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Alphabetical [« »] advocate 1 aeduan 15 aeduans 4 aedui 116 aemilius 1 affair 22 affairs 29 | Frequency [« »] 119 some 119 things 117 s 116 aedui 116 did 114 own 111 horse | Julius Caesar Commentaries on the Gallic War IntraText - Concordances aedui |
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1 I, 10| country of the Sequani and the Aedui into the territories of 2 I, 11| at the territories of the Aedui, and were ravaging their 3 I, 11| ravaging their lands. The Aedui, as they could not defend 4 I, 11| friends and kinsmen of the Aedui, apprize Caesar, that it 5 I, 12| through the territories of the Aedui and Sequani into the Rhone 6 I, 14| that they had molested the Aedui, the Ambarri, and the Allobroges? 7 I, 14| give satisfaction to the Aedui for the outrages which they 8 I, 15| the Province and from the Aedui and their allies), to observe 9 I, 16| kept daily importuning the Aedui for the corn which they 10 I, 16| march from the Saone. The Aedui kept deferring from day 11 I, 16| chief magistracy (whom the Aedui style the Vergobretus, and 12 I, 17| wrest their freedom from the Aedui together with the remainder 13 I, 18| all the other taxes of the Aedui at a small cost, because 14 I, 18| of the cavalry which the Aedui had sent for aid to Caesar); 15 I, 19| even without their [the Aedui] knowing any thing of it 16 I, 19| chief] magistrate of the Aedui; he [Caesar] considered 17 I, 23| best-stored town of the Aedui), he thought that he ought 18 I, 28| granted the petition of the Aedui, that they might settle 19 I, 31| whole of Gaul: that the Aedui stood at the head of one 20 I, 31| Gaul: that with these the Aedui and their dependents had 21 I, 31| of all the state of the Aedui, who could not be prevailed 22 I, 31| Sequani than the vanquished Aedui, for Ariovistus the king 23 I, 33| especially as he saw that the Aedui, styled [as they had been] 24 I, 35| hostages, which he has from the Aedui, and grant the Sequani permission 25 I, 35| that he neither provoke the Aedui by outrage nor make war 26 I, 35| the republic, protect the Aedui and the other friends of 27 I, 35| overlook the wrongs of the Aedui.” ~ 28 I, 36| people in his right; that the Aedui, inasmuch as they had tried 29 I, 36| restore their hostages to the Aedui, but should not make war 30 I, 36| overlook the wrongs of the Aedui, [he said] that no one had 31 I, 37| embassadors came from the Aedui and the Treviri; from the 32 I, 37| and the Treviri; from the Aedui to complain that the Harudes, 33 I, 43| themselves [the Romans] and the Aedui, what decrees of the senate 34 I, 43| from time immemorial the Aedui had held the supremacy of 35 I, 43| make war either upon the Aedui or their allies, that he 36 I, 44| Caesar’s saying that the Aedui had been styled ‘brethren’ 37 I, 44| as not to know that the Aedui in the very last war with 38 I, 44| the struggles which the Aedui had been maintaining with 39 I, 48| from the Sequani and the Aedui. For five successive days 40 II, 5| might be affected if the Aedui would lead their forces 41 II, 10| that Divitiacus and the Aedui were approaching the territories 42 II, 14| dismissed the troops of the Aedui, he had returned to Caesar). “ 43 II, 14| they had revolted from the Aedui and made war upon the Roman 44 II, 14| nobles, who said that the Aedui, reduced to slavery by Caesar, 45 II, 14| Bellovaci, but also the Aedui, entreated him to use his [ 46 II, 14| increase the influence of the Aedui among all the Belgae, by 47 V, 6| Caesar; which speech the Aedui bore with impatience and 48 V, 7| with the cavalry of the Aedui, Caesar being ignorant of 49 V, 53| in all, that, except the Aedui and the Remi, whom Caesar 50 VI, 4| advances to him through the Aedui, whose state was from ancient 51 VI, 4| excuse, at the request of the Aedui, because he thought that 52 VI, 4| he delivers these to the Aedui to be held in charge by 53 VI, 12| Caesar arrived in Gaul, the Aedui were the leaders of one 54 VI, 12| was from of old among the Aedui, and their dependencies 55 VI, 12| all the nobility of the Aedui, they had so far surpassed 56 VI, 12| they brought over, from the Aedui to themselves, a large portion 57 VI, 12| hostages were returned to the Aedui, their old dependencies 58 VI, 12| perceived that they equaled the Aedui in favor with Caesar, those, 59 VI, 12| means coalesce with the Aedui, consigned themselves in 60 VI, 12| in that position that the Aedui were considered by far the 61 VII, 5| send embassadors to the Aedui, under whose protection 62 VII, 5| forces of the enemy. The Aedui, by the advice of the lieutenants 63 VII, 5| separates the Bituriges from the Aedui, they delayed a few days 64 VII, 5| this design, that if the Aedui should cross the river, 65 VII, 9| through the territory of the Aedui into that of the Lingones, 66 VII, 9| have been organized by the Aedui, he might defeat it by the 67 VII, 9| rendered tributary to the Aedui, he determined to attack 68 VII, 10| when the tributaries of the Aedui were subdued, because it 69 VII, 10| therefore, impressed on the Aedui the necessity of supplying 70 VII, 17| to importune the Boii and Aedui for supplies of corn; of 71 VII, 17| corn; of whom the one [the Aedui], because they were acting 72 VII, 17| Boii, the apathy of the Aedui, and the burning of the 73 VII, 32| blockade; some noblemen of the Aedui came to him as embassadors 74 VII, 33| because, by the laws of the Aedui, it was not permitted those 75 VII, 33| determined to go in person to the Aedui, lest he should appear to 76 VII, 34| parties], he exhorted the Aedui to bury in oblivion their 77 VII, 37| empire; that the state of the Aedui was the only one which retarded 78 VII, 37| freedom; for, why should the Aedui go to Caesar to decide concerning 79 VII, 37| than the Romans come to the Aedui?” The young men being easily 80 VII, 38| that all the knights of the Aedui were slain because they 81 VII, 38| midst of the slaughter. The Aedui shout aloud and conjure 82 VII, 38| the entire state of the Aedui, and rouses them completely 83 VII, 40| indulged the state of the Aedui, and, without any hesitation, 84 VII, 40| sight of the army of the Aedui, and, by sending on his 85 VII, 40| Litavicus discovered, the Aedui began to extend their hands 86 VII, 41| messengers to the state of the Aedui, to inform them that they 87 VII, 42| going on at Gergovia, the Aedui, on receiving the first 88 VII, 43| diminish his regard for the Aedui.” He himself, fearing a 89 VII, 45| action, and detaches the Aedui at the same time by another 90 VII, 50| men on their bravery, the Aedui suddenly appeared on our 91 VII, 53| in the direction of the Aedui. The enemy not even then 92 VII, 54| the cavalry to raise the Aedui; that it was necessary that 93 VII, 54| distinctly the treachery of the Aedui in many things, and was 94 VII, 54| his services toward the Aedui: in what a state and how 95 VII, 55| Noviodunum was a town of the Aedui, advantageously situated 96 VII, 55| had been admitted by the Aedui into Bibracte, which is 97 VII, 59| concerning the revolt of the Aedui, and a successful rising 98 VII, 59| learning the revolt of the Aedui, began to assemble forces 99 VII, 61| terrified by the revolt of the Aedui, were preparing for flight, 100 VII, 63| 63 The revolt of the Aedui being known, the war grows 101 VII, 63| putting them to death. The Aedui request Vercingetorix to 102 VII, 63| auxiliaries to neither party. The Aedui are highly indignant at 103 VII, 64| thousand infantry on the Aedui and Segusiani, who border 104 VII, 67| three of the noblest of the Aedui are taken and brought to 105 VII, 67| under whose command the Aedui had engaged in war against 106 VII, 75| thirty-five thousand men from the Aedui and their dependents, the 107 VII, 76| reviewed in the country of the Aedui, and a calculation was made 108 VII, 77| what was going on among the Aedui, convened an assembly and 109 VII, 88| their arms. Reserving the Aedui and Arverni, [to try] if 110 VII, 89| into the [country of the] Aedui, and recovers that state. 111 VII, 89| thousand captives to the Aedui and Arverni; he orders Titus 112 VII, 89| Publius Sulpicius among the Aedui at Cabillo and Matisco on 113 VIII, 2| from the territories of the Aedui, and joined to it the eleventh 114 VIII, 46| Two he detached to the Aedui, knowing them to have a 115 VIII, 54| with four more, to the Aedui; for he thought that Gaul 116 VIII, 54| greatest valor, and the Aedui, who possessed the most