Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|      Caius while returning from Armenia, still suffering from a
 2    II,      4|       Vonones found a refuge in Armenia, then a free country, and
 3    II,      5|   appointed to restore order in Armenia. He put over the Armenians
 4    II,     56|      matters and the affairs of Armenia, which I have already related,
 5    II,     71|         to be first in reaching Armenia. ~ ~
 6    II,     74|        part of the legions into Armenia under his own or his son'
 7    II,     83|     Artaxias being made king of Armenia by Germanicus, the Senate
 8    II,     88|       his guards to escape into Armenia, thence to Albania and Heniochia,
 9   III,     67|     Caesar in the government of Armenia, and had likewise paid court
10    VI,     45|      Tiberius, eagerly coveting Armenia, over which, on the death
11    VI,     47|        instrument of recovering Armenia, having reconciled him to
12    VI,     48|         the Iberians burst into Armenia with a huge host, and captured
13    VI,     48|        poured the Sarmatae into Armenia by the Caspian route. Meanwhile
14    VI,     52|         alarm of war with Rome. Armenia was then abandoned, and
15    VI,     59|    Tigranes, who had once ruled Armenia and was now impeached, did
16    XI,     10|   before spoken as having ruled Armenia, and having been imprisoned
17    XI,     11|        opportunity of occupying Armenia was presented to Mithridates,
18    XI,     11|   routed. Cotys, king of Lesser Armenia, to whom some of the nobles
19    XI,     12|        and was eager to recover Armenia, but was stopped by Vibius
20   XII,     14|      but, by a long detour, for Armenia, then ill-suited to their
21   XII,     52|     brother, Mithridates, ruled Armenia with our powerful support.
22   XII,     52|        prospects and pointed to Armenia, which, as he reminded him,
23   XII,     52|          he lured the nobles of Armenia into revolutionary schemes,
24   XII,     54|        of an allied king and of Armenia, the gift of the Roman people,
25   XII,     54|       of Syria, of the state of Armenia.~ ~
26   XII,     57|       away this same kingdom of Armenia to excite the minds of the
27   XII,     58|        the design of recovering Armenia, but, while he plundered
28   XII,     59|    presented itself of invading Armenia, which, though the possession
29   XII,     59|      abandon his present plans. Armenia was thus again without a
30  XIII,      6|       hearing. When envoys from Armenia were pleading their nation'
31  XIII,      7|        bounds and were ravaging Armenia, from which they had driven
32  XIII,      8|      spanned by bridges; Lesser Armenia was intrusted to Aristobulus,
33  XIII,      8|       and the Parthians quitted Armenia, apparently intending to
34  XIII,      9|      Domitius Corbulo to secure Armenia, thus opening, as it seemed,
35  XIII,      9|       should Corbulo once enter Armenia to take command of the army,
36  XIII,     42|         about the possession of Armenia, which, feebly begun, had
37  XIII,     45|      brother Vologeses, ravaged Armenia, not in stealthy raids as
38  XIII,     45|       they overran the wilds of Armenia. Thus the intended plans
39  XIII,     45|         he was thus driven from Armenia, his ancient possession. ~ ~
40   XIV,     36|     began to take possession of Armenia, when Tigranes arrived,
41   XIV,     36|       his new kingdom. Parts of Armenia, according to their respective
42   XIV,     40|        glory of the recovery of Armenia by the subjugation of Rome'
43    XV,      1|  Tigranes, having been set over Armenia, though he longed at the
44    XV,      1|      action. Tigranes, quitting Armenia, had ravaged the Adiabeni,
45    XV,      1|  quarter - "Already," he said, "Armenia has been given up, and its
46    XV,      2|         me in the possession of Armenia, which is accounted the
47    XV,      3|         was to be driven out of Armenia. He would himself abandon
48    XV,      4|    specially for the defence of Armenia, and that Syria, threatened
49    XV,      6|      legions had been sent into Armenia, and other legions were
50    XV,      6|   emperor for the possession of Armenia and the conclusion of a
51    XV,      7|       Tigranes also was to quit Armenia. "Why," it was asked, "had
52    XV,      7|  exclusively for the defence of Armenia, and it was heard that Caesennius
53    XV,      8|       Calavius Sabinus, entered Armenia, with unlucky omen. In the
54    XV,     10| concentrated all their hopes on Armenia.~ ~
55    XV,     13|     Cappadocia, and thence into Armenia. Beside the other usual
56    XV,     14|         to villages or towns of Armenia, but to a Roman camp with
57    XV,     17|         they would decide about Armenia, and that heaven had granted
58    XV,     17|       of holding or giving away Armenia, while Vasaces declared
59    XV,     19|      that no Roman was to enter Armenia until Nero's reply arrived
60    XV,     20|      their united forces invade Armenia, much weakened, as it was,
61    XV,     20|      demanded the evacuation of Armenia by the garrisons posted
62    XV,     31|        claims to the holding of Armenia, since the gods who ruled
63    XV,     32|   questioned as to the state of Armenia. He replied that all the
64    XV,     34|     battle, and led thence into Armenia the third and sixth legions,
65    XV,     36|       possessions the nobles of Armenia, who had been the first
66   XVI,     26|      receive the sovereignty of Armenia, so that crime at home might
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