Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|       the beginning was ruled by kings. Freedom and the consulship
 2    II,      2|      Phraates and the succeeding kings in the bloodshed of civil
 3    II,     55|        Antiochus and Philopator, kings respectively of the Commageni
 4    II,     55|        rule, some, that of their kings. The provinces too of Syria
 5    II,     79|     emulation and vast wealth of kings; the lake hollowed out of
 6    II,     82|  barbarians who followed the two kings, lest they might disturb
 7    II,     83|    frontier, to Rhescuporis. The kings too themselves differed,
 8    II,     84|          a centurion to tell the kings not to decide their dispute
 9    II,     95|     peoples. Foreign nations and kings grieved over him, so great
10    II,    102|          wrote word to the petty kings of Cilicia that they were
11    II,    105|      auxiliaries which the petty kings had sent, by mixing with
12    II,    118|         her early rise, as other kings and generals, but in the
13   III,     38|      beginning, or when tired of kings, preferred codes of laws.
14   III,     38|   legislator, to whose laws even kings were to be subject. ~ ~
15   III,     85|          allies, even decrees of kings who had flourished before
16    IV,      5|        then had under arms, what kings were our allies, and how
17    IV,      6|     Iberian, Albanian, and other kings, to whom our greatness was
18    IV,     13|      Julian house, all the Alban kings, Romulus, Rome's founder,
19    IV,     44|        the defeat and capture of kings, or whenever they turned
20    IV,     73|           Aristonicus, and other kings. But the people of Hypaepa,
21    IV,     74|   standing and there were mighty kings in Asia. They appealed too
22    IV,     83|          or by some other of the kings. As to that point historians
23    VI,     16|         In former days, when the kings and subsequently the chief
24    XI,     27|         were appointed while the kings still ruled, and this the
25   XII,     11|    yielded to us out of respect. Kings' sons were given as hostages,
26   XII,     12|        bear with the caprices of kings, and frequent revolutions
27   XII,     22| harbourless sea, against warlike kings and wandering tribes, on
28   XII,     23|        were won over nations and kings hitherto unconquered. ~ ~
29   XII,     26|    Judaea, on the death of their kings, Sohaemus and Agrippa, were
30   XII,     28|      vainglorious efforts of our kings in this matter. Still, I
31   XII,     63|         as a descendant from the kings of Arcadia, than of the
32  XIII,      9|      Cappadocia. The confederate kings were instructed to obey
33  XIII,     70|        Verritus and Malorix, the kings of the tribe, as far as
34  XIII,     70|         far as Germans are under kings. Already they had settled
35    XV,     33|      tetrarchs, the tributaries, kings, prefects and procurators,
36   XVI,      1|      money, or that the Numidian kings, already for other reasons
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