Book, Par.
1 I, 2 | immediately abandoned; the tribes of the Suevi and the Sarmatae
2 I, 29| debaucheries, of revels, of tribes of mistresses. These things
3 I, 83| Vitellius is the master of a few tribes, and has some semblance
4 II, 32| Rhine, when such hostile tribes are ready to burst in, would
5 III, 5 | defence to the barbarian tribes, the princes of the Sarmatae
6 III, 41| its armies as well as the tribes of Germany, and so to kindle
7 III, 47| the name of Vitellius the tribes that border on Pontus, bribed
8 III, 58| their rank) he ordered the tribes to be convoked, and to those
9 IV, 18| champions of liberty. The tribes of Germany immediately sent
10 IV, 24| Augustus had thought the German tribes might be watched and checked;
11 IV, 24| disaster, as that these tribes should themselves advance
12 IV, 24| Batavians and the Transrhenane tribes took up their position,
13 IV, 25| was inviting the German tribes to join the league. "This,"
14 IV, 29| be ravaged by the several tribes on which they bordered,
15 IV, 29| and when the Transrhenane tribes clamoured for battle, he
16 IV, 51| had sold to more distant tribes. ~ ~
17 IV, 66| honourable custody. But the tribes beyond the Rhine disliked
18 IV, 76| Batavi and the Transrhenane tribes, than your fathers and grandfathers
19 IV, 79| arrival of the Transrhenane tribes, the terror of whose name
20 V, 9 | contemptible of the subject tribes. When the Macedonians became
21 V, 18| occupied by the Transrhenane tribes. The exhortations of the
22 V, 21| among these danger-loving tribes by appeals to their pity
23 V, 27| fidelity of the Transrhenane tribes had been thus shaken, among
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