Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 4 | affairs, and require only six days' time to finish the
2 I, 16| fleeing from Camerinum, with six cohorts, which he had in
3 I, 25| praetor, fled from Alba, with six cohorts: Rutilus, Lupus,
4 I, 26| marched to Brundusium with six legions, four of them veterans:
5 I, 40| legions into Spain, with about six thousand auxiliary foot,
6 I, 42| country, he left behind him six cohorts to guard the bridge,
7 I, 47| ranks to that post. About six hundred were wounded. Of
8 I, 52| there were besides about six thousand people of all descriptions,
9 I, 65| addition of a circuit of six miles and a considerable
10 I, 86| should be disbanded: for six legions had been sent into
11 II, 5 | Caesar at Arelas were added six ships taken from the Massilians,
12 II, 9 | or danger, they raised it six stories high, and in laying
13 II, 15| two walls of brick, each six feet thick, and to lay floors
14 II, 18| town of Gades, and sent six cohorts thither from the
15 II, 19| he himself advances with six hundred horse by forced
16 II, 24| he must make a circuit of six miles to reach the town. ~
17 II, 25| detached as a guard for them six hundred Numidian horse,
18 II, 35| Fabius. Of the enemy about six hundred were killed and
19 II, 38| posted at a distance of six miles behind Sabura. The
20 II, 39| the camp. Having advanced six miles, he met the horse,
21 III, 4 | three thousand archers, six cohorts of slingers, two
22 III, 4 | and seven thousand horse; six hundred of which, Deiotarus
23 III, 20| should be discharged in six equal payments, of six months
24 III, 20| in six equal payments, of six months each, without interest. ~
25 III, 37| But as there was a plain six miles in breadth between
26 III, 53| 3.53]Thus six engagements having happened
27 III, 53| government of Asia, and six military standards were
28 III, 63| breadth. At an interval of six hundred feet from that there
29 III, 93| which he had formed of the six cohorts. They instantly
30 III, 94| its beginning from those six cohorts, which he had placed
31 III, 97| enemy: and having marched six miles, drew up his army.
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 32 I, 15| was not more than five or six miles between the enemy’
33 I, 48| and pitched under a hill six miles from Caesar’s camp.
34 II, 5 | Sabinus, his lieutenant, with six cohorts. He orders him to
35 II, 8 | reserve, he formed the other six legions in order of battle
36 II, 19| custom, led on [as the van six legions unencumbered by
37 II, 19| extended, in the mean time the six legions which had arrived
38 III, 5 | been fighting for more than six hours, without cessation,
39 IV, 3 | to lie desolate for about six hundred miles. On the other
40 V, 2 | of all materials, about six hundred ships of that kind
41 VI, 44| Lingones, the remaining six at Agendicum, in the territories
42 VII, 8 | the snow to the depth of six feet, and having opened
43 VII, 11| to be brought forth, and six hundred hostages to be given.
44 VII, 34| Parisii; and led in person six into the country of the
45 VII, 46| previously built a wall six feet high, made of large
46 VII, 69| trench and a stone wall six feet high. The circuit of
47 VII, 75| from the Rauraci, and Boii; six thousand from all the states
48 VII, 86| movements, sends Labienus with six cohorts to relieve his distressed
49 VII, 87| first young Brutus, with six cohorts, and afterward Caius
50 VIII, 17| Bellovaci, had selected six thousand of his bravest
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