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Alphabetical    [«  »]
trivulce 13
trod 1
troop 3
troops 58
tropea 1
trotting 1
trouble 8
Frequency    [«  »]
59 hand
59 never
58 name
58 troops
57 000
57 both
57 head
Alexandre Dumas, Père
The Borgias

IntraText - Concordances

troops

   Chapter
1 4,4 | reckoned on employing the troops of Alfonso an his own account. 2 4,4 | Colonnas. The rest of his troops Alfonso divided into two 3 4,4 | longer against Alfonso's troops, embarked on a brigantine 4 4,5 | encountering a single body of troops to dispute his passage, 5 4,5 | them not only the promised troops and money, but also a court 6 5,1 | therefore, instead of sending troops to Florence, was obliged 7 5,1 | Bajazet should send him the troops that he had been asking 8 5,3 | remnants of the Neapolitan troops pass disheartened through 9 5,7 | Rome with the rest of his troops, pursued his way towards 10 5,8 | throne once more. Those troops were to be put under the 11 6,1 | listen to nothing, and as the troops he had demanded from the 12 6,1 | generalissimo of the confederate troops, a passage for his king' 13 6,1 | skirmishes with the French troops during the two days of halt 14 6,2 | As their masters had no troops in the army, and as all 15 6,2 | combat an either side. Light troops, eager for a skirmish, and, 16 6,2 | comprised the van and a body of troops whose duty it was to support 17 6,3 | general-in-chief of the confederate troops, had modelled his plans 18 6,4 | within ten days those of his troops that still remained in the 19 6,4 | That, as to recalling his troops from Naples, he was not 20 7,1 | with his want of armed troops and his preoccupation with 21 7,1 | their learning to their own troops: the improvements were mainly 22 7,1 | for they were the best troops in the world; but Vitelli 23 7,1 | same time Vitelli's light troops wheeled upon the flank, 24 7,1 | their attack. The pontifical troops were put to flight, though 25 7,1 | of Spanish and Neapolitan troops. Alexander, as he could 26 10,1| who was holding back his troops for the defence of his own 27 10,1| Alessandria, sent off Cajazzo with troops to that part of the Milanese 28 10,1| collected on the Po as many troops as he could. But these precautions 29 10,2| and then, with all the troops His Holiness could supply, 30 10,3| back Yves d'Alegre and the troops that Louis XII had lent 31 10,4| the work of collecting the troops. There the cardinal found 32 10,4| Swiss; so that, counting the troops which Trivulce had at Mortara, 33 11,4| composed of the finest troops of France and Italy; led 34 12,1| so, without counting the troops sent to Pisa, he had under 35 12,3| French army with some of his troops on the very day on which 36 13,1| that the Duke of Urbina's troops started for Camerino, Caesar' 37 13,1| started for Camerino, Caesar's troops entered the duchy of Urbino, 38 13,1| the cardinal, Vitellozzo's troops were nearer to the besiegers 39 13,2| march down with his own troops and take them if he hesitated 40 13,2| Imola, awaiting the French troops, but with scarcely any men; 41 13,3| as he was, almost without troops at Imola, the confederates 42 13,3| the arrival of the French troops and calling into his pay 43 13,3| speedy arrival of French troops; he showed him those he 44 13,4| frontiers, despatched all her troops to the banks of the Po. 45 13,4| he sent away all French troops in his service as soon as 46 13,4| was sending some of his troops to Cesena and Imola, for 47 13,5| perceived him exercising his troops on the square. Caesar at 48 13,5| a rash thing to have his troops out, when they might easily 49 13,5| prisoners; then the duke's troops began to pillage the town, 50 15,1| in the Vatican with his troops, who, loyal to him in his 51 15,1| Caraffa. Frightened by the troops that Caesar still had, especially 52 15,2| Caesar, had been levying many troops at Perugia and the neighbourhood 53 15,2| one morning he ordered his troops to march for this town, 54 15,2| and, taking out all the troops they had by the gate of 55 15,2| destruction; so he ordered his troops to retire, and, being a 56 15,3| poison, abandoned by his troops, fallen as he was from the 57 15,3| had always coveted: these troops had been led towards Ravenna, 58 16,2| with which he hoped to levy troops in Spain and in Navarre,


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