Book, Chapter
1 I, II | ultimate cause of their being driven out of Italy. The affairs
2 I, III| took refuge who had been driven out of their own country.
3 I, IV | after ninety years, were driven from those places which
4 I, VI | remained only a few days, being driven away by the Orsini with
5 I, VI | of the surrounding hills, driven by similar fears, fled to
6 I, VI | anciently called Venetia, driven by the same events, became
7 I, VI | undertaking, without being driven away, secretly fled to Charles,
8 I, VI | king of Hungary, having driven out Queen Joan, returned
9 I, VII| unarmed, and would have been driven out of the kingdom, but
10 II, II | Ghibellines—Ghibellines driven out of the city—Guelphs
11 II, II | the city, without being driven out, two days before the
12 II, VII| nobility, that these were driven to desperation, and ready
13 III, II | the city, till they had driven all their adversaries out
14 IV, VI | simply this, that we had driven him out a good man and he
15 IV, VII| at Florence, having been driven from Rome by the people.
16 V, VII| were in turn repulsed and driven over the bridge, by the
17 V, VII| forces being defeated and driven into the Borgo, the commissaries
18 VI, I | Annibale Bentivoglio had driven Francesco Piccinino from
19 VI, II | Annibale, after they had driven out Francesco Piccinino;
20 VI, II | permission of the count.~Filippo, driven to extremity, then had recourse
21 VI, VII| muleteer and his beasts were driven from the road into the adjoining
|