Book, Par.
1 I, 65| soldiers with all kinds of supplies from their private means.
2 II, 32| where any corn, and without supplies an army cannot be kept together.
3 II, 87| exhausted by having to furnish supplies, but the very cultivator
4 II, 94| he had the most abundant supplies. ~ ~
5 III, 2 | the meanwhile money and supplies? Why not rather avail ourselves
6 III, 8 | which commanded the corn supplies, and the revenues of the
7 III, 13| they were straitened for supplies, that Gaul and Spain were
8 III, 15| Cremona, ostensibly to collect supplies, really to imbue the soldiery
9 III, 20| cavalry to Bedriacum to fetch supplies and whatever else they needed. ~ ~
10 III, 48| always dependent on foreign supplies. He was indeed also preparing
11 III, 48| intending by thus closing the supplies of corn to cause famine
12 III, 56| suffering from cold and scant supplies, yet, by dividing his forces,
13 IV, 23| about the conveyance of supplies into the camp. These the
14 IV, 27| of navigation, and thus supplies were straitened at the same
15 IV, 36| much as the scarcity of supplies. The baggage of the legions
16 IV, 39| had been closed and the supplies stopped, the Vitellianists,
17 IV, 53| the granaries, when the supplies from Vespasian arrived. ~ ~
18 IV, 60| fortifications, have corn and supplies sufficient for a campaign
19 V, 7 | its snows. The same range supplies and sends forth the stream
20 V, 25| alarming demonstration, the supplies that were approaching from
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