Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 1 | prolongation of the command of his province. Pompey, who was estranged
2 I, 1 | comes to Caesar in his province. Curio had made many and
3 I, 1 | that two legions, and the province of Cisalpine Gaul, and Illyricum,
4 I, 3 | Pompey should set out for his province, that there might be no
5 I, 5 | return. Similar hopes of a province and armies, which he expected
6 I, 10 | Let Pompey go to his own province; let them both disband their
7 I, 12 | Ariminum and return to his province; but that he [Pompey] should
8 I, 12 | should himself retain his province and the legions that belonged
9 I, 12 | merely promise to go to his province, without naming the day
10 I, 23 | that he had not left his province to do mischief [to any man],
11 I, 31 | understood that the whole province was combined [against him],
12 I, 31 | assembly, he fled from his province. ~
13 I, 32 | in the government of the province, who, having lost his cohorts,
14 I, 32 | and his knowledge of that province, he found the means of effecting
15 I, 32 | praetorship, he had obtained that province. He, when Tubero came to
16 I, 40 | belonging to the former province had shields, those of the
17 I, 40 | mountaineers, who border on the Province in Gaul. He had been informed
18 I, 50 | coming in from the whole province: they had a good store of
19 I, 86 | peace, or for the use of the province, which, from the length
20 II, 1 | carriages and men from the whole Province, and orders hurdles and
21 II, 17 | disposition of the whole province to Caesar. These sentiments
22 II, 17 | heard that the whole Hither province had entered into a confederacy,
23 II, 18 | made levies throughout the province; and, having completed his
24 II, 18 | cohorts thither from the province to guard them, and gave
25 II, 18 | the Roman citizens of that province, and obliged them to promise
26 II, 18 | republic, and forced the whole province to take an oath of allegiance
27 II, 18 | informed that the whole province was inclined to favor Caesar'
28 II, 18 | and clients in the hither province. ~
29 II, 19 | published through the whole province, there was not a state that
30 II, 19 | strongest state in the whole province, of themselves drove out
31 II, 20 | island. The affection of the province to Caesar proved so great
32 II, 21 | Cassius governor of the province, and assigned him four legions.
33 II, 21 | greatest part of the nearer province waited his arrival. Having
34 III, 31 | of horse from the whole province. When they were collected,
35 III, 31 | and when he came into the province, which was under great anxiety
36 III, 32 | had been demanded from the province at large, was most vigorously
37 III, 32 | man, and best citizen. The province was overrun with bailiffs
38 III, 32 | two years, the debt of the province was doubled: but notwithstanding,
39 III, 34 | hundred horse; from which province, Menedemus, the principal
40 III, 102| all the young men of that province, Grecians and Roman citizens,
41 III, 105| all the senators in the province that he might have them
42 III, 110| freebooters, from Syria, and the province of Cilicia, and the adjacent
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 43 I, 1 | and refinement of [our] Province, and merchants least frequently
44 I, 2 | Rhone, which separates our Province from the Helvetii. From
45 I, 6 | the other, through our Province, much easier and freer from
46 I, 7 | their route through our Province he hastens to set out from
47 I, 7 | Geneva. He orders the whole Province [to furnish] as great a
48 I, 7 | intention to march through the Province without doing any harm,
49 I, 7 | of marching through the Province were given them, would abstain
50 I, 8 | which had assembled from the Province, he carries along for nineteen [
51 I, 8 | one a passage through the Province; and he gives them to understand,
52 I, 10 | Toulouse] is a state in the Province. If this took place, he
53 I, 10 | with great danger to the Province to have warlike men, enemies
54 I, 10 | Vocontii in the Further Province on the seventh day from
55 I, 10 | remote town of the Hither Province; thence he leads his army
56 I, 10 | are the first beyond the Province on the opposite side of
57 I, 14 | attempted a route through the Province by force, in that they had
58 I, 15 | together from all parts of the Province and from the Aedui and their
59 I, 19 | Procillus, chief of the province of Gaul, an intimate friend
60 I, 28 | become borderers upon the province of Gaul and the Allobroges.
61 I, 33 | from going forth into the province and thence marching into
62 I, 33 | separated the Sequani from our province. Against which events he
63 I, 35 | the administration of the province of Gaul should, as far as
64 I, 44 | beyond the frontiers of the province of Gaul. What [said he]
65 I, 44 | domains?—that this was his province of Gaul, just as that is
66 I, 45 | not reduced them into a province or imposed a tribute upon
67 I, 53 | of the first rank in the province of Gaul, his intimate acquaintance
68 II, 29 | they were marching into our province and Italy, having deposited
69 III, 2 | parts to the neighboring province [of Gaul], not only to secure
70 III, 6 | hastens to return into the province; and as no enemy opposed
71 III, 9 | rowers to be raised from the province; sailors and pilots to be
72 III, 20 | which are the states of the province of Gaul, that border on
73 V, 1 | heard that the part of the province nearest them was being laid
74 VI, 24 | but their proximity to the Province and knowledge of commodities
75 VII, 1 | levy throughout the entire province. Report of these events
76 VII, 6 | summon the legions into the province, he was aware that on their
77 VII, 7 | to make a descent on the province in the direction of Narbo.
78 VII, 7 | among the Ruteni, in the province of the Volcae Arecomici,
79 VII, 7 | portion of the forces from the province, and the recruits which
80 VII, 56 | direct his march into the Province, both because the infamy
81 VII, 59 | had marched hastily to the province. But the Bellovaci, who
82 VII, 64 | Segusiani, who border on our province: to these he adds eight
83 VII, 64 | the dominion of the whole province. ~~
84 VII, 65 | collected from the entire province by Lucius Caesar, the lieutenant,
85 VII, 65 | receive no aid from the Province or Italy, while all communication
86 VII, 66 | easily render aid to the province, Vercingetorix encamped
87 VII, 66 | Romans were fleeing into the Province and leaving Gaul; that this
88 VII, 77 | reduced to the form of a province, stripped of its rights
89 VIII, 30 | provisions), was marching to the province with five thousand men,
90 VIII, 30 | to make an attack on the Province in the first revolt of Gaul,
91 VIII, 30 | or injuries done to the Province by the depredations of a
92 VIII, 32 | enter the boundaries of the province, while an army was in pursuit
93 VIII, 46 | spent a few days in the province, he quickly ran through
94 VIII, 46 | fidelity and assistance of the Province. ~
95 VIII, 53 | to dispose of Caesar’s province, before the expiration of
96 VIII, 54 | it was levied in Caesar’s province. Caesar, however, though
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