Book, Par.
1 I, 9 | Germany despised their legate, Hordeonius Flaccus, who, disabled by
2 I, 51| find nothing to stop you in Hordeonius Flaccus; Britain will be
3 I, 53| the verge of mutiny, when Hordeonius Flaccus ordered the envoys
4 I, 55| Hordeonius Flaccus, the consular legate,
5 II, 57| the Rhine was entrusted to Hordeonius Flaccus. Vitellius himself
6 II, 97| provinces were equally slow. Hordeonius Flaccus, who was beginning
7 IV, 14| policy was suggested by Hordeonius in person; he had a bias
8 IV, 19| states. His first attempts Hordeonius Flaccus had encouraged by
9 IV, 20| Germany, to join Civilis. Hordeonius, assembling the tribunes
10 IV, 20| might have been crushed, if Hordeonius, moving from one side, and
11 IV, 25| the order of his battle; Hordeonius from his chamber or his
12 IV, 26| even more enraged against Hordeonius, and laid on him the blame
13 IV, 26| action of so many provinces. Hordeonius read to the army copies
14 IV, 26| should be their general, Hordeonius handed over to him the supreme
15 IV, 28| army. Their old hatred of Hordeonius reappeared. He, they declared,
16 IV, 28| the legate himself charged Hordeonius with treachery. He was then
17 IV, 32| hesitated. Nevertheless, when Hordeonius administered the oath, under
18 IV, 37| Vitellius. After a short delay Hordeonius gave the donative in the
19 IV, 37| their old grudge against Hordeonius. Without a single legate
20 IV, 56| Before the murder of Flaccus Hordeonius nothing had come out by
21 V, 28| advised by his letters, Hordeonius suggested by word of mouth.
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