Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 4 | were crowded with tribunes, centurions, and veterans. All the consul'
2 I, 18| corresponding share to the centurions and veterans. ~
3 I, 21| other by their tribunes and centurions, and the most respectable
4 I, 40| money from the tribunes and centurions, which he distributed among
5 I, 40| secured the interest of the centurions by this pledge in his hands,
6 I, 47| centurion, and four other centurions, and above two hundred men. ~
7 I, 58| legions, antesignani and centurions, who had requested to be
8 I, 65| applied to their tribunes and centurions, and entreated them to inform
9 I, 68| presence of the tribunes and centurions had the same effect: by
10 I, 72| sides. The lieutenants, centurions, and tribunes, gathered
11 I, 75| their standards, and sent centurions of the first rank as deputies
12 I, 75| several of the tribunes and centurions came to Caesar, and paid
13 I, 77| same oath. The tribunes and centurions followed their example;
14 I, 78| But of the tribunes and centurions, several voluntarily remained
15 I, 78| with great respect. The centurions he promoted to higher ranks,
16 I, 81| several privates and some centurions were killed. The main body
17 II, 21| liberty; to the Tribunes and Centurions who had gone there as a
18 II, 27| The next night two Marsian centurions with twenty-two men belonging
19 II, 28| excepting the change of a few centurions. Quintilius, making this
20 II, 44| of the troops sent their centurions as deputies to Varus at
21 III, 13| oath, and the tribunes and centurions followed their example:
22 III, 19| Plotius, and Lucius Tiburtius, centurions, and some privates; hereupon
23 III, 53| them volunteer veterans and centurions. Among them was Valerius,
24 III, 53| and in one cohort, four centurions lost their eyes. And being
25 III, 64| was preserved, but all the centurions of the first cohorts were
26 III, 67| which had lost so many centurions, and whose privates were
27 III, 71| thirty-two military tribunes and centurions. But the greatest part of
28 III, 94| camp, and calling to the centurions, whom he had placed to guard
29 III, 95| under the conduct of their centurions and tribunes, fled, without
30 III, 99| Caesar lost about thirty centurions, valiant officers. Crastinus,
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 31 I, 39| camp, both soldiers and centurions, and those [the decurions]
32 I, 40| and summoned to it the centurions of all the companies, he
33 I, 41| military tribunes and the centurions of the principal companies,
34 II, 17| sends forward scouts and centurions to choose a convenient place
35 II, 25| the fight; that all the centurions of the fourth cohort were
36 II, 25| itself lost, almost all the centurions of the other cohorts either
37 II, 25| line, and addressing the centurions by name, and encouraging
38 III, 5 | Whereupon assembling the centurions, he quickly gives orders
39 III, 14| of the soldiers and the centurions, to whom the several ships
40 V, 27| of the soldiers and the centurions of the first rank, were
41 V, 36| time around him, and the centurions of the first ranks, to follow
42 V, 42| touching the rampart, the centurions of the third cohort retired
43 V, 43| were two very brave men, centurions, who were now approaching
44 V, 51| addresses individually the centurions and the tribunes of the
45 VI, 7 | the soldiers and principal centurions by night, states what his
46 VI, 38| himself at the gate. The centurions of that cohort which was
47 VI, 39| military tribune and the centurions; they wait to find what
48 VI, 40| unfavorable situation. The centurions, some of whom had been promoted
49 VII, 12| were being performed, a few centurions and soldiers being sent
50 VII, 12| line the walls. When the centurions in the town understood from
51 VII, 17| same declarations to the centurions and military tribunes, that
52 VII, 51| with the loss of forty-six centurions; but the tenth legion, which
53 VIII, 23| sent with him some chosen centurions. When they came to the conference,
54 VIII, 23| the hand, and one of the centurions, as if surprised at so uncommon
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