Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | who had not an enemy were destroyed by friends. ~ ~
2 I, 57| the treachery which had destroyed Capito. The memory of Capito
3 I, 59| obedience in the army was destroyed by these disgraceful quarrels
4 I, 67| place having been completely destroyed, the army was marching in
5 I, 78| Sarmatian tribe, who had destroyed two cohorts in the previous
6 I, 83| things may be indifferently destroyed and rebuilt. The eternal
7 II, 26| whole army might have been destroyed, had not Suetonius Paullinus
8 II, 38| kings and cities had been destroyed, and men had leisure to
9 II, 48| boats and carriages; he destroyed all memorials and letters
10 II, 66| the Colonia Taurina was destroyed by the fires which were
11 II, 68| the auxiliary troops, and destroyed two cohorts. The first disturbance
12 II, 94| the Praetorian camp was destroyed by these 20,000 men indiscriminately
13 III, 38| and that Blaesus might be destroyed, the part of the informer
14 III, 47| of the Pontus. There he destroyed a cohort, once a part of
15 III, 51| horrible deed he had committed, destroyed himself. So much more earnest
16 III, 72| been able to violate, was destroyed by the madness of our Emperors.
17 IV, 11| Antonius and Varus Arrius was destroyed; for the irritation of Mucianus
18 IV, 23| town near the camp, were destroyed, lest they might be useful
19 IV, 33| mere fraction of Gaul, have destroyed their vast but useless camps,
20 IV, 35| cohorts, and he might have destroyed the camp after once forcing
21 IV, 40| with hope and ambition, he destroyed his power by sending into
22 IV, 43| the whole Senate might be destroyed by one word. Keep, Conscript
23 IV, 60| endured to see their cities destroyed, and with their wives and
24 IV, 63| survived the battle the flames destroyed. ~ ~
25 IV, 65| one of his eyes had been destroyed; he was repulsive in countenance
26 IV, 78| unite, when he might have destroyed them in detail. The Roman
27 IV, 81| his success, he took and destroyed the enemy's camp on the
28 IV, 82| cohort had been entirely destroyed by a stratagem of the Agrippinenses,
29 IV, 82| came in rapid succession, destroyed by degrees the prestige
30 IV, 84| of sight was not wholly destroyed, and might return, if the
31 V, 10| walls of Jerusalem were destroyed, the temple was left standing.
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