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Alphabetical    [«  »]
citizen 4
citizens 24
citizenship 1
city 43
civil 5
claim 1
claimed 1
Frequency    [«  »]
45 you
44 general
44 guard
43 city
43 even
43 italy
43 than
Julius Caesar
Civil Wars

IntraText - Concordances

city
   Book, Par.
1 1, 1| dispatch, and reached the city in three days' time, before 2 1, 3| senate was convened in the city, and Pompey was near at 3 1, 3| and keeping them near the city to do him injury:" as Marcus 4 1, 4| Caesar, were sent for. The city and the comitium were crowded 5 1, 6| proposers except when the city was in danger of being set 6 1, 6| people, and proconsuls in the city, should take care that the 7 1, 6| made their escape from the city, and withdrew to Caesar, 8 1, 7| is convened outside the city. Pompey repeated the same 9 1, 7| oath, and march out of the city in a public manner, robed 10 1, 7| Both the consuls leave the city, and private men had lictors 11 1, 7| private men had lictors in the city and capital, contrary to 12 1, 8| temples and eminences of the city; (and these instances of 13 1, 10| and dragged back to the city, though the people had ordered 14 1, 10| fears be removed from the city; let free elections, and 15 1, 15| hallowed door he fled from the city. For it was falsely rumored 16 1, 15| Cneius Pompey had left the city the day before, and was 17 1, 15| were stopped within the city. No place on this side of 18 1, 18| a particular part of the city to defend. In a speech to 19 1, 23| had been driven out of the city on his account, and to assert 20 1, 34| For Pompey, on leaving the city, had declared in the open 21 1, 34| to no purpose, left the city, in order that he might 22 1, 35| from all the forts into the city; had opened armories in 23 1, 35| had opened armories in the city; and were repairing the 24 1, 36| admit either into their city or harbors." ~ 25 1, 37| and was received into the city, and made governor of it. 26 1, 37| lieutenant, to invest the city. ~ 27 1, 86| direct the affairs of the city; and though absent, have 28 2, 5| hopes of preserving the city, either by their internal 29 2, 6| the citizens, who, if the city was taken, must undergo 30 2, 7| and when it came near the city, the whole people crowded 31 2, 7| would have imagined that the city had been taken by an enemy 32 2, 7| for the defense of their city with unwearied energy. ~ 33 2, 12| dreading the pillage of their city, rush all together out of 34 2, 12| arrival; they saw that their city was taken, our works completed, 35 2, 20| town, and to secure the city and island for Caesar. That 36 2, 36| protect and defend their city, a circumstance which greatly 37 3, 1| legions quartered in the city (these trials were finished 38 3, 2| dictatorship, set out from the city, and went to Brundusium, 39 3, 20| of Caius Trebonius, the city praetor, and promised if 40 3, 79| marched to Heraclea Sentica, a city subject to Candavia; so 41 3, 81| acquainted with the fate of the city of Gomphi by some prisoners, 42 3, 83| boasting his interest in the city and his dignity, and Scipio 43 3, 106| killed in all parts of the city. ~


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