Book, Chapter
1 I, VI | plundered the others of their property, sent them into exile. By
2 I, VI | with them whatever movable property they possessed. The people
3 I, VI | with their most valuable property to a place on the same sea,
4 I, VI | equally bountiful with the property of others, gave to all who
5 I, VII| the acquisition of either property or safety. The others (those
6 II, II | against the Ghibellines, whose property they divided into three
7 II, IV | the destruction of much property; and not being able to effect
8 II, IV | was Dante the poet, —their property confiscated, and their houses
9 II, VI | destruction, and burning of property, is quite indescribable;
10 II, I | who saved their houses and property; and having disarmed them,
11 III, I | beaten, or possession of his property detained from him, he might
12 III, II | plundered the churches of their property, and compelled the priests
13 III, II | conveyed their valuable property into the churches and monasteries,
14 III, III| but wish to possess the property of others and to revenge
15 III, III| subjugation? or from the property of which you already have
16 III, III| us, but poverty? for this property is the means by which we
17 IV, III| proposed that whoever possessed property of the value of one hundred
18 IV, III| necessary to consider his property in the aggregate, which
19 IV, III| on immovable but movable property, which people possess to-day
20 IV, III| city to take both their property and their time, while of
21 IV, III| replied, that if movable property varies, the taxes would
22 IV, III| those who possessed hidden property; for it would be unreasonable
23 IV, III| extend the Catasto over the property of their nearest neighbors,
24 IV, III| present a schedule of their property against a certain time.
25 IV, V | valley, carried off our property, ravaged every place, destroyed
26 IV, V | and with one-half of our property have saved the rest. But
27 IV, V | and praying that their property and their country might
28 IV, VII| against himself and his property. Cosmo received his sentence
29 IV, VII| alone is desirable in which property and friends may be safely
30 IV, VII| from fear of losing their property, are compelled to abandon
31 V, III| and their avarice with our property, so that all ranks ought
32 V, III| loss of their own lawful property as they did because they
33 V, III| pope, who demanded them as property held of the church, and
34 V, V | if he had been carrying property of his master’s, and to
35 V, V | them, and protected their property to the utmost of their power
36 VI, V | attacked two small towns, the property of private citizens, but
37 VI, VI | wife, family, and all his property, in the hands of those whom
38 VI, VII| and with their persons and property to contribute to the enterprise
39 VII, II | caused an account of all his property, liabilities, and assets,
40 VII, II | desirous to repossess his own property to meet the demands to which
41 VII, III| government, I shall lose my property, and the rest will be exiled.”~
42 VII, III| government, others of their property, and all alike threatened.
43 VII, IV | having shared among a few the property of your enemies, or with
44 VII, V | alum-pit was the rightful property of those who had hitherto
45 VIII, II | his debts; and whatever property he possessed belonging to
46 VIII, IV | their children and their property, but even their laborers;
47 VIII, VII| taking with them whatever property they could carry off, they
48 VIII, VII| many places, much of his property was wasted, and he had to
49 VIII, VII| pursuits, and invested his property in land and houses, as being
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