Book, Chapter
1 IV, IV | having raised a good body of infantry in the Val d’Arno Inferiore,
2 IV, IV | hundred cavalry and as many infantry, and then descending into
3 IV, VII| mountains of Pistoia for infantry, which, with what other
4 V, II | his cavalry and whatever infantry he could raise, for the
5 V, IV | cavalry and two thousand infantry, ready at once to march
6 V, VI | of their citizens, with infantry raised upon the emergency
7 V, VI | possessed, and a body of infantry raised entirely from the
8 V, VII| captain, on the left; the infantry being drawn up along the
9 V, VII| exertions, excepting that their infantry were ordered, in case their
10 V, VII| in flank by the hostile infantry, to assail them with their
11 VI, II | much influence with the infantry, whose leader he had always
12 VI, III| in throwing three hundred infantry into Piombino, took up their
13 VI, V | cavalry and three thousand infantry, garrisoned Alexandria and
14 VI, V | and faithful. Two hundred infantry were also sent by the Signory
15 VIII, V | raise as numerous a body of infantry as possible, which was done
16 VIII, V | cavalry, and superior in infantry, marched boldly out of Rome
17 VIII, V | victorious, for her numerous infantry so annoyed the ducal cavalry,
18 VIII, V | cavalry and eight thousand infantry, they went in pursuit of
|