Book, Chapter
1 I, I | These migrating masses destroyed the Roman empire by the
2 I, II | or to leave the city, he destroyed the greater part of it,
3 I, II | king. He rebuilt Imola, destroyed by Narses, and occupied
4 I, IV | on the war in Lombardy, destroyed Milan; which caused the
5 I, V | took Verona and Mantua, destroyed Vicenza, occupied Padua,
6 I, VI | had taken Aquileia, and destroyed Padua, Monselice, Vicenza,
7 I, VII| their frequent divisions, destroyed the nobility, and their
8 II, I | till the Saracens, having destroyed Genoa and rendered her rivers
9 II, I | barbarians, Florence was destroyed by Totila, king of the Ostrogoths;
10 II, I | Fiesolani, they took and destroyed Fiesole, which must have
11 II, II | Sienna, they took Volterra, destroyed some castles, and led the
12 II, III| unfurled his gonfalon, and destroyed the houses of the Galletti,
13 II, IV | from the old bridge, it destroyed the houses of the Gherardini,
14 II, VII| above their ordinary level, destroyed some of the bridges and
15 II, I | greedy for spoil, sacked and destroyed their houses, and pulled
16 II, I | although the nobility were destroyed, fortune did not fail to
17 III, I | when the Ghibellines were destroyed, the Guelphs would long
18 III, III| expelled from the city or destroyed. This terrible doctrine
19 IV, I | uninterrupted possession of power, destroyed that vigilance over those
20 IV, V | prisoners. He then burned and destroyed the whole valley, carried
21 IV, V | property, ravaged every place, destroyed everything, violated the
22 IV, VI | nobility of this city, who were destroyed by the plebeians, ought
23 IV, VII| remain untouched, or be destroyed; that there was now no remedy
24 V, III| troubled at seeing our crops destroyed, our towns burned, our fortresses
25 V, VII| attacked that of the duke, and destroyed it. His land forces took
26 VII, II | hands, they were soon after destroyed in various ways, and under
27 VII, V | church of Santo Spirito destroyed by fire—The rebellion of
28 VII, V | the church was completely destroyed by the flames. Many thought
29 VII, VI | was suspected of having destroyed his own mother; for, not
30 VII, VI | hope of safety after having destroyed them; and let others see
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