Book,  Par.

 1     I,     10| forty-three million five hundred thousand sesterces "to the people
 2     I,     10|        populace of Rome," of one thousand to every praetorian soldier,
 3     I,     73|       Caecina four legions, five thousand auxiliaries, with some hastily
 4     I,     88|          yet remained to so many thousand men. ~ ~
 5    II,      7|          fleet. It seemed that a thousand vessels were required, and
 6    II,     28|       sounded with the oars of a thousand vessels or were ruffled
 7    II,     31|         Caius Silius with thirty thousand infantry and three thousand
 8    II,     31|      thousand infantry and three thousand cavalry to march against
 9    II,     48|         would bestow two hundred thousand sesterces on each of his
10    II,     78|          in Thebes seven hundred thousand men of military age, and
11    II,    114|      Senate was passed that four thousand of the freedmen class who
12   III,     60|   manufactured. There were forty thousand, one fifth armed like our
13    IV,     81|    efforts at recognition. Fifty thousand persons were maimed or destroyed
14    IV,     81|       fell short of four hundred thousand sesterces, and that no amphitheatre
15    VI,     55|         Ornospades, with several thousand cavalry. Formerly an exile,
16    VI,     62|         his lieutenant with four thousand legionaries and some picked
17    XI,      5|                  Fifteen hundred thousand sesterces and the decorations
18    XI,      6|        who had paid four hundred thousand sesterces to Suilius, stabbed
19    XI,      9|      which might be taken to ten thousand sesterces, and those who
20   XII,     19|       freeborn, and offering ten thousand slaves. As it would have
21   XII,     66|      banks of oars, and nineteen thousand men; he lined the circumference
22  XIII,     41|     annual grant of five hundred thousand sesterces on which Messala
23  XIII,     47|          between the leaders. "A thousand troopers," Tiridates said, "
24  XIII,     47|        which he had united three thousand men of the third, brought
25  XIII,     50|        the rear was guarded by a thousand cavalry, who were ordered
26   XIV,     36|  supported too with a force of a thousand legionaries, three allied
27   XIV,     44|       for defence. About seventy thousand citizens and allies, it
28   XIV,     45|          the number of about ten thousand armed men, when he prepared
29   XIV,     49|          little less than eighty thousand of the Britons, with a loss
30   XIV,     50|         sending from Germany two thousand legionaries, eight cohorts
31   XIV,     50|    cohorts of auxiliaries, and a thousand cavalry. On their arrival
32    XV,     94|       troops and distributed two thousand sesterces to every common
33   XVI,     38|          Ostorius twelve hundred thousand, with the decorations of
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