Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 8 | soldiers of the thirteenth legion, which was present (for
2 I, 9 | Caesar set off with that legion to Ariminum, and there met
3 I, 13 | cohorts of the thirteenth legion from the garrison, and set
4 I, 16 | the mean time, the twelfth legion came to join Caesar; with
5 I, 19 | five cohorts of the eighth legion. The inhabitants, as soon
6 I, 19 | the three days the eighth legion came to him, and twenty-two
7 I, 31 | his lieutenant, with one legion to Sardinia; Curio, the
8 I, 43 | in his work; and to each legion, one after the other, he
9 I, 44 | the advanced men of one legion to hasten forward and seize
10 I, 45 | advanced guard gave way, the legion which was stationed on that
11 I, 46 | his men and led the ninth legion to their relief, and checked
12 I, 46 | the soldiers of the ninth legion, being over zealous to repair
13 I, 47 | second line of the fourteenth legion, who, for his extraordinary
14 I, 55 | afterward transported a legion: and having begun a bridge
15 I, 65 | and left them, with one legion besides, to guard the camp:
16 I, 84 | line. Three more from each legion followed them, as reserves:
17 II, 20 | to reach Gades with his legion as soon as possible, lest
18 II, 20 | ready to deliver up the legion which he commanded. He sends
19 II, 20 | having delivered up the legion, went to Caesar to Corduba,
20 II, 23 | with a garrison of one legion, guarded this town. The
21 III, 4 | brought with him; one veteran legion from Sicily, which being
22 III, 16 | having set out with one legion to gain possession of the
23 III, 16 | Bibulus's demands, he left his legion behind him, and returned
24 III, 22 | Quintus Pedius with one legion, he died of it; and Caelius
25 III, 28 | soldiers of the veteran legion, who had also struggled,
26 III, 34 | army, and having drawn his legion out of Oricum, which he
27 III, 34 | with the twenty-seventh, a legion composed of young soldiers,
28 III, 35 | went to Thessaly with his legion. As there were two factions
29 III, 45 | these, when Caesar's ninth legion had gained a certain post,
30 III, 46 | Antonius, who commanded that legion, ordered the signal of battle
31 III, 46 | The soldiers of the ninth legion suddenly closing their files,
32 III, 52 | sustained the charge of a legion with three cohorts, and
33 III, 62 | quaestor, with the ninth legion, and as he was not in a
34 III, 63 | our cohorts of the ninth legion were on guard by the sea-side,
35 III, 66 | to them appeared like a legion, were retired behind the
36 III, 66 | before, when Caesar's ninth legion had opposed a party of Pompey'
37 III, 67 | word that the standard of a legion was carried to this place.
38 III, 67 | hoping to surprise this legion, and anxious to repair the
39 III, 67 | among which was the ninth legion, which had lost so many
40 III, 67 | two lines against Pompey's legion and his lesser camp. Nor
41 III, 67 | inclosed within it; and as the legion on its repulse had retired
42 III, 69 | marched with the fifth legion, which he called away from
43 III, 69 | suddenly changed. For Pompey's legion, encouraged by the hope
44 III, 75 | journey; and he detached one legion with them as a convoy. This
45 III, 88 | the center. The Cilician legion in conjunction with the
46 III, 89 | custom, had placed the tenth legion on the right, the ninth
47 III, 89 | Dyrrachium. He placed the eighth legion so close to the ninth, as
48 III, 91 | first centurion of the tenth legion, a man of pre-eminent bravery.
49 III, 101| that though there was a legion in garrison at Messana,
50 III, 102| advance, and ordered one legion to follow him by shorter
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 51 I, 7 | there was in all only one legion in Further Gaul: he orders
52 I, 8 | 8 Meanwhile, with the legion which he had with him and
53 I, 40 | would go with only the tenth legion, of which he had no misgivings,
54 I, 40 | praetorian cohort.”—This legion Caesar had both greatly
55 I, 41 | engendered; and the tenth legion was the first to return
56 I, 42 | legionary soldiers of the tenth legion, in which he placed the
57 I, 42 | the soldiers of the tenth legion said, not without a touch
58 I, 42 | promised to have the tenth legion in place of his praetorian
59 I, 43 | conference. Caesar stationed the legion, which he had brought [with
60 I, 46 | any danger to his chosen legion, yet he did not think proper
61 I, 52 | Caesar appointed over each legion a lieutenant and a questor,
62 II, 17 | difficulty, when the first legion had come into the camp,
63 II, 17 | distance, to attack that legion while under baggage, which
64 II, 21 | troops, and came to the tenth legion. Having encouraged the soldiers
65 II, 23 | exposed, since the twelfth legion was posted in the right
66 II, 25 | after encouraging the tenth legion, to the right wing; where
67 II, 25 | standards of the twelfth legion being collected together
68 II, 25 | the chief centurion of the legion P. Sextius Baculus, a very
69 II, 26 | perceived that the seventh legion, which stood close by him,
70 II, 26 | our camp, sent the tenth legion as a relief to our men,
71 II, 26 | danger the camp and the legion and the commander were involved,
72 II, 34 | whom he had sent with one legion against the Veneti, the
73 III, 1 | Servius Galba with the twelfth legion and part of the cavalry,
74 III, 1 | necessary, to station the legion in these places, for the
75 III, 1 | the other cohorts of that legion in a village of the Veragri,
76 III, 2 | war and cutting off that legion. First, because they despised
77 III, 2 | because they despised a single legion, on account of its small
78 III, 6 | his march, he brought the legion safe into the [country of
79 III, 7 | quarters with the seventh legion among the Andes, who border
80 IV, 25 | carried the eagle of the tenth legion, after supplicating the
81 IV, 25 | turn out favorably to the legion, exclaimed, “Leap, fellow
82 IV, 32 | are being transacted, one legion had been sent to forage,
83 IV, 32 | that direction in which the legion had marched. Caesar, suspecting
84 IV, 32 | their ground, and that, the legion being crowded together,
85 V, 9 | soldiers of the seventh legion, having formed a testudo
86 V, 23 | Trebonius, his lieutenants. One legion which he had raised last
87 V, 24 | orders Lucius Plancus, with a legion, to proceed quickly from
88 V, 26 | winter-quarters, in order that no legion should be able to come to
89 V, 26 | to the relief of another legion, that Gauls could not easily
90 V, 28 | without danger to the nearest legion; if all Gaul conspired with
91 V, 37 | matter of difficulty for the legion which was wintering with
92 V, 38 | dependents, begin to attack the legion: our men quickly run together
93 V, 43 | 44 In that legion there were two very brave
94 V, 44 | danger of Cicero and the legion. ~
95 V, 45 | from him. He orders the legion to set forward in the middle
96 V, 45 | ordering him to lead forth his legion into the territories of
97 V, 45 | Labienus to come with his legion to the frontiers of the
98 V, 46 | Samarobriva and assigns him a legion, because he was leaving
99 V, 46 | him on the march with his legion, as he had been commanded.
100 V, 46 | hazard he would lead out his legion from winter-quarters; he
101 V, 51 | belonging to the enemy: the legion having been drawn out, he
102 V, 51 | desert, and likewise the legion; he addresses individually
103 V, 52 | sends back Fabius with his legion to his winter-quarters;
104 V, 52 | placed over the thirteenth legion, that large forces of those
105 V, 56 | apprehensions as to his own and the legion’s danger, but was devising
106 VI, 7 | attack Labienus and the legion which was wintering in their
107 VI, 32 | He left the fourteenth legion as a guard for the baggage,
108 VI, 32 | brought over. Over that legion and camp he places Q. Tullius
109 VI, 33 | aware corn was due to that legion which was being left in
110 VI, 35 | return to the baggage and the legion. Here it might be learned
111 VI, 40 | to higher ranks in this legion, in order that they might
112 VII, 42 | was on his march to his legion; they compel those who had
113 VII, 45 | the maneuver. He sends one legion to the same hill, and after
114 VII, 47 | the soldiers of the tenth legion, by which he was then accompanied,
115 VII, 47 | centurion of the eighth legion, who, it was ascertained,
116 VII, 49 | himself, advancing with the legion a little from that place
117 VII, 50 | a centurion of the same legion, after attempting to hew
118 VII, 50 | opportunity, and retreat to the legion.” Thus he fell fighting
119 VII, 51 | centurions; but the tenth legion, which had been posted in
120 VII, 51 | cohorts of the thirteenth legion, which, being led from the
121 VII, 60 | remaining cohorts of the same legion to proceed a little after
122 VII, 62 | wing, where the seventh legion stood: on the left wing,
123 VII, 62 | which position the twelfth legion held, although the first
124 VII, 62 | tribunes of the seventh legion, they faced about their
125 VII, 62 | they faced about their legion to the enemy’s rear and
126 VII, 89 | of the Ruteni, with one legion each. He stations Quintus
127 VIII, 2 | Bibracte, to the thirteenth legion, which he had stationed
128 VIII, 2 | joined to it the eleventh legion which was next it. Leaving
129 VIII, 2 | be deterred, by a single legion quartered among them, from
130 VIII, 4 | the fourteenth and sixth legion out of quarters on the Saone,
131 VIII, 6 | again draws the eleventh legion out of quarters, and writes
132 VIII, 11 | dispatch for the thirteenth legion which was in winter quarters
133 VIII, 24 | quaestor, with the eleventh legion; Caius Fabius was detached
134 VIII, 24 | himself, and sent the twelfth legion which had been under him
135 VIII, 36 | enemy’s camp. He divides one legion among the three camps, and
136 VIII, 36 | he marched up with his legion, armed and in order of battle.
137 VIII, 54 | by the senate, that one legion should be sent by Pompey,
138 VIII, 54 | Caesar alone. For the first legion which Pompey sent to Caesar,
139 VIII, 54 | of his enemies, sent the legion back to Cneius Pompey, and
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