Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 5 | government of an army and provinces, and by the presents which
2 I, 7 | other matters passed. The provinces, two of which were consular,
3 I, 7 | even admitted. To the other provinces praetors were sent, nor
4 I, 40| thousand horse raised in both provinces. Caesar had sent his legions
5 I, 86| government of two most warlike provinces for so many years: that
6 I, 86| not be sent to govern the provinces as had been the constant
7 I, 86| before, let them quit the provinces, and disband their army.
8 II, 22| any aid, either from the provinces or their armies, for these
9 II, 32| dearest friend, and the provinces of Sicily and Africa, without
10 II, 32| generals, recovered two provinces, and effected all this within
11 III, 3 | the corporations of those provinces, of which he himself had
12 III, 4 | and had settled in those provinces; two from Asia, which had
13 III, 34| sound the inclination of the provinces, and march further into
14 III, 57| Italy, the peace of the provinces, and the preservation of
15 III, 79| by Pompey through all the provinces and states, with an account
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 16 III, 11| the Santoni, and the other provinces which remained at peace;
17 VI, 23| magistrate, but the chiefs of provinces and cantons administer justice
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