Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 1 I, 2 | B.C.], incited by lust of sovereignty, formed a conspiracy among
2 I, 3 | father had possessed the sovereignty among the people for many
3 I, 3 | people), to seize upon the sovereignty in his own state, which
4 I, 3 | his own army, acquire the sovereignty for them. Incited by this
5 I, 3 | when they have seized the sovereignty, they will, by means of
6 I, 9 | and, incited by lust of sovereignty, was anxious for a revolution,
7 I, 18| highest hope of gaining the sovereignty by means of the Helvetii,
8 I, 45| be regarded—then was the sovereignty of the Roman people in Gaul
9 IV, 12| grandfather had held the sovereignty of his state, and had been
10 V, 6 | assembly of Aeduans, that the sovereignty of the state had been made
11 V, 19| Imanuentius, had possessed the sovereignty in that state, and had been
12 V, 24| whose ancestors had held the sovereignty in his state. To him Caesar
13 V, 53| Moritasgus, had held the sovereignty at the period of the arrival
14 VI, 12| force, and possessed the sovereignty of the whole of Gaul. Divitiacus
15 VI, 12| consequence, the Sequani lost the sovereignty. The Remi succeeded to their
16 VI, 17| that Jupiter possesses the sovereignty of the heavenly powers;
17 VII, 20| he preferred holding the sovereignty of Gaul by the grant of
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