Book, Par.
1 I, 1 | the transactions of the Roman people, they wrote with
2 I, 3 | terrible calamities of the Roman People, or evidence more
3 I, 11| time of the Divine Augustus Roman Knights have ruled Egypt
4 I, 11| Such was the state of the Roman world, when Servius Galba,
5 I, 16| confer no greater boon on the Roman people than a good successor,
6 I, 20| appliances of their vices. Thirty Roman Knights were appointed to
7 I, 36| it is the Emperor of the Roman people, or a public enemy,
8 I, 37| invite you; the swords of all Roman soldiers are with us. At
9 I, 39| anticipate the danger. Then did Roman soldiers rush forward like
10 I, 49| capital had been taken by Roman armies, how Italy had been
11 I, 57| proceeded to distribute among Roman Knights the offices of the
12 I, 64| foreigners and enemies; we are a Roman colony, a part of the Roman
13 I, 64| Roman colony, a part of the Roman army, sharers in your successes
14 I, 77| Lingones the privileges of Roman citizenship; to the province
15 I, 78| deep and soft snow. The Roman soldier, moving easily in
16 I, 88| Caesars, the wars of the Roman people had been in remote
17 II, 16| and Quintius Certus, a Roman knight, who ventured to
18 II, 38| power. Legions formed of Roman citizens did not lay down
19 II, 62| banished from Italy. The Roman Knights were forbidden,
20 II, 75| shaken the fidelity of the Roman soldiery, and danger was
21 III, 5 | cause. Their loyalty to the Roman people was of long standing,
22 III, 27| Both used the arts of Roman warfare; the Vitellianists
23 III, 33| character, an army comprising Roman citizens, allies, and foreigners,
24 III, 45| peril. She asked for some Roman troops, and our auxiliary
25 III, 46| the good fortune of the Roman people, which brought to
26 III, 47| kingdom was converted into a Roman province, ill brooked the
27 III, 47| their arms and banners in Roman fashion, they still retained
28 III, 58| delusive name of an army and of Roman legions to a cowardly mob,
29 III, 58| certain weight of silver. The Roman Knights offered their services
30 III, 68| spectacle. There was the Roman Emperor, lord but a few
31 III, 80| violence by the madness of Roman citizens before the very
32 IV, 15| same objects. Even to the Roman people this war will not
33 IV, 16| fell upon the sutlers and Roman traders, who were wandering
34 IV, 17| Batavians, and the Frisii. The Roman army was drawn up to meet
35 IV, 18| departed the spoils of the Roman army. At the same time he
36 IV, 19| to pieces, and that the Roman power had been expelled
37 IV, 23| more than five thousand Roman soldiers. But there was
38 IV, 29| country, and assumed the Roman name of the Agrippinenses.
39 IV, 38| distinguished services to the Roman people. ~ ~
40 IV, 42| advantage by the ruin of Roman citizens. Great was the
41 IV, 55| now openly assailing the Roman power, while the legions
42 IV, 55| believe that the end of the Roman Empire was at hand. The
43 IV, 58| territory and bring back to the Roman alliance the more influential
44 IV, 59| there, striving to make a Roman army commit the unheard
45 IV, 60| it was at any rate from a Roman Emperor that you received
46 IV, 60| your wickedness when the Roman legions are marshalled against
47 IV, 61| assumed the insignia of Roman Imperial power, and entered
48 IV, 68| at this very moment the Roman armies are assembling, it
49 IV, 71| and levelled against the Roman people many insulting and
50 IV, 72| braver spirits, and that the Roman legions were close at hand,
51 IV, 73| on the approach of the Roman generals at the head of
52 IV, 73| which had not renounced the Roman alliance. The legions, which
53 IV, 74| thought that a war which Roman arms had undertaken was
54 IV, 74| however, did not deter the Roman general from ordering his
55 IV, 76| asserted the excellence of the Roman people. Since, however,
56 IV, 76| than for me to have spoken. Roman generals and Emperors entered
57 IV, 78| destroyed them in detail. The Roman army surrounded their camp
58 IV, 82| had taken up arms on the Roman side. Classicus also gained
59 V, 10| province of Judaea to the Roman Knights or to his own freedmen,
60 V, 16| unfavourable to our troops. The Roman soldier is heavily armed
61 V, 18| of the old glory of the Roman name, of former and of recent
62 V, 19| Wherever," he said, "the Roman turns his eyes, captivity,
63 V, 21| constructing a bridge, and that the Roman army could not cross the
64 V, 23| of whose loyalty to the Roman cause and enmity to his
65 V, 23| Even on this occasion the Roman fleet was not present at
66 V, 26| well-timed service to the Roman people the fortune of war,
67 V, 27| challenge to battle the Roman people, then what a mere
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