Book, Chapter
1 I, II | After Ildovadus, who was slain, came Totila, who routed
2 I, V | its close he himself was slain, in the eightieth year of
3 I, V | the French were taken and slain. About this period was also
4 I, VI | the latter of whom being slain by the people of Milan,
5 I, VII | which ensued Giovanmaria was slain. Filippo remained some time
6 I, VII | he was shortly afterward slain in Romagna, in the service
7 II, I | Buondelmonti—Buondelmonti slain—Guelphs and Ghibellines
8 II, I | foot of the bridge, and slain close by a statue of Mars.
9 II, II | kingdom from Manfred, and slain him, to which success the
10 II, III | member of that family having slain one of the Florentine people
11 II, IV | conclusion; for Niccolo was slain, and Simone was so severely
12 II, V | numbers, and Gherardo was slain upon the bridge of Affrico
13 II, V | brother and 2,000 men were slain; but the body of the Prince
14 II, VI | which many citizens were slain and taken prisoners, and
15 II, VIII| many were attacked and slain. However, about three hundred
16 II, VIII| but both were instantly slain. Those who could not wound
17 III, VI | Hungary, but was soon after slain there.~As great rejoicings
18 III, VII | raise a tumult—Some of them slain, others taken to the church
19 III, VII | them their liberty were slain, and their own chains more
20 III, VII | of the conspirators were slain defending themselves; the
21 III, VII | the government; and having slain them, reform the republic
22 IV, III | warlike, Count Oddo was slain there, and Niccolo Piccinino
23 IV, IV | so many, he was at last slain, and his body thrown into
24 V, I | wars in which no men are slain, cities plundered, or sovereignties
25 V, II | arrived at the piazza he was slain, his body divided into many
26 V, VI | that if he went he would be slain. Bartolomeo, requesting
27 VI, I | accoutrements, and being neither slain nor detained prisoners,
28 VI, II | Bologna— Annibale Bentivoglio slain by Battista Canneschi, and
29 VI, II | in complete armor he was slain, his body dragged about
30 VI, II | all his ancestors had been slain by their enemies, he lived
31 VI, V | not escape by flight were slain: among the number, as being
32 VI, VII | his people were all either slain or made prisoners by John’
33 VII, III | in the house to be basely slain by their armed enemies,
34 VII, V | nearly all either secured or slain. An exaggerated report of
35 VII, V | followers either dispersed or slain, and everything restored
36 VII, VI | of Milan—His vices—He is slain by the conspirators—Their
37 VII, VI | former, as above related, was slain by the people of Val di
38 VII, VI | the duke and had seen him slain, recognizing the murderers,
39 VII, VI | duke’s footmen. Carlo was slain by those immediately around
40 VIII, I | by a conspiracy, if not slain like the duke of Milan (
41 VIII, I | which the young men might be slain, on account of their going
42 VIII, I | both the brothers might be slain, either at a marriage, or
43 VIII, II | CHAPTER II~Giuliano de’ Medici slain—Lorenzo escapes—The archbishop
44 VIII, II | terror, were immediately slain or thrown alive out of the
45 VIII, II | all of whom were either slain or made prisoners. The name
46 VIII, VII | Girolamo Riario, lord of Furli, slain by a conspiracy—Galeotto,
47 VIII, VII | Severino, their captain, was slain. After this defeat, the
48 VIII, VII | of his people, was also slain. After this slaughter, and
49 VIII, VII | Galeotto to visit her, he was slain by assassins, whom she had
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