Book, Par.
1 I, 69| German army, they joined the Vitellianists, and by way of a present
2 II, 14| a formidable front. The Vitellianists whose infantry was inferior,
3 II, 14| general consternation of the Vitellianists was increased by a new alarm
4 II, 15| The Vitellianists, however, though beaten,
5 II, 15| the other might cause, the Vitellianists retreated to Antipolis,
6 II, 21| preparation of siege-works. The Vitellianists constructed mantlets, hurdles,
7 II, 25| hostile lines engaged, the Vitellianists began to retreat, but Celsus,
8 II, 25| kept his men back. The Vitellianists rashly left their position,
9 II, 25| vanquished. This delay gave the Vitellianists time to retreat into some
10 II, 26| march, apprehending that the Vitellianists might issue fresh from their
11 II, 27| of this disaster on the Vitellianists was not so much to drive
12 II, 31| united their forces, the Vitellianists had no longer any reason
13 II, 34| Nothing of this escaped the Vitellianists, for, as is usual in civil
14 II, 35| the more it delighted the Vitellianists, the more vehemently did
15 II, 41| conflict. The line of the Vitellianists was formed without hurry,
16 II, 44| but by treachery. "The Vitellianists indeed," they said, "gained
17 III, 9 | the united strength of the Vitellianists, or driven back and compelled
18 III, 16| cavalry, and drove back the Vitellianists, inflicting upon them some
19 III, 17| received the attack of the Vitellianists, who were now imprudently
20 III, 23| substance, fell short, while the Vitellianists, who had the light shining
21 III, 24| have you challenged the Vitellianists with threatening words,
22 III, 27| arts of Roman warfare; the Vitellianists rolled down ponderous stones,
23 III, 29| efforts on the same point. The Vitellianists, unable to resist the combined
24 III, 31| when the courage of the Vitellianists began to flag. The higher
25 III, 32| that they had supplied the Vitellianists with provisions in the field,
26 III, 35| dispersed and panic-stricken Vitellianists round their proper standards.
27 III, 35| a Trever, and both were Vitellianists, they would be a proof of
28 III, 43| among the now distracted Vitellianists, Fabius Valens returned
29 III, 60| calculated on interviews with the Vitellianists, who were only ten miles
30 III, 61| the position. Among the Vitellianists treason went unpunished;
31 III, 63| both sides of the road. The Vitellianists were received between the
32 III, 69| for himself, should the Vitellianists come upon them while they
33 III, 69| the most determined of the Vitellianists. From this unforeseen collision
34 III, 69| terminating favourably for the Vitellianists. In the hurry of the moment
35 III, 69| fascination of war. The Vitellianists kept but a careless watch
36 III, 71| tiles and stones on the Vitellianists. The assailants were not
37 III, 73| means of concealment. The Vitellianists burst in, carrying everywhere
38 III, 73| the watchword by which the Vitellianists recognised each other, and,
39 III, 77| country people, whom the Vitellianists slaughtered indiscriminately.
40 III, 79| a vanquished enemy, the Vitellianists, who had disposed some infantry
41 III, 79| which were well known to the Vitellianists, but disconcerting to their
42 III, 82| gardens of Sallust. The Vitellianists, taking their stand on the
43 III, 82| and repeated victory, the Vitellianists rushing on in sheer despair.
44 III, 84| On the other hand the Vitellianists, though unequal in numbers
45 IV, 1 | secret, nothing be closed; Vitellianists, they pretended, might be
46 IV, 39| the supplies stopped, the Vitellianists, who had not yet given up
47 IV, 47| their promised pay. Even the Vitellianists could not be got rid of
48 IV, 47| the divisions; then the Vitellianists, whose capitulation at Bovillae
49 IV, 50| Vespasian, and some of the Vitellianists, who had escaped from the
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