Book
1 1| four hundred years while armed: Sparta eight hundred: Many
2 1| been the first who were armed by their founders. And not
3 1| having dominion on land, they armed themselves on the sea, where
4 1| that such a multitude of armed men would cause confusion,
5 1| well organized, whether armed or unarmed, fear the laws,
6 1| the infantry ought to be armed, and how they should prepare
7 2| the heavily and lightly armed. The light armed they gave
8 2| lightly armed. The light armed they gave the name Veliti.
9 2| Afterwards, with time, they were armed like the infantry, but the
10 2| that they were the best armed armies that ever existed.~
11 2| infantry who are better armed and organized than they.
12 2| organized as they are, and armed as the Roman. So that there
13 2| found one who was better armed than they, not to go on
14 2| how I said the Romans were armed, you would not think this
15 2| and would want half to be armed as the Romans, and the other
16 2| seems the more strongly armed to you, ours or that of
17 2| squadron of very heavily (armed) men-at-arms comes to be
18 2| disgrace by the infantry armed (armored) and organized
19 2| cavalry, among whom were many armed as our men-at-arms, whom
20 2| training (of the men), having armed this infantry according
21 2| well selected and better armed, they were trained with
22 2| straddled, and jumped over them armed and unarmed without any
23 2| four hundred are heavily armed and fifty lightly armed:
24 2| armed and fifty lightly armed: the heavily armed include
25 2| lightly armed: the heavily armed include three hundred with
26 2| called pikemen: the lightly armed are fifty infantry armed
27 2| armed are fifty infantry armed with light guns, cross-bows,
28 2| and five hundred light armed, whom I will call extraordinary
29 2| of four hundred heavily armed infantry, I will stand on
30 2| and with what arms it is armed. The form, therefore, that
31 2| how captained, and how armed.~FABRIZIO: And it, perhaps,
32 2| enemy) than twenty other armed men. And as to numbers,
33 3| archers), and other lightly armed, who were not in these ranks,
34 3| the infantry. These light armed men, therefore, enkindled
35 3| among those who were not armed: after this proceeding,
36 3| Veliti, that is the light armed, to enkindle the battle,
37 3| hurry the enemy moves; for, armed with the pike and their
38 3| finding the enemy too greatly armed)), in part they fall dead
39 3| answer, first that they go armed because, even if that armor
40 3| much as an Army is better armed, and as much as its ranks
41 3| Army thus organized and armed not to overcome, at the
42 4| commanded those who are lightly armed, that they begin the fight,
43 4| accustomed some of the lightly armed infantry to get used to
44 4| rear, and all the heavily armed in front, leaving many intervals
45 4| number, which are better armed or better trained, which
46 5| so that each one of those armed should have its equal share
47 5| the cavalry and lightly armed men pursued him, unless
48 5| his army, who were badly armed, and mounted on small and
49 6| part, I would divide the armed men from the unarmed, and
50 6| or a greater part of the armed men on the east side, and
51 6| distinguish the quarters of the armed men, I would employ this
52 6| among the number of the armed: herdsmen with their herds
53 6| third of the army remain armed every night, and a fourth
54 6| And since in restraining armed men, the fear of laws, or
55 6| impedimenta behind, the armed men on every side, placing
56 7| young and the brave: who armed, are distributed for defense,
57 7| one would be harmed unless armed, and whoever would throw
58 7| virtu, and oppose them with armed forces, and with all your
59 7| side, and in good part well armed. I do not want to miss telling
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