Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 31| certain quota of horse and foot from the states of Sicily.
2 I, 32| laboring under sickness, to set foot on shore; but obliged him
3 I, 39| reinforcements of horse and foot were demanded from Lusitania,
4 I, 40| about six thousand auxiliary foot, and three thousand horse,
5 I, 42| s distance from the very foot of the mountain; and that
6 I, 43| their forces at the very foot of the mountain, and challenged
7 I, 46| ground and went up to the foot of the mountain on which
8 I, 46| they were posted at the foot of the mountain, so that
9 I, 62| considerable aid, both of horse and foot, and hoped to protract the
10 I, 63| pass the river; but the foot had only their shoulders
11 I, 74| parties of horse and auxiliary foot along the road, and intermix
12 II, 2 | covered over with beams a foot thick, fastened together,
13 II, 25| horse, and four hundred foot, which king Juba had sent
14 II, 26| large supply of horse and foot sent by king Juba were on
15 II, 40| his army, both horse and foot, and commanded them to give
16 II, 41| But he made use of the foot only for show; and sent
17 II, 44| circumstances it happened that a few foot and aged men, that could
18 III, 47| a superior force both of foot and horse. Besides, the
19 III, 61| soldier, either horse or foot had deserted from Caesar
20 III, 85| up his army at the very foot of it, ever in expectation,
21 III, 97| post on a mountain, whose foot was washed by a river. Caesar
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 22 I, 21| enemy had encamped at the foot of a mountain eight miles
23 I, 48| very active and courageous foot, one of whom each of the
24 I, 48| own protection. By these [foot] they were constantly accompanied
25 III, 13| which were made of planks a foot in breadth, were fastened
26 IV, 2 | their horses and fight on foot; and train their horses
27 IV, 17| feet, two piles, each a foot and a half thick, sharpened
28 IV, 33| their chariots and engage on foot. The charioteers in the
29 V, 7 | favorable weather, he orders the foot soldiers and the horse to
30 V, 15| their chariots and fought on foot in unequal [and to them
31 VII, 5 | send supplies of horse and foot to succor the Bituriges.
32 VII, 36| opposite the town, at the very foot of that mountain, strongly
33 VII, 46| distant from the plain and foot of the ascent, in a straight
34 VII, 49| camp, and post them at the foot of the hill, on the right
35 VII, 69| different sides, washed the foot of the hill. Before the
36 VII, 73| clay to the height of one foot from the bottom: the rest
37 VII, 73| to that flower. Stakes a foot long, with iron hooks attached
38 VIII, 6 | consequence could be set on foot in the summer campaign,
39 VIII, 12| ambush with a select body of foot in a place covered with
40 VIII, 12| surrounded on every side by the foot. Being, by this means thrown
41 VIII, 16| ambuscades, both of horse and foot, they did considerable damage
42 VIII, 17| thousand of his bravest foot and a thousand horse, with
43 VIII, 19| till at length a body of foot gradually advanced from
44 VIII, 20| and most valiant of their foot cut off, imagined that the
45 VIII, 21| thousand of their choicest foot had fallen, that scarce
46 VIII, 28| cavalry made a bold stand, the foot relieving each other, and
47 VIII, 28| most valiantly against the foot: and the enemy, imagining
48 VIII, 29| such a manner, that the foot should by turns assist the
49 VIII, 29| were so astonished, and the foot so terrified, that breaking
50 VIII, 36| his cavalry and the German foot, men of great activity,
51 VIII, 40| it ran so low down at the foot of the mountain, that no
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