Book,  Par.

 1     I,     14| Citizens were proscribed, lands divided, without so much as the
 2     I,     36|       mutually suspicious, they divided off the new troops from
 3     I,     42|     fact that, instead of being divided or instigated by a few persons,
 4     I,     64|  resting from labour, that they divided themselves into two factions,
 5     I,     67|      spread devastation widely, divided his eager legions into four
 6     I,     72|         hope of the enemy being divided between Arminius and Segestes,
 7     I,    104|       plan proposed) were to be divided into several streams and
 8    II,     39|                His property was divided among his accusers, and
 9    II,     67|        Mazippa. The army was so divided that Tacfarinas kept the
10    II,     87|         his kingdom. Thrace was divided between his son Rhoemetalces,
11   III,     55|      Trebellienus Rufus, it was divided against itself, from not
12   III,    105|            Blaesus then further divided his triple army into several
13    IV,     68|       of renown. The young were divided between Tarsa and Turesis,
14    IV,     73|          the sons of King Atys, divided the nation between them
15    VI,     68|         presence in person, was divided in mind, and doubted whether
16    XI,     10|         that the Parthians were divided, and that the highest questions
17    XI,     11|         forces of the East were divided, and hesitated which side
18   XII,     33|       of the troops. These were divided into two columns; and those
19   XII,     36|       Pannonia. Vangio and Sido divided his kingdom between them;
20   XII,     64|      the province, which was so divided that Galilea was governed
21  XIII,      9|      armies of the East were so divided that half the auxiliaries
22  XIII,     19|      and the impossibility of a divided throne. It is related by
23  XIII,     20|      having on such an occasion divided houses and estates among
24  XIII,     45|         hostilities everywhere, divided his army, so that his generals
25  XIII,     51|      not sufficient force to be divided between adequately garrisoning
26    XV,      7|  arrived, and the army was thus divided; the fourth and twelfth
27    XV,     44|       which impended, Torquatus divided the arteries in his arms.
28    XV,     50|      his name. Rome, indeed, is divided into fourteen districts,
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