Book, Chapter
1 I, II | willing to pour their Tartar hordes into Siberia, and excite
2 I, II | Kirghiz are divided into three hordes, the greater, the lesser,
3 I, II | troops could reach the Tartar hordes.~Omsk is the center of that
4 I, II | persuasion, to subdue the Kirghiz hordes.~A few words only with respect
5 I, II | chiefs who ruled all the hordes of Central Asia, he had
6 I, II | of Bokhara—had poured his hordes over the Russian frontier.
7 I, IV | the rising of the Kirghiz hordes, and of the Tartar invasion
8 I, IV | Kamtschatkan, and Aleutian hordes, and one may understand
9 I, XII | the approach of the Tartar hordes. The inhabitants, having
10 I, XIII| Government had believed these hordes reduced to absolute submission,
11 I, XVI | clear evidence that their hordes had passed that way; the
12 II, I | eventually to defeat the savage hordes of the invaders. But in
13 II, II | Tartar waters. The Kirghiz hordes rose at the voice of Feofar-Khan.
14 II, IV | town stood empty to the hordes of Feofar-Khan. At four
15 II, XII | drive off these barbarian hordes, and it will not be my fault
16 II, XV | over the khans and their hordes to bring them to the conquest
17 II, XV | only a small part of these hordes returned to the steppes
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