Civil Wars
Book, Chap. 1 I, 28| he barricaded with large beams fastened in the ground and
2 II, 2 | vineae were covered over with beams a foot thick, fastened together,
3 II, 9 | that place they laid two beams across, angle-ways, at a
4 II, 9 | cover the turret, and on the beams they laid joists across
5 II, 9 | they laid the ends of the beams, covered in by the outer
6 II, 10| the form of it: first, two beams of equal length were laid
7 II, 10| laid: upon this were laid beams, two feet square, bound
8 II, 10| the musculus and the upper beams, they fastened laths, four
9 II, 15| underneath and traversed beams laid on to strengthen the
Commentaries on the Gallic War
Book, Chap. 10 IV, 17| were kept firmly apart by beams two feet thick (the space
11 IV, 17| fastened together. These beams were bound together by timber
12 VII, 23| the Gallic walls. Straight beams, connected lengthwise and
13 VII, 23| be observed, and that the beams may not touch one another,
14 VII, 23| intervening, each row of beams is kept firmly in its place
15 VII, 23| to the alternate rows of beams and stones, which preserve
16 VII, 23| the inside with rows of beams, generally forty feet each
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