Book,  Par.

 1    II,     70|        before him, they had been Mithridates's allies against Sulla,
 2   III,     87|          defeating Antiochus and Mithridates, honoured the fidelity and
 3   III,    103| tremendous wars of Sertorius and Mithridates, had not the offer of an
 4    IV,     18|        of Aesculapius, when king Mithridates ordered a general massacre
 5    IV,     50|       earned during the war with Mithridates, when their city was besieged,
 6    VI,     47|       his rival, and the Iberian Mithridates to be the instrument of
 7    VI,     48|              Of the petty chiefs Mithridates was the first to persuade
 8    XI,     10|             About this same time Mithridates, of whom I have before spoken
 9    XI,     10|         king of the Iberians and Mithridates' brother, now told him that
10    XI,     11|         Armenia was presented to Mithridates, who had the vigorous soldiers
11    XI,     11|         passed into the hands of Mithridates, who showed more cruelty
12   XII,     17|                                  Mithridates of Bosporus, meanwhile,
13   XII,     17|          contrast with the rebel Mithridates. It was accordingly stipulated
14   XII,     18|         town in Dandarica, which Mithridates had abandoned, where it
15   XII,     19|        to the fallen fortunes of Mithridates or to the kingdom of his
16   XII,     20|                        Meanwhile Mithridates, finding arms an unavailing
17   XII,     20|        of Eunones he exclaimed, "Mithridates, whom the Romans have sought
18   XII,     21|                The great name of Mithridates, his reverse, his prayer,
19   XII,     21|         deprived of nothing. For Mithridates, as he deserved heavier
20   XII,     23|   Claudius wrote to Eunones that Mithridates had certainly merited an
21   XII,     24|                      After this, Mithridates was given up and brought
22   XII,     52|         Iberia, and his brother, Mithridates, ruled Armenia with our
23   XII,     52|    reminded him, he had given to Mithridates after driving out the Parthians.
24   XII,     52|         without the knowledge of Mithridates, who was actually loading
25   XII,     53|          a sudden invasion drove Mithridates in terror from the open
26   XII,     55|   surveillance; and he now urged Mithridates to conclude a treaty. He
27   XII,     55|         negotiation to arms." As Mithridates wavered, and suspected the
28   XII,     55|           Under this compulsion, Mithridates agreed to a day and a place
29   XII,     56|    suddenly seizing the knees of Mithridates flung him to the ground.
30   XII,     56|        clothes. Even the sons of Mithridates were butchered for having
31   XII,     57|         Quadratus, learning that Mithridates had been betrayed and that
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