Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 17 | town, were breaking down a bridge which was over the river,
2 I, 17 | quickly beaten off from the bridge and retreated precipitately
3 I, 41 | and the mass of water, the bridge fell, and all the horse
4 I, 41 | immediately crossed his own bridge, which communicated between
5 I, 41 | sent round by the further bridge to reinforce our men, suspecting,
6 I, 42 | retained for a body guard. The bridge which had been broken down
7 I, 42 | six cohorts to guard the bridge, the camp, and all his baggage,
8 I, 44 | enemy from the town, the bridge, and all the stores which
9 I, 50 | good store of forage. The bridge of Ilerda afforded an opportunity
10 I, 50 | and the places beyond the bridge, to which Caesar had no
11 I, 55 | legion: and having begun a bridge on both sides, he finished
12 I, 56 | to the camp over the same bridge. ~
13 I, 60 | to Caesar at Ilerda, the bridge being completed at the same
14 I, 61 | the face of affairs. The bridge being finished, five powerful
15 I, 62 | long circuit round by the bridge, having found a convenient
16 I, 62 | the river, they ordered a bridge to be made of boats fastened
17 I, 63 | news was received of the bridge being nearly completed over
18 I, 64 | his cavalry to go by the bridge, required him to take a
19 III, 112| sunk in the sea, and by a bridge. In this island some of
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 20 I, 6 | Geneva. From this town a bridge extends to the Helvetii.
21 I, 7 | Further Gaul: he orders the bridge at Geneva to be broken down.
22 I, 8 | passage (some by means of a bridge of boats and numerous rafts
23 I, 13 | Helvetii, he procures a bridge to be made across the Saone,
24 II, 5 | states. Over that river was a bridge: there he places a guard;
25 II, 9 | commanded, and might cut off the bridge; but, if they could not
26 II, 10 | slingers and archers, over the bridge, and hastens toward them.
27 IV, 17 | difficulty in forming a bridge was presented to him, on
28 IV, 17 | He devised this plan of a bridge. He joined together at the
29 IV, 17 | water dashed against the bridge, so much the closer were
30 IV, 17 | direction of the length of the bridge, and were [then] covered
31 IV, 17 | at the lower side of the bridge, and these, serving as buttresses,
32 IV, 17 | were others also above the bridge, at a moderate distance;
33 IV, 17 | and might not injure the bridge. ~
34 IV, 18 | guard at each end of the bridge, hastens into the territories
35 IV, 18 | Sigambri, at the very time the bridge was begun to be built, made
36 IV, 19 | their scouts found that the bridge was being built, had called
37 IV, 19 | into Gaul, and cut down the bridge. ~
38 VI, 9 | matters, he began to build a bridge a little above that place
39 VI, 9 | left a strong guard at the bridge on the side of the Treviri,
40 VI, 29 | the further end of the bridge, which joined the banks
41 VI, 29 | at the extremity of the bridge raises towers of four stories,
42 VI, 29 | purpose of defending the bridge, and strengthens the place
43 VI, 35 | below that place where the bridge was entire and the garrison
44 VII, 11 | that enterprise; and as a bridge over the Loire connected
45 VII, 11 | because the narrowness of the bridge and the roads prevented
46 VII, 35 | the Romans should build a bridge and bring over their troops;
47 VII, 35 | he began to rebuild the bridge on the same piles, the lower
48 VII, 53 | third day he repaired the bridge over the river Allier, and
49 VII, 58 | contest. Having repaired the bridge, which the enemy had broken
50 VIII, 14 | small valley, he laid a bridge over the morass and led
51 VIII, 27 | river to pass except by a bridge. Though Fabius had not yet
52 VIII, 27 | therefore marched to that bridge with his army, and ordered
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