Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 16 | All the governors in these countries most cheerfully received
2 I, 16 | likewise, from the neighboring countries, as many cohorts as he can
3 I, 45 | by the customs of those countries in which they have spent
4 I, 49 | seen higher floods in those countries; it swept down the snow
5 III, 2 | after the very wholesome countries of Spain and Gaul, had impaired
6 III, 5 | Crete, Cyrene, and other countries. He had resolved to fix
7 III, 13 | Epirus and the neighboring countries; several threw down their
8 III, 32 | from their own homes and countries, they stood in need of every
9 III, 34 | that the states in those countries would obey his orders, if
10 III, 42 | from Asia, and from all the countries of which he kept possession.
11 III, 42 | corn; and because these countries were too remote, he fixed
12 III, 61 | and Aetolia, and in those countries, which were in Caesar's
13 III, 110| Cilicia, and the adjacent countries. Besides several convicts
14 III, 112| sent to all the neighboring countries, to demand supplies. In
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 15 III, 7 | acquire a knowledge of their countries, a sudden war sprang up
16 III, 8 | considerable of any of the countries on the whole sea coast,
17 IV, 5 | them to state from what countries they come, and what affairs
18 IV, 20 | Caesar, although in these countries, as all Gaul lies toward
19 IV, 21 | parts of the neighboring countries, and the fleet which the
20 IV, 21 | influence ranked highly in those countries. He orders him to visit
21 VI, 24 | knowledge of commodities from countries beyond the sea supplies
22 VII, 77 | are going on in distant countries, look to the neighboring
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