Book,  Par.

 1    II,      1|           had its origin among the Parthians, who disdained as a foreigner
 2    II,      2|            Soon they felt shame at Parthians having become degenerate,
 3    II,      2|         slavery, were to rule over Parthians."~ ~
 4    II,      3|        thus virtues with which the Parthians were unfamiliar, and vices
 5    II,     76|        from Artabanus, king of the Parthians. He had sent them to recall
 6    VI,     19|        himself on the mercy of the Parthians. He was, at any rate, found
 7    VI,     46|           The chief adviser of the Parthians in sending the secret embassy
 8    VI,     48|           up to the support of the Parthians were easily kept back, all
 9    VI,     49|            of a blockade, till the Parthians, who were unused to such
10    VI,     51|           variety of conflict. The Parthians, accustomed to pursue or
11    VI,     51|    Iberians seized, and hurled the Parthians from their steeds, and embarrassed
12    VI,     51|     mistake, struck panic into the Parthians, and they yielded the victory. ~ ~
13    VI,     53|           Carmanians. Meantime the Parthians, he thought, indulgent as
14    VI,     63|            with the consent of the Parthians, received the submission
15    VI,     64|          look with contempt on the Parthians; as soon as they are at
16    XI,     10|     brother, now told him that the Parthians were divided, and that the
17    XI,     11|        little to the credit of the Parthians, whom a single city had
18    XI,     12|          successes terminated. The Parthians, victorious though they
19    XI,     13|           the palace, he drove the Parthians by his cruelty and profligacy
20   XII,     11|           time an embassy from the Parthians, which had been sent, as
21   XII,     11|            feebleness. Between the Parthians and ourselves there was
22   XII,     12|         submissive attitude of the Parthians. He compared himself to
23   XII,     52|          Vologeses was king of the Parthians; on the mother's side, he
24   XII,     52|  Mithridates after driving out the Parthians. But open violence, he said,
25   XII,     59|       power. On the advance of the Parthians, the Iberians dispersed
26  XIII,      7|       disquieting rumours that the Parthians had again broken their bounds
27  XIII,      8|          his son Vardanes, and the Parthians quitted Armenia, apparently
28  XIII,     42|            more connected with the Parthians, to whose subjection, in
29  XIII,     45|       behalf of himself and of the Parthians, why, when hostages had
30   XIV,     35|     success was the easier, as the Parthians were distracted by a war
31    XV,      1|            from us, and unless the Parthians help us, we shall find that
32    XV,      8|           without success, and the Parthians made open war. Nor did Paetus
33    XV,     10|          display of force that the Parthians, giving up their preparations
34    XV,     17|          and of bestowing, but the Parthians, the reality of power. After
35    XV,     17|       should be surrendered to the Parthians, and when all this had been
36    XV,     18| facilitating his march. It was the Parthians, however, who had required
37    XV,     19|          Corbulo declared that the Parthians on the other hand were in
38    XV,     20|       ended with the flight of the Parthians, Paetus replied that for
39    XV,     20|           about the designs of the Parthians, he should return to Syria,
40    XV,     31|         over its possession to the Parthians, not without disgrace to
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA1) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2009. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License