Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | with bloody deeds. In the capital there were yet worse horrors.
2 I, 4 | review the condition of the capital, the temper of the armies,
3 I, 4 | or the soldiery of the capital, it had also excited all
4 I, 4 | power, and absent from the capital. The leading men of the
5 I, 5 | The soldiery of the capital, who were imbued with the
6 I, 6 | men. His entry into the capital, made after the slaughter
7 I, 7 | Clodius Macer reached the capital. Macer was executed in Africa,
8 I, 14| even the soldiery of the capital. He therefore resorted to
9 I, 20| profligate among them had neither capital nor land remaining, nothing
10 I, 29| had this consolation, a capital unstained by bloodshed,
11 I, 30| immediately on his entry into the capital. Meanwhile Cetrius Severus,
12 I, 36| before the eyes of the capital he gave orders to decimate
13 I, 49| The alarm of the capital, which trembled to see the
14 I, 49| recurred, speaking of how the capital had been taken by Roman
15 I, 50| tidings. The reports from the capital were unfavourable, while
16 I, 61| Italy, we must seize the capital; in civil strife, where
17 I, 67| order on Aventicum, the capital town, when a deputation
18 I, 75| weight in the name of the capital and the prestige of the
19 I, 79| nearly proved fatal to the capital. Otho had ordered the 7th
20 I, 82| critical position of the capital and by the perils of the
21 I, 84| was not restored to the capital; there was still the din
22 I, 84| Vitellius had come to the capital to learn the feelings of
23 I, 85| and level districts of the capital, but also much that had
24 I, 87| roused the anxieties of the capital; no rank was free from apprehension
25 I, 88| insurrection of Vindex; the capital was safe, and the war was
26 I, 89| enlarged on the dignity of the capital and the unanimity of the
27 II, 1 | as omens. At Corinth, the capital of Achaia, he received positive
28 II, 11| body of the legions. The capital itself contributed no contemptible
29 II, 19| was to the soldiery of the capital, broke their spirits. All
30 II, 21| distinctions of the soldiery of the capital and the Praetorian cohorts;
31 II, 28| more importance than the capital and the safety of the Empire,
32 II, 29| refrained from demanding capital punishment in any case;
33 II, 32| have Italy and Rome, the capital of the Empire, the Senate,
34 II, 38| unconstitutional power; it was in the capital and the forum that we first
35 II, 54| conveyed with rapidity to the capital, but a few days after suffered
36 II, 55| that all the troops in the capital had taken the oath to Vitellius
37 II, 62| conveyed to him from the capital and from Italy, till the
38 II, 62| sent on before him to the capital an edict, by which he postponed
39 II, 63| of Otho, had entered the capital. Plancius Varus, who had
40 II, 71| arrangements introduced from the capital. The nearer the Emperor
41 II, 81| had been summoned from the capital by secret despatches from
42 II, 87| he advanced towards the capital. He was followed by 60,000
43 II, 87| came to meet him from the capital, some moved by fear, many
44 II, 89| Vitellius. Thus he entered the capital, and he there embraced his
45 II, 93| the temples, and the whole capital, did not know their own
46 II, 94| among the soldiers of the capital. Soldiers again of good
47 II, 99| as it marched out of the capital. All strength had departed
48 III, 2 | and the allurements of the capital, or they are worn out with
49 III, 2 | and the resources of the capital, and, should they choose
50 III, 13| against them, that in the capital there was nothing on which
51 III, 15| Fabius Valens had left the capital, and would hasten his march,
52 III, 38| keep him from us. In the capital, in the very bosom of the
53 III, 48| pressure of famine to the capital, which is always dependent
54 III, 55| for the defence of the capital. Vitellius, while he abated
55 III, 60| rather than to preserve the capital. Greater will be our reward,
56 III, 64| possessed himself of the capital. It would well become Sabinus
57 III, 66| Vespasian might have entered the capital without bloodshed. But the
58 III, 68| midst of his people and his capital, to abdicate his throne.
59 III, 77| involving the destruction of the capital, must have ensued. Lucius
60 III, 78| than actually to attack the capital, as Vitellius' strongest
61 III, 80| sally forth to defend the capital. Then the Senate was called
62 III, 82| Mulvian bridge, and enter the capital on the following day. His
63 III, 84| by this achievement. The capital has been restored to the
64 IV, 1 | in hand, throughout the capital, the conquerors hunted down
65 IV, 2 | men, passed through the capital. Not one of them wore the
66 IV, 11| Emperor, Mucianus entered the capital, and at once drew all power
67 IV, 11| Lest his execution in the capital should excite too much notice,
68 IV, 28| who the next day inflicted capital punishment on the ringleaders
69 IV, 40| usual appearance of the capital, the laws, and the jurisdiction
70 IV, 47| been collected from the capital and its neighbourhood, were
71 IV, 50| who had escaped from the capital, incessantly represented
72 IV, 52| and on the state of the Capital, he heard an unfavourable
73 IV, 60| you to the walls of the capital, will you lift up arms against
74 IV, 71| of so vast a war. Yet the capital could not be left without
75 IV, 77| cause of peace, and to that capital in which we, conquerors
76 V, 1 | persons brought from the capital and from Italy by private
77 V, 9 | towns. Jersualem is the capital. There stood a temple of
78 V, 21| defence of the Batavian capital, but carrying off property
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