Book,  Par.

 1     I,     21|           demoralization among the troops, of quarreling, of listening
 2     I,     27|            On the arrival of these troops the mutiny broke out afresh,
 3     I,     30|       usual force with some picked troops. There was in addition a
 4     I,     36|           they divided off the new troops from the old, and one legion
 5     I,     40|            assessment of Gaul. The troops under the control of Silius,
 6     I,     46|   undefended. Yet if the auxiliary troops and allies were to be armed
 7     I,     68|             At the same moment the troops of the van emerged from
 8     I,     73|        Mount Taunus he hurried his troops in quick marching order
 9     I,     80|          been lost with Varus. The troops were then marched to the
10     I,     83|      broken by the shock of flying troops, increased the panic. They
11     I,     84|           march he had outstripped troops heavily laden with baggage
12     I,     86|            and the more encumbered troops were in advance. For between
13     I,     91|          the breastwork, where the troops were thinly distributed
14    II,      6|         and early winters. His own troops were affected not so much
15    II,     10|         the legions and the allied troops, entered "Drusus's fosse,"
16    II,     10|          river. He disembarked the troops, which were to be marched
17    II,     14|           that without bridges and troops to guard them, it would
18    II,     20|           legions, and light-armed troops with horse-bowmen, and the
19    II,     27|    publicly praised his victorious troops, Caesar raised a pile of
20    II,     31|           small force. Immediately troops were despatched to draw
21    II,     67|             under standards and in troops, till at last he was regarded
22    II,     67|          while Mazippa, with light troops, spread around him fire,
23    II,    106|       Against him were the veteran troops drawn up in ranks and with
24   III,     30|         hundred, routed those same troops of Tacfarinas on their attacking
25   III,     58|          quelled by some legionary troops sent by Visellius Varro
26   III,     62|        sent forward some auxiliary troops was ravaging those villages
27   III,    104|           himself with some picked troops. By establishing redoubts
28   III,    105|            was usual, withdraw his troops and let them rest in winter-quarters
29    IV,     24|        extravagant boasts that his troops had been steadfastly loyal,
30    IV,     32|          with detachments of light troops whose strength, as they
31    IV,     33|       meanwhile collecting all the troops on the spot, raised the
32    IV,     33|           with the attack of heavy troops from a single point, he
33    IV,     65|           he was concentrating his troops, returned gentle answers;
34    IV,     68| strengthened with denser masses of troops. Night was coming on with
35    IV,     93|           the passage of his heavy troops, and meanwhile having found
36    IV,     93|            courage to the repulsed troops and were themselves carried
37    VI,     62|       against the king's unwarlike troops, till Marcus Trebellius,
38    VI,     68|           reinforced by allies and troops which would be sent by the
39    XI,      1|           of the Praetorians, with troops in hot haste, as though
40    XI,      2|      accused him of corrupting the troops, of binding them by bribes
41    XI,     22|         variously affected his own troops and the enemy. Our men gained
42   XII,     16|          Arabs deserted with their troops, with their countrymen's
43   XII,     18|            the cohorts, and native troops of Bosporus with Roman arms.
44   XII,     33|            up by the energy of the troops. These were divided into
45   XII,     37|        rest to the general and his troops, he prepared to disarm all
46   XII,     37|           with him only the allied troops, without the strength of
47   XII,     41|       stimulated the ardour of the troops. Ostorius having ascertained
48   XII,     75|           imperfect control of her troops of slaves in Calabria. She
49  XIII,      9|       number of citizen and allied troops, together with the auxiliary
50  XIII,     20|             along with some German troops, added as a further honour.
51  XIII,     47|            a spreading plain where troops of cavalry could manoeuvre.
52  XIII,     47|            conference, ordered his troops to retire to their respective
53  XIII,     51|            sent on his light-armed troops, which were meanwhile to
54  XIII,     54|            wholesale conviction of troops of Roman knights, and with
55  XIII,     68|           Arar by a canal, so that troops crossing the sea and then
56  XIII,     72|          the Rhine and display his troops in the enemy's rear, himself
57   XIV,     19|          Senate in holiday attire, troops of their children and wives
58   XIV,     43|          to the rescue, routed his troops, and destroyed all his infantry.
59   XIV,     45|        round them, the light-armed troops, and the cavalry in dense
60    XV,      4|     provincials, and occupied with troops the enemy's approaches.
61    XV,      6|         Tigranes was safe with his troops and supplies; those who
62    XV,     10|          had never neglected, with troops at closer intervals. That
63    XV,     11|       defence, thus dispersing the troops which, if kept together,
64    XV,     17|         the blockade, that all the troops should quit Armenian territory,
65    XV,     34|           third and sixth legions, troops in thorough efficiency,
66    XV,     73|        soldiers and occupying with troops the coast and the river-banks.
67    XV,     73|    foreigners. In long succession, troops of prisoners in chains were
68    XV,     77|          surrounded the house with troops of soldiers, and then made
69    XV,     94|      completed, Nero assembled the troops and distributed two thousand
70   XVI,     14|           That same year levies of troops were held in Narbon Gaul,
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