Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 III, 53| was made of the number of slain, we found that about two
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 2 I, 7 | Cassius, the consul, had been slain, and his army routed and
3 I, 12| recollection of our fathers, had slain Lucius Cassius the consul,
4 I, 12| because the Tigurini had slain Lucius Piso the lieutenant [
5 I, 26| soldiers and the burial of the slain, had not been able to follow
6 I, 53| their two daughters, one was slain, the other captured. C.
7 II, 25| of the fourth cohort were slain, and the standard-bearer
8 II, 25| cohorts either wounded or slain, and among them the chief
9 II, 33| 000 of the men having been slain, the rest were forced back
10 III, 17| and the Sexovii, having slain their senate because they
11 III, 21| great number of them being slain, Crassus began to besiege
12 III, 22| one who, upon his being slain to whose friendship he had
13 IV, 4 | beyond the Rhine. Having slain these, and seized their
14 IV, 12| seventy-four of our horse were slain; among them, Piso, an Aquitanian,
15 IV, 15| their families were being slain, throwing away their arms
16 IV, 37| they did not wish to be slain; afterward however, when
17 V, 7 | do not submit, that he be slain; considering that Dumnorix
18 V, 15| woods and hills; but, having slain a great many, they pursued
19 V, 15| tribune of the soldiers, was slain. The enemy, since more cohorts
20 V, 20| the enemy were taken and slain in their flight. ~
21 V, 24| discover that Tasgetius was slain. In the mean time, he was
22 V, 34| fighting most valiantly, is slain while he assists his son
23 V, 36| surrounded by degrees, he is slain. Then they, according to
24 V, 36| Cotta, while fighting, is slain, together with the greater
25 V, 36| intrenchments and is himself slain while fighting with the
26 V, 37| two lieutenants have been slain, and that a large portion
27 V, 42| the enemy was wounded and slain, since they had crowded
28 V, 43| the latter was wounded and slain, the enemy cover him with
29 V, 43| hand to hand, and having slain one man, for a short time
30 V, 43| relief; and both having slain a great number, retreat
31 V, 57| he should have seen him slain, because he was unwilling
32 V, 57| at one, Indutiomarus is slain, having been overtaken at
33 VI, 2 | Indutiomarus having been slain, as we have stated, the
34 VI, 8 | upon a large number being slain, and several taken prisoners,
35 VI, 12| several successful battles and slain all the nobility of the
36 VI, 28| hunting, and those who have slain the greatest number of them,
37 VI, 40| should be surrounded and slain, they fully trust that at
38 VII, 1 | that it was better to be slain in battle, than not to recover
39 VII, 14| slavery, and themselves slain; the evils which must necessarily
40 VII, 25| when the second man was slain in the same manner by a
41 VII, 28| the town. A part was then slain by the infantry when they
42 VII, 38| accused of treason, have been slain by the Romans without any
43 VII, 38| all my relations have been slain, am prevented by grief from
44 VII, 38| knights of the Aedui were slain because they were said to
45 VII, 42| resisted; when many were slain on both sides, they excite
46 VII, 50| him, being surrounded and slain, were cast from the wall.
47 VII, 62| all were surrounded and slain. Camulogenus met the same
48 VII, 65| and several others, being slain, they are forced to retire
49 VII, 88| chief of the Lemovices is slain; Vergasillaunus the Arvernian,
50 VIII, 13| resolutely crossed the marsh, and slain the few who made resistance,
51 VIII, 20| unfavorable, that Correus was slain, and the horse and most
52 VIII, 21| agitator of the people, was slain: for that while he lived
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