opposed
64 6| they opposed two hundred thousand Gauls whom they assaulted
65 6| Greeks, the number of fifty thousand soldiers ought not to be
66 6| to say that with fifteen thousand men he would assail the
67 6| the French in the year one thousand five hundred three (1503)
68 7| into Italy in the year one thousand four hundred ninety four (
69 7| assemble fifteen or twenty thousand young men from among their
70 7| this, then, in the year one thousand four hundred ninety four (
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