Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | frightful in its wars, torn by civil strife, and even in peace
2 I, 2 | sword. There were three civil wars; there were more with
3 I, 8 | all the accomplishments of civil life, but who was without
4 I, 9 | all the troubles of these civil wars, either because they
5 I, 11| nothing of laws, and unused to civil rule. Its governor was at
6 I, 45| dissension, and finally into civil war. Otho, however, not
7 I, 49| the recollections of the civil wars, that men recurred,
8 I, 50| of peace, is relaxed by civil strife, when on both sides
9 I, 52| army itself the elements of civil strife. The whole of it
10 I, 59| seized the opportunity of a civil war to break out into greater
11 I, 61| must seize the capital; in civil strife, where action is
12 I, 78| minds were so intent on the civil war, that foreign affairs
13 I, 82| be most easily urged to civil war by indulgence in tumult
14 I, 82| driven many armies into civil strife, much less to any
15 I, 89| of Galerius Trachalus in civil matters, just as he employed
16 II, 5 | arrangement and direction of civil business. It would have
17 II, 6 | gigantic undertaking of a civil war, for which the East
18 II, 6 | former times the mightiest civil conflicts had been begun
19 II, 6 | followed across the sea by civil war, had met with a disastrous
20 II, 6 | various success. In the last civil war, though other provinces
21 II, 11| employed throughout the civil wars even by strict disciplinarians.
22 II, 29| persons, well aware that in civil wars the soldiers have more
23 II, 32| supply of money, which in a civil war is a mightier weapon
24 II, 34| Vitellianists, for, as is usual in civil wars, there were many deserters,
25 II, 38| forum that we first essayed civil wars. Then rose C. Marius,
26 II, 38| strife. They were driven into civil war by the same wrath from
27 II, 44| greater, for captives taken in civil war can be turned to no
28 II, 45| and cursed the fatality of civil strife with a melancholy
29 II, 47| will not long enjoy. The civil war began with Vitellius;
30 II, 69| preparing the occasions of civil and of foreign war. The
31 II, 75| without experience of a civil war, that those of Vitellius
32 II, 75| dissatisfaction than real strength. Civil strife had shaken the fidelity
33 II, 76| every day fresh seeds of civil war. All the energy and
34 II, 82| Vespasian offered no more in the civil war than others had done
35 II, 82| legions were engaged in the civil war, the country in their
36 II, 85| afterwards take any part in the civil war. He set out to join
37 II, 86| other men, powerful amidst civil strife and rebellion, rapacious,
38 II, 89| captured city, he assumed a civil garb, and proceeded with
39 II, 96| that there was no fear of a civil war. The name of Vespasian
40 III, 4 | and to take part in the civil strife. Cornelius Fuscus
41 III, 5 | declined, lest in the midst of civil strife they should attempt
42 III, 7 | with more strictness than a civil war will permit, was withdrawn
43 III, 15| taste for the spoils of civil war. He himself advanced
44 III, 25| all; how small a part of a civil war is a single soldier!"
45 III, 34| though most unfortunate in civil wars. Ashamed of the atrocious
46 III, 35| throughout Illyricum; for civil war was not over, and they
47 III, 37| when the prizes of the civil war had to be enjoyed in
48 III, 45| the continual rumours of civil war, raised the courage
49 III, 51| recorded. In the earlier civil wars indeed a similar horror
50 III, 53| must be answerable; the civil strifes of former days cost
51 III, 57| can be done in times of civil discord by the daring of
52 III, 57| municipal jealousy into the civil war. Claudius Julianus,
53 III, 60| despair. "The opening of a civil war must," he said, "be
54 III, 72| Once before indeed during civil war the Capitol had been
55 IV, 1 | so energetic in kindling civil strife, were incapable of
56 IV, 3 | Emperors. And indeed the civil war, which, beginning in
57 IV, 4 | Mucianus, a triumph for a civil war, though the expedition
58 IV, 23| these mingled emblems of civil and of foreign warfare utterly
59 IV, 39| satisfied by any triumphs that civil war could furnish. ~ ~
60 IV, 55| continuous succession of civil wars and internal calamities. ~ ~
61 IV, 59| not so utterly shaken by civil war as to have become contemptible
62 IV, 72| Where could they look for civil authority, and the sanction
63 IV, 75| submitted, for, now that civil war was at an end, they
64 IV, 83| not destroy all seeds of civil war. Nor would he suffer
65 V, 10| fallen, in the course of our civil wars, into the hands of
66 V, 11| been wholly taken up with civil strife, and had passed,
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