Book
1 3| of the army, or into the intervals (gaps) provided for such
2 3| order for battle, created intervals of four arm lengths between
3 3| artillery well within those intervals, I believe that from here
4 3| so that if you make the intervals small, in which you would
5 3| so that, because of those intervals, you not only give the enemy
6 3| the encounter by creating intervals in your army which give
7 3| the end portions of the intervals, so that its shots, if they
8 3| the enemy, must have large intervals, and therefore must have
9 3| result in not leaving any intervals, which would cause disorder,
10 3| companies behind them with wide intervals which would receive them.~
11 3| pressed, retire within the intervals of the second (company),
12 4| vans of the army full of intervals; and so that they should
13 4| the Triari; so that the intervals of the Principi being occupied
14 4| armed in front, leaving many intervals in order to be able to send
15 5| come to occupy, with the intervals, one hundred thirty four
16 5| the infantry) with so many intervals, that by means of them the
17 5| forty arm lengths with equal intervals between one another, and
18 5| would have to enter the intervals (gaps) that exist between
19 7| to have towers placed at intervals of two hundred arm lengths.
20 7| lowered, by those weaves and intervals, to be able to defend it
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