Book, Chapter
1 Int | Livy, which continued to occupy him for several years. These
2 I, I | Africa for the empire, to occupy that province; for, being
3 I, II | finding they could not occupy the kingdom, and fearful
4 I, III| Tuscany, took up arms to occupy the kingdom, and demanded
5 I, III| consented that they should occupy the places in which they
6 I, III| permission to the Saracans to occupy them; and they having taken
7 I, IV | Normans, to assail France and occupy that portion of the country
8 I, IV | and the pope intended to occupy that kingdom on the ground
9 I, VI | agreeable and fertile country to occupy one sterile and unwholesome.
10 II, I | induces a willingness to occupy places strong and difficult
11 III, IV | restore peace to the city. To occupy the minds of the people,
12 IV, I | Florentines resolved to occupy the places he had undertaken
13 IV, II | who, in this case, would occupy their places, and overturn
14 IV, IV | not that they failed to occupy many places, but from the
15 IV, VII| confines of Romagna), would occupy the minds of the Signory
16 V, I | to defend Tuscany than to occupy Ascesi, ordered the count
17 V, V | capture; and to do this, would occupy more time than could be
18 V, V | which it was necessary to occupy before he could reach Brescia.~
19 VI, III| powerful army, determined to occupy their territories, and had
20 VI, IV | all. Supposing he should occupy Milan, it appeared to him
21 VIII, III| expected, either that he would occupy the place, or that the pope
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