Book,  Par.

 1     I,     11|        passed, the names of the nations conquered by Augustus were
 2     I,     55|      ambassador, and the law of nations have been violated by you.
 3     I,     79|     rods, axes, and toga. Other nations in their ignorance of Roman
 4    II,     55|  Commageni and Cilicians, these nations became excited, a majority
 5    II,     58|         The strength of the two nations, the valour of their chiefs
 6    II,     78|  tributes were imposed on these nations, the weight of silver and
 7    II,     81|  received invitations from many nations, he had still, he said,
 8    II,     95|   neighbouring peoples. Foreign nations and kings grieved over him,
 9    II,    118|         of song among barbarous nations, though to Greek historians,
10   III,     38|     became perpetual among many nations. Some from the beginning,
11   III,     66|         subdued the most savage nations and received or refused
12   III,     73|    wealth to strange or hostile nations? ~ ~
13    IV,     33|    rumours; that elsewhere also nations were rending the empire
14    IV,     45|                             All nations and cities are ruled by
15    IV,     73| augmented by the immigration of nations into that part of Greece
16    VI,     45|         against the surrounding nations, while he disdained the
17    VI,     68|         and Elymaeans and other nations in their rear, and then,
18    XI,      1|     would find it easy to rouse nations allied to his house. Claudius
19    XI,     30|         fellow-citizens several nations on the very same day. Strangers
20   XII,     12|         she wished even foreign nations to enjoy repose." Upon this
21   XII,     23|    triumphs, they were won over nations and kings hitherto unconquered. ~ ~
22   XII,     27|     after the conquest of great nations, had never exercised this
23   XII,     32|        power even to the allied nations, procured the despatch of
24   XII,     37|     instigation the surrounding nations chose as a battlefield a
25   XII,     43|       ancestors and ruling many nations. My present lot is as glorious
26  XIII,     70|    granted to envoys from those nations which were distinguished
27  XIII,     71|         man, famous among those nations and loyal to Rome, Boiocalus
28  XIII,     71|      and a solitude to friendly nations. Once these fields belonged
29   XIV,     16|       giving answers to foreign nations! He glanced too with indirect
30   XIV,     50|      our supplies as their own. Nations, too, so high-spirited inclined
31   XIV,     56|       we have in our households nations with different customs to
32   XIV,     73|      and I distrust no less the nations of Asia, because of the
33    XV,     26|         each man's loyalty. And nations were timidly sensitive to
34    XV,     31|  destinies of the most powerful nations, had handed over its possession
35    XV,     56|      ruined, as also the allied nations and the free states, as
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