Book, Chapter
1 I, II | slew him and routed his army. By this victory, the power
2 I, III| honorably by Pepin, who sent an army into Italy, and besieged
3 I, III| Pepin, who sent another army, conquered the Lombards,
4 I, III| having, while prefect of the army, dethroned Constantine;
5 I, IV | also named Henry, with an army to Rome, and he, with the
6 I, IV | Frederick, routed the Roman army with such dreadful slaughter,
7 I, IV | thither with as large an army as he could draw together;
8 I, IV | remainder of the Christian army in Asia and still held that
9 I, V | occupied Padua, routed the army of the united cities, and
10 I, V | against Manfred, routed his army, and slew him near Benevento,
11 I, VI | having returned with a large army, still found his undertaking
12 I, VII| Anjou, who had brought the army from Provence, and coming
13 I, VII| the kingdom and a large army, under the command of the
14 II, II | intended to assemble the army, this car was brought into
15 II, II | was also taken with the army, and served to regulate
16 II, II | and returning with the army from Sienna, they took Volterra,
17 II, V | Arezzo, and halted with his army at the monastery of San
18 II, V | Having drawn together a large army, they entered the Val di
19 II, V | many of the leaders of his army, fell in the strife.~The
20 II, VI | they thus increased their army with an addition of four
21 II, VI | friends they mustered an army amounting to 20,000 foot
22 II, VI | been given him over the army, endeavoring to show that
23 II, VI | by attacking first his army and then his country, they
24 II, VII| him to the command of the army. The nobility, who were
25 III, II | attacked them with a large army, trusting that being famished
26 IV, IV | having arrived with the army in the country of the Lucchese,
27 V, I | supported by so large an army, sought a reconciliation
28 V, I | who was already, with his army, at Furli. The count accordingly
29 V, III| take the command of the army, and with the special understanding
30 V, V | count’s design, led his army to Peschiera. He then, with
31 V, V | to the main body of his army. It was now nightfall, and
32 V, V | Count Francesco was with his army at Tenna; and when the report
33 V, V | assembled the relics of their army, they hastened to join those
34 V, V | that if Niccolo with his army were to approach Florence,
35 V, V | many deserted from their army.~The Florentines, being
36 V, VI | return to Verona with his army, to recover from the injuries
37 V, VI | immediately with the whole army and attack the duke, in
38 V, VI | were situated; for when the army is vanquished the war is
39 V, VI | castles, and halted with his army at Pulicciano. Thence he
40 V, VI | Count di Poppi, was in the army of Niccolo, having deserted
41 V, VI | them, and returned to his army. He then set on foot secret
42 V, VII| took the field with his army, and the Venetians having
43 V, VII| adopted, Niccolo led his army, unperceived by the enemy,
44 V, VII| and accoutrements of his army, which could be replaced
45 V, VII| merest shadow of a regular army would easily and most justly
46 V, VII| is astonishing, that an army so constructed should have
47 VI, I | victory—Niccolo reinforces his army—The duke of Milan endeavors
48 VI, I | that being deprived of his army at Verona, he was shortly
49 VI, II | leaders of the Florentine army was Baldaccio d’Anghiari,
50 VI, II | again assembled so large an army as enabled him to make head
51 VI, II | Francesco to command the army, hastened to Milan. The
52 VI, II | learning the defeat of his army and the capture of his son,
53 VI, II | The pope, seeing Niccolo’s army defeated and himself dead,
54 VI, III| The count had his whole army at Cotignola, ready to pass
55 VI, III| with the remainder of his army to quarters in the Siennese.
56 VI, III| king approached with his army, amounting to fifteen thousand
57 VI, III| could remain with their army among the woods of Campiglia,
58 VI, III| the plain.~The Florentine army depended for provisions
59 VI, III| the ravages made in his army by those diseases which
60 VI, III| saw that, with his reduced army, he could not gain the place,
61 VI, III| took the field with his army, upon which the people of
62 VI, III| Venetians, who, with a powerful army, determined to occupy their
63 VI, III| therefore resolved that the army should march to the siege
64 VI, III| disadvantage. The Venetian army, led by Micheletto, approached
65 VI, III| surprise, Francesco’s whole army was thrown into dismay.
66 VI, IV | collected the relics of their army, and, by virtue of the treaty,
67 VI, V | Malatesti, halted with their army upon the Adda, and considering
68 VI, V | and the courage of his army, said it would be unadvisable
69 VI, VI | force to act against the army of the Aragonese at Sienna.~
70 VI, VII| learning that the Turkish army, being at the siege of Belgrade,
71 VI, VII| times considered a tolerable army; which, meeting the enemy
72 VII, II | arranged that the whole army should be assembled, and
73 VII, IV | as he remained with the army. Hereupon the Florentines
74 VIII, III| to the command of their army. While these preparations
75 VIII, III| San Savino. The Florentine army being now in order, went
76 VIII, III| could be spared from the army, which, under the marquis
77 VIII, III| Santo Geminiano. But the army, on the arrival of Count
78 VIII, III| Guicciardini, commissary to the army, by the advice of Roberto
79 VIII, III| disorders which arose in the army at Poggibonzi thrown all
80 VIII, IV | Calabria routs the Florentine army at Poggibonzi— Dismay in
81 VIII, IV | fortresses he had taken.~The army being thus reduced, without
82 VIII, IV | although the Florentine army had so closely pressed the
83 VIII, IV | the relics of the routed army were assembled. On the other
84 VIII, IV | Calabria, who was with the army at Sienna, of a breach of
85 VIII, IV | II. had gone with a large army to the siege of Rhodes,
86 VIII, IV | left Rhodes, part of his army, under the Pasha Achmet,
87 VIII, V | arrangements—The Neapolitan army routed by the papal forces—
88 VIII, V | duke of Calabria, with his army across the Tronto, and asked
89 VIII, V | him, with part of their army, to keep their enemies at
90 VIII, VI | orders first to recruit his army at Rome, and then proceed
91 VIII, VI | Guicciardini was commissary of the army; and while the siege of
92 VIII, VI | money, proceeded to the army, and intimated the heavy
93 VIII, VI | disgrace, if so large an army and so many generals, having
94 VIII, VI | Santa endeared him to the army.~Upon the taking of Pietra
95 VIII, VI | Florentines, opposed the army of the church; with the
96 VIII, VII| having assembled a large army under Jacopo Guicciardini
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