Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 10| removed from the city; let free elections, and the whole
2 I, 19| corn from the neighboring free towns, and waiting for the
3 I, 31| commanded the magistrates of the free towns to procure him ships,
4 I, 75| obtained by their absence a free opportunity of conversing
5 II, 29| for the custom of offering free towns to those who joined
6 III, 3 | dynasts, tetrarchs, and free states of Achaia; and had
7 III, 14| spared neither slaves nor free men, nor even children;
8 III, 15| leave the shores and harbors free from blockade. But when
9 III, 22| dispatched letters to the free towns, purporting that he
10 III, 34| side which is called the Free, having come as embassador,
11 III, 77| sudden attack with an army free from incumbrance. He did
12 III, 80| Caesar, offering him the free use of every thing in their
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 13 I, 44| depart and resign to him the free possession of Gaul, he would
14 I, 45| observed, then ought Gaul to be free, which they [the Romans]
15 IV, 19| vengeance on the Sigambri, and free the Ubii from the invasion
16 IV, 24| little way into the water, free in all their limbs in places
17 V, 7 | exclaiming that “he was free and the subject of a free
18 V, 7 | free and the subject of a free state.” They surround and
19 VII, 36| supply of water, and from free foraging; but this place
20 VII, 37| remember that they were free and born for empire; that
21 VIII, 16| s heads, gave the enemy free liberty to retreat, through
22 VIII, 50| stages, in order to visit the free towns and colonies, that
23 VIII, 50| honor bound to visit the free towns and colonies, to return
24 VIII, 52| be easily gained by the free voice of the senators. For
25 VIII, 52| That then the city would be free, and enjoy its due rights.”
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