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 1  T-II|            me,~so as not to fear the tribes the Danube scarcely checks,~
 2 T-III|          life under the Bears,~those tribes must be hard-pressed by
 3 T-III|             in speech, with the wild tribes:~every place fills me with
 4  T-IV|             foreign ships.~There are tribes round it, seeking plunder
 5   T-V|            Scythian Sea.~Innumerable tribes round about threaten fierce
 6   T-V|         existence among the Scythian tribes:~both are a heavy punishment.
 7  ExII|      Oresteian goddess,~or the other tribes that when Danube’s frozen
 8  ExII|              acquaintance with these tribes.~It’s enough that I should
 9  ExIV| yellow-haired~Coralli, and the other tribes of the barbarous Danube?~
10  ExIV|            care.~He kept the Moesian tribes to their peace treaty,~he
11  ExIV|             Laestrygonians,~with the tribes the Danube reveals in its
12   Ind|             the threat from Thracian tribes.~Book EIV.XIV:1-62 Preferable
13   Ind|            victories over the German tribes. Ovid however does not appear
14   Ind|      considers them a merging of two tribes and aggressive by nature.~
15   Ind|            Tomis but not the warlike tribes.~ ~Gigantes, Giants~Monsters,
16   Ind|          barrier against the warring tribes.~Book TIII. X:41-78 Book
17   Ind|              II:53-100 In winter the tribes attack across the frozen
18   Ind|           Not as bad as the Thracian tribes.~Ibis:365-412 Attacked Ulysses’
19   Ind|      Pannonians, a group of Illyrian tribes south and west of the bend
20   Ind|            storms, and the barbarous tribes on its coast, later hospitable,
21   Ind|           among the hostile Scythian tribes.~Book TIII. XII:1-54 He
22   Ind|     chieftain reigning over Ligurian tribes. The son of Marcus Julius
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