Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | before been offered to a Roman citizen. While these transactions
2 I, 5 | title of friends of the Roman people, and boasted among
3 I, 8 | which words and decree the Roman people were obliged to repair
4 I, 10 | chagrined, that the favor of the Roman people was wrested from
5 I, 10 | direction of the senate and Roman people. That these things
6 I, 18 | great number of senators and Roman knights, would be in extreme
7 I, 23 | liberty, and that of the Roman people, who were oppressed
8 I, 24 | of the soldiers, and the Roman knights to be brought before
9 I, 24 | men, and a great number of Roman knights and burgesses, whom
10 I, 31 | He was raising levies of Roman citizens, among the Lucani
11 I, 36 | they understood that the Roman people was divided into
12 I, 78 | ranks, and conferred on the Roman knights the honor of tribunes. ~
13 II, 18 | Gades to Caius Gallonius, a Roman knight, and friend of Domitius,
14 II, 18 | these means he terrified the Roman citizens of that province,
15 II, 19 | appointed time; and not a Roman citizen of any note but
16 II, 20 | doing any injury, and the Roman citizens residing there
17 II, 21 | to all severally: to the Roman citizens, because they had
18 II, 21 | remitted the tax which the Roman citizens had promised to
19 II, 36 | his favors to them; the Roman population was composed
20 III, 4 | made up nine legions of Roman citizens; five from Italy,
21 III, 9 | situation and a hill. The Roman citizens built wooden towers,
22 III, 10 | hundred and thirty cohorts of Roman citizens, in Italy and Spain:
23 III, 11 | against the power of the Roman people, and as the citizens
24 III, 12 | to what all Italy and the Roman people had judged. As soon
25 III, 21 | apprehensive of danger, because the Roman citizens residing there
26 III, 29 | 29]After this action, the Roman citizens, who resided at
27 III, 32 | exacted, not only from the Roman citizens, but from every
28 III, 40 | vigorous defense of the Roman citizens who belonged to
29 III, 71 | sixty rank and file, several Roman knights of distinction,
30 III, 102| that province, Grecians and Roman citizens, should take the
31 III, 102| inhabitants of Antioch and Roman citizens who traded there,
32 III, 107| the jurisdiction of the Roman people, and of him as consul,
33 III, 108| same will he conjured the Roman people by all the gods,
34 III, 110| name and discipline of the Roman people, and had married
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 35 I, 2 | 240, and in breadth 180 [Roman] miles. ~~
36 I, 3 | friend” by the senate of the Roman people), to seize upon the
37 I, 6 | well-affected toward the Roman people, or compel them by
38 I, 8 | carries along for nineteen [Roman, not quite eighteen English]
39 I, 8 | custom and precedent of the Roman people, grant any one a
40 I, 10 | warlike men, enemies of the Roman people, bordering upon an
41 I, 11 | so well deserved of the Roman people, that their fields
42 I, 12 | signal calamity upon the Roman people, was the first to
43 I, 13 | with Caesar:—that, “if the Roman people would make peace
44 I, 13 | ancient disgrace of the Roman people and the characteristic
45 I, 13 | from the disaster of the Roman people and the destruction
46 I, 14 | happened undeservedly to the Roman people: for if they had
47 I, 14 | hostages; of that fact the Roman people were witness.” Having
48 I, 18 | under the government of the Roman people he despairs not only
49 I, 19 | very high regard for the Roman people, his great affection
50 I, 25 | been by one stroke of the (Roman) javelins pierced through
51 I, 30 | wrong done by them to the Roman people, yet that circumstance
52 I, 30 | land of Gaul than of the Roman people, because the Helvetii,
53 I, 31 | their own valor and from the Roman people’s hospitality and
54 I, 31 | supplicate aid from the Roman people, nor refuse to be
55 I, 31 | some aid in Caesar and the Roman people, the Gauls must all
56 I, 31 | victory, or by name of the Roman people, intimidate him,
57 I, 33 | empire [as that] of the Roman people he considered very
58 I, 33 | would be] dangerous to the Roman people, and judged, that
59 I, 34 | business either Caesar or the Roman people at all had in his
60 I, 35 | kindness by himself and the Roman people (as he had in his
61 I, 35 | Caesar] himself and the Roman people, [viz.] that when
62 I, 35 | that “he himself and the Roman people will entertain a
63 I, 35 | the other friends of the Roman people), will not overlook
64 I, 36 | pleased; that in that way the Roman people were wont to govern
65 I, 36 | part did not dictate to the Roman people as to the manner
66 I, 36 | to be obstructed by the Roman people in his right; that
67 I, 36 | continue to do that, the Roman people’s name of ‘brothers’
68 I, 40 | after the friendship of the Roman people; why should any one
69 I, 40 | reject neither his nor the Roman people’s favor. But even
70 I, 42 | consideration of his own and the Roman people’s great favors toward
71 I, 43 | it was the custom of the Roman people to desire not only
72 I, 43 | to the friendship of the Roman people should be torn from
73 I, 44 | That the friendship of the Roman people ought to prove to
74 I, 44 | expectation. But if through the Roman people the tribute was to
75 I, 44 | renounce the friendship of the Roman people no less heartily
76 I, 44 | come into Gaul before the Roman people. That never before
77 I, 44 | never before this time did a Roman army go beyond the frontiers
78 I, 44 | nor received any from the Roman people in the struggles
79 I, 44 | nobles and leading men of the Roman people; he had assurance
80 I, 45 | that neither his nor the Roman people’s practice would
81 I, 45 | Ariovistus rather than to the Roman people; that the Arverni
82 I, 45 | Fabius Maximus, and that the Roman people had pardoned them
83 I, 45 | was the sovereignty of the Roman people in Gaul most just:
84 I, 47 | as embassador one of his [Roman] officers, and should expose
85 II, 1 | confederacy against the Roman people, and giving hostages
86 II, 1 | dissatisfied that the army of the Roman people should pass the winter
87 II, 3 | protection and disposal of the Roman people: and that they had
88 II, 3 | confederacy against the Roman people: and were prepared
89 II, 13 | contend in arms against the Roman people. In like manner,
90 II, 14 | Aedui and made war upon the Roman people, being urged thereto
91 II, 15 | surrendered themselves to the Roman people and thrown aside
92 II, 31 | suffer any fate from the Roman people, than to be tortured
93 II, 32 | who had surrendered to the Roman people.” The matter being
94 II, 33 | made thither [i. e. by the Roman soldiers] from the nearest
95 II, 34 | dominion and power of the Roman people. ~
96 III, 1 | Alps, through which [the Roman] merchants had been accustomed
97 III, 4 | not given to the wearied [Roman] to retire from the fight,
98 III, 10 | in the detention of the Roman knights, the rebellion raised
99 III, 18 | they ought to go to the [Roman] camp. Many things persuaded
100 III, 18 | with which to fill up the Roman trenches, and hasten to
101 III, 23 | adopting the practice of the Roman people, begin to select [
102 IV, 7 | neither make war upon the Roman people first, nor do they
103 IV, 16 | discovered that the army of the Roman people both could and dared
104 IV, 16 | bounded the empire of the Roman people; if he did not think
105 IV, 16 | fame and friendship of the Roman people.” They promised a
106 IV, 17 | own dignity or that of the Roman people. Therefore, although
107 IV, 21 | to the government of the Roman people. Having given them
108 IV, 21 | embrace the protection of the Roman people, and apprize them
109 IV, 22 | they had made war upon the Roman people, and promising to
110 V, 3 | from the alliance of the Roman people, and informs him
111 V, 21 | should pay each year to the Roman people; he forbids and commands
112 V, 26 | 27 C. Arpineius, a Roman knight, the intimate friend
113 V, 26 | forces he could conquer the Roman people; but that it was
114 V, 27 | dared to make war upon the Roman people of their own accord.
115 V, 28 | reduced under the sway of the Roman people, her pristine glory
116 V, 34 | mean time, that part of the Roman army, of necessity, was
117 V, 40 | feelings toward Cicero and the Roman people that they deny them
118 V, 40 | is not the custom of the Roman people to accept any condition
119 V, 50 | if “any, either Gaul or Roman, was willing to go over
120 V, 53 | uniform fidelity toward the Roman people, the other for their
121 V, 53 | submit to commands from the Roman people. ~~
122 VI, 1 | discipline and the power of the Roman people could accomplish. ~
123 VI, 7 | than was usual with the Roman people. By these means he
124 VI, 34 | discipline and practice of the Roman army required, the situation
125 VI, 35 | reach Aduatuca; there the Roman army has deposited all its
126 VI, 40 | conduct of Caius Trebonius, a Roman knight, who had been appointed
127 VII, 3 | at Genabum, and slay the Roman citizens who had settled
128 VII, 3 | Fusius Cita, a distinguished Roman knight, who by Caesar’s
129 VII, 8 | dangerous to enter the line of Roman garrisons, Caesar marches
130 VII, 17 | unworthy of the majesty of the Roman people and their former
131 VII, 17 | avenge the names of the Roman citizens who perished at
132 VII, 20 | with truth;—listen to these Roman soldiers!” He produces some
133 VII, 26 | should be pre-occupied by the Roman cavalry, desisted from their
134 VII, 33 | closely connected with the Roman people, which he himself
135 VII, 36 | commanded a view [of the Roman encampment], he presented
136 VII, 38 | robbers.” He points to the Roman citizens, who had accompanied
137 VII, 39 | from the alliance with the Roman people, owing to the depraved
138 VII, 42 | plunder the property of the Roman citizens, and either massacre
139 VII, 60 | brought from Melodunum to Roman knights, one to each, and
140 VII, 61 | the superintendence of the Roman knights, whom he had appointed
141 VII, 65 | rest, nay, even from the Roman knights and veterans, and
142 VII, 74 | cavalry; and in order that the Roman soldiers might not be compelled
143 VII, 77 | and laws, and subjected to Roman despotism, is oppressed
144 VII, 78 | When these came to the Roman fortifications, weeping,
145 VIII, 1 | places at the same time, the Roman army would neither have
146 VIII, 7 | aversion to the name of the Roman people: that a few days
147 VIII, 16 | considerable damage to the Roman foragers. ~
148 VIII, 19 | and the enemy that the [Roman] general was near at hand,
149 VIII, 23 | come within sight of any Roman.
150 VIII, 24 | Hither Gaul, to protect the Roman colonies, and prevent any
151 VIII, 26 | continued in friendship to the Roman people, though a part of
152 VIII, 26 | prepared to assault the Roman camp. But after spending
153 VIII, 27 | forced to withstand the Roman army without, and observe,
154 VIII, 30 | robbers, and intercepted the Roman baggage and provisions),
155 VIII, 36 | German horse observing the Roman colors, fought with great
156 VIII, 44 | a sincere friend of the Roman people, delivered without
157 VIII, 47 | bringing provisions to the Roman quarters. ~
158 VIII, 48 | into the presence of any Roman. As Antonius judged that
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