Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 7 | were decreed to private persons; Scipio got Syria, Lucius
2 I, 10 | injuries, yet having got proper persons by whom he could communicate
3 I, 10 | senate, requiring that all persons should resign the command
4 I, 10 | disband their armies; let all persons in Italy lay down their
5 I, 11 | proposals to him by the same persons, the purport of which was,
6 I, 22 | night, he commended the persons who came to him, and sent
7 I, 24 | brought before him. Among the persons of senatorial rank were
8 I, 33 | acknowledged to be vested in those persons to whom embassadors were
9 I, 35 | fitted up by some private persons at Igilium and Cosa, and
10 I, 36 | fifteen of the principal persons of Massilia to attend him.
11 I, 86 | inhumanly put to death ignorant persons, who were deceived by a
12 I, 86 | the constant custom, but persons approved of and chosen by
13 I, 86 | age was not admitted; but persons of tried experience in former
14 II, 5 | remained in it, and all persons of more advanced years,
15 II, 18 | judgment against some private persons, and condemned to confiscation
16 II, 21 | in the houses of private persons, to be replaced in the temple.
17 II, 29 | single author to several persons, and was handed from one
18 II, 36 | population was composed of persons differing widely in their
19 III, 1 | question to the people) some persons condemned for bribery at
20 III, 18 | these expressions by some persons who were present at the
21 III, 20 | more severe to those very persons for whose advantage it had
22 III, 21 | and having wounded several persons, drove him from his tribunal.
23 III, 22 | engage in his interest all persons whom he imagined were under
24 III, 61 | 3.61]As they were persons nobly descended and of liberal
25 III, 82 | was delighted in having persons of consular and praetorian
26 III, 103| the merchants, and such persons as each of his friends thought
27 III, 107| are totally unfavorable to persons on a voyage from Alexandria.
28 III, 109| Dioscorides and Serapion, the persons sent by him, who had both
29 III, 110| finding protection for their persons on the condition that they
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 30 I, 4 | the number of ten thousand persons; and led together to the
31 I, 14 | are wont to allow those persons whom they wish to punish
32 I, 21 | from his own camp; he sent persons to ascertain what the nature
33 II, 1 | upon by the more powerful persons and by those who had the
34 II, 3 | two of] the principal persons of the state, as their embassadors:
35 II, 7 | using as guides the same persons who had come to him as messengers
36 II, 33 | town. The number of 53,000 persons was reported to him by those
37 IV, 2 | rather that they may have persons to whom they may sell those
38 V, 3 | Rhine. In that state, two persons, Indutiomarus and Cingetorix,
39 V, 3 | that, some of the chief persons of the state, both influenced
40 V, 5 | assembles, and [also] the chief persons of all the states; he had
41 V, 6 | to tamper with the chief persons of the Gauls, to call them
42 V, 6 | reported to Caesar by several persons. ~
43 V, 24 | arrest and send to him the persons by whose instrumentality
44 V, 53 | summoned to him the principal persons of each state, in one case
45 VI, 13 | about boundaries, these same persons decide it; they decree rewards
46 VII, 13 | intimidated, arrested those persons by whose exertions they
47 VII, 32 | king for a single year, two persons now exercised this office,
48 VII, 33 | the other, when only a few persons were privately summoned
49 VII, 38 | declaring what has taken place. Persons are brought forward whom
50 VIII, 8 | concurring testimony of several persons, and perceived that the
51 VIII, 27 | nature of the country, by persons acquainted with it, he judged
52 VIII, 44 | on the honor of several persons, as he saw that he dare
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