Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 18| encouraged his troops, disposed engines on the walls, and assigned
2 I, 27| furnished them with several engines and all sorts of weapons,
3 II, 2 | and so great a number of engines, that no vineae made of
4 II, 2 | too shot from very large engines, sank into the ground through
5 II, 2 | towers, and the multitude of engines retarded the progress of
6 II, 4 | filled with archers and engines. With a fleet thus appointed,
7 II, 9 | the weapons thrown from engines should break through the
8 II, 9 | not be pierced by darts or engines. But when that part of the
9 II, 9 | proper for working their engines. ~
10 II, 11| defended by darts, thrown from engines by our men from the brick
11 II, 14| plutei, testudo, tower, and engines all caught the flames and
12 II, 14| prevented, by arrows and engines from the walls; from pursuing
13 II, 16| advantage arising from their engines, on which they had built
14 II, 22| conveyed their arms and engines out of the town, as they
15 III, 9 | heads, made ropes for their engines. Octavius, being informed
16 III, 32| soldiers, sailors, arms, engines, and carriages, were made
17 III, 44| his weapons, arms, and engines; and supplied his army with
18 III, 45| infantry, and using his engines, he stopped our works; and
19 III, 56| that no weapon from their engines could reach it. But Pompey,
20 III, 63| scaling ladders, and by engines and weapons of all sorts,
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 21 II, 8 | placed there his military engines, lest, after he had marshaled
22 IV, 17| After he had, by means of engines, sunk these into the river,
23 IV, 25| with slings, arrows, and engines: which plan was of great
24 IV, 25| oars and the nature of our engines, which was strange to them,
25 VII, 22| drew them on by means of engines, and undermined the mound
26 VII, 41| kinds of missiles; that the engines were of great service in
27 VII, 81| missiles, are thrown from the engines. But Marcus Antonius, and
28 VII, 86| ascent: hither they bring the engines which they had prepared;
29 VIII, 14| which he could, with his engines, shower darts upon the thickest
30 VIII, 40| easiest descents, placed engines, and attempted to hinder
31 VIII, 41| of the spring. When our engines began to play from it upon
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