Book,  Par.

  1     I,      3|           to the command of eight legions on the Rhine, and required
  2     I,      9|           at his disposal so many legions, such vast auxiliary forces
  3     I,     13|     boundaries of the empire; the legions, provinces, fleets, all
  4     I,     14|        tampered with the Consul's legions, and feigned an attachment
  5     I,     21|           mutiny broke out in the legions of Pannonia, which could
  6     I,     21|          In the summer camp three legions were quartered, under the
  7     I,     23|      propose to combine the three legions into one. Driven from their
  8     I,     23|         uphold the loyalty of the legions, or Pierced to the heart
  9     I,     28|         consulted the good of the legions, we may be buried by these
 10     I,     29|           from his ready wit. Two legions, the eighth and the fifteenth,
 11     I,     30|       When Drusus approached, the legions, as a mark of respect, met
 12     I,     31|        special care for the brave legions with which he had endured
 13     I,     32|       frustrate the wishes of the legions, and the same tricks were
 14     I,     33|       oppose the interests of the legions. At the same moment they
 15     I,     37|          merciful and receive the legions' petition. At their prayer,
 16     I,     40|         from the same causes, the legions of Germany rose in mutiny,
 17     I,     40|          and offer himself to the legions, whose strength would carry
 18     I,     40|        the twenty-first and fifth legions, and into which the first
 19     I,     41|          did Percennius among the legions of Pannonia, nor was it
 20     I,     44|      hearing of the mutiny in the legions, he instantly went to the
 21     I,     44|           achievements with those legions in Germany. Next, he extolled
 22     I,     46|        armed against the retiring legions, civil war was in fact begun.
 23     I,     48|        the fifth and twenty-first legions refused to go till in the
 24     I,     48|           The first and twentieth legions were led back by their officer
 25     I,     48|         thirteenth, and sixteenth legions, without any delay, accepted
 26     I,     49|          veterans of the mutinous legions on garrison duty. They were
 27     I,     50|        the Altar of the Ubii. Two legions, the first and twentieth,
 28     I,     54|          up amid the tents of the legions, whom they used to call
 29     I,     55|         Divine Augustus cowed the legions who had fought at Actium
 30     I,     55|        Syria. First and twentieth legions, you who received your standards
 31     I,     56|      death of Varus and his three legions. Never indeed may heaven
 32     I,     57|           let the nursling of the legions return and not be handed
 33     I,     57|           of the throng stood the legions with drawn swords. Each
 34     I,     59|        the fifth and twenty-first legions, who were in winter quarters
 35     I,     60|        commotion among the German legions, the citizens in alarm reproached
 36     I,     63|          that a majority of their legions remained loyal, at the commander'
 37     I,     65|         across it 12,000 from the legions, with six-and-twenty allied
 38     I,     66|  obstructions from the woods. The legions followed at a moderate interval.
 39     I,     67|         widely, divided his eager legions into four columns, and ravaged
 40     I,     73|     accordingly gave Caecina four legions, five thousand auxiliaries,
 41     I,     73|        head of an equal number of legions and twice as many allies.
 42     I,     79|           woman. Before me, three legions, three commanders have fallen.
 43     I,     80|       Germanicus himself put four legions on shipboard and conveyed
 44     I,     80|          remains of Varus and his legions were said to lie unburied. ~ ~
 45     I,     81|  indicated the handiwork of three legions. Further on, the partially
 46     I,     82|       bury the bones of the three legions, not a soldier knowing whether
 47     I,     83|         when Caesar led forth his legions in battle array. This struck
 48     I,     84|         to the Amisia, taking his legions by the fleet, as he had
 49     I,     85|        Night at last released the legions, which were now wavering,
 50     I,     86|          of an extended line. The legions had their assigned places,
 51     I,     87|         over him. At daybreak the legions, posted on the wings, from
 52     I,     87|        again, "Behold a Varus and legions once more entangled in Varus'
 53     I,     87|         secure the spoil, and the legions, towards evening, struggled
 54     I,     91|           not till night that the legions returned, and though more
 55     I,     92|           thanks on the returning legions. This made a deep impression
 56     I,     93|                            Of the legions which he had conveyed by
 57     I,     93|       arrived with the fleet. The legions then embarked, while a rumour
 58    II,      6|   withdrawing Germanicus from the legions which knew him well, and
 59    II,      6|           more quickly begun, the legions and supplies would be brought
 60    II,      9|           being besieged, led six legions to the spot. Silius owing
 61    II,      9|       raised in memory of Varus's legions, and the old altar of Drusus.
 62    II,      9|       altar, and himself with his legions celebrated funeral games
 63    II,     10|          assigned vessels for the legions and the allied troops, entered "
 64    II,     10|      bridges. The cavalry and the legions fearlessly crossed the first
 65    II,     14|         generalship to expose the legions to danger, sent the cavalry
 66    II,     16|     insult fired the wrath of the legions. "Let daylight come," they
 67    II,     20|    foot-archers, after them, four legions and Caesar himself with
 68    II,     20|           Next came as many other legions, and light-armed troops
 69    II,     21|           the true deities of our legions." At the same moment the
 70    II,     24|         woods, so as to be on the legions' rear, as soon as they entered
 71    II,     25|          and having withdrawn his legions to a little distance, ordered
 72    II,     26|            he withdrew one of his legions from the field, to intrench
 73    II,     28|         at its height some of the legions were sent back overland
 74    II,     31|           eagle of one of Varus's legions was buried and guarded only
 75    II,     45|        that the commanders of the legions who before receiving a praetorship
 76    II,     58|       both his sons in command of legions. However, he made a pretext
 77    II,     59|           freedom, of slaughtered legions, of spoils and weapons wrested
 78    II,     60|       surprised three unofficered legions and a general who had not
 79    II,     60|           been attacked by twelve legions led by Tiberius, and had
 80    II,     70|          he reached Syria and the legions, he began, by bribery and
 81    II,     70|         talk as the father of the legions. ~ ~
 82    II,     74|      ordered to march part of the legions into Armenia under his own
 83    II,     89|         all his directions to the legions and to the various cities
 84    II,     90|           of the province and the legions. But Germanicus is not yet
 85    II,    100|           had the sympathy of the legions at his command. "Go back,"
 86    II,    101|    praetor's jurisdiction and the legions had been given. In case
 87    II,    105|         had given him, not by the legions (for he had come at their
 88   III,     16|     vilest of them "father of the legions" while on the other hand
 89   III,     48|         and the evolutions of the legions. You should yourselves bear
 90   III,     59|         when they were stopped by legions which Visellius and Silius
 91   III,     62|   meantime was advancing with two legions, and having sent forward
 92   III,     63|           exultation. For now the legions in battle array were advancing,
 93   III,    106|         hailed "Imperator" by the legions, an ancient honour conferred
 94    IV,      3|          the head-quarters of our legions.~ ~
 95    IV,      5|       also rapidly enumerated the legions and the provinces which
 96    IV,      6|         Gauls, and numbered eight legions. Spain, lately subjugated,
 97    IV,      6|      Africa was garrisoned by two legions, and Egypt by the same number.
 98    IV,      6|         kept in restraint by four legions, and on this frontier were
 99    IV,      6|         bank of the Danube by two legions in Pannonia, two in Moesia,
100    IV,     24|           not have lasted had his legions too been bent on revolution.
101    IV,     66|           the entrenchment of the legions were easily repulsed; the
102    IV,     74|        backs and sent them to our legions. And so the Senate, when
103    IV,     93|      horse as well as that of the legions sent to support them, when
104    IV,     93|         the whole strength of the legions. The soldiers of the fifth
105    VI,     44|         time was in charge of the legions of Upper Germany, and had
106    VI,     52|       Vitellius had assembled his legions and, by starting a report
107    VI,     54|          the main strength of the legions and the allies to the banks
108    VI,     55|        done, he returned with the legions to Syria. ~ ~
109    XI,     21|   discipline of former days among legions which had forgotten the
110    XI,     24|         The toil meanwhile of the legions was only to a loss, while
111    XI,     29|      under colour of settling our legions throughout the world, we
112   XII,     13|   discipline, kept exercising the legions, in short, used as much
113   XII,     34|    Pomponius was waiting with the legions, to see whether the Chatti,
114   XII,     35|           that he was to have his legions, with some picked auxiliaries
115   XII,     37|       without the strength of the legions, attempted to break, and
116   XII,     38|          could be quelled only by legions encamped in their country.
117   XII,     46|         stop the flight, till our legions sustained the brunt of the
118   XII,     51|          to send supplies for the legions into distant provinces,
119  XIII,      8|          up for the supply of the legions of the East, and the legions
120  XIII,      8|      legions of the East, and the legions themselves to take up a
121  XIII,      9|           the auxiliaries and two legions were to remain in the province
122  XIII,     43|       treachery of the enemy. His legions indeed, transferred as they
123  XIII,     44|        Meanwhile Corbulo kept his legions within the camp till spring
124  XIII,     49|        the country, Artaxata. The legions however were not marched
125  XIII,     50|       marched the third and sixth legions, with some picked men of
126  XIII,     51|     whether he should push on his legions without their baggage to
127  XIII,     69|           Vetus from bringing his legions into another man's province,
128  XIII,     72|           s rear, himself led his legions into the territory of the
129   XIV,     36|         himself followed with the legions by forced marches, and compelled
130   XIV,     37|       without families. For whole legions were no longer transplanted,
131   XIV,     45|       danger from ambuscades. His legions were in close array; round
132   XIV,     47|      routed them. Even among many legions, it is a few who really
133    XV,      4|          could trust, he sent two legions under Verulanus Severus
134    XV,      4|           he posted his remaining legions on the bank of the Euphrates,
135    XV,      6|        the place had been routed; legions had been sent into Armenia,
136    XV,      6|           into Armenia, and other legions were ready to rush to the
137    XV,      7|            the fourth and twelfth legions, with the fifth which had
138    XV,      7|           third, sixth, and tenth legions and the old soldiery of
139    XV,      8|           challenge, but with two legions, the 4th and 12th, the first
140    XV,     10|          the entrenchments of the legions, with such rapidity and
141    XV,     11|           the foe, he led out his legions, as if he meant to fight
142    XV,     11|        men from each of his three legions with 800 cavalry, and an
143    XV,     14|          spoke, he went up to his legions, cheering them and reminding
144    XV,     14|          to a Roman camp with two legions, a worthy recompense for
145    XV,     15|       besieged, now attacking the legions' entrenchments, and now
146    XV,     16|           his kingdom against two legions, while the Romans had all
147    XV,     17|       determine the fate of Roman legions. Messengers were then despatched
148    XV,     17|            It was agreed that the legions should be released from
149    XV,     18|        way. Rumour added that the legions had been passed under the
150    XV,     18|       from gazing on the fugitive legions. He sought a character for
151    XV,     20|           it was the peril of the legions which had stirred him to
152    XV,     31| afterwards, he let Paetus and his legions depart in safety when he
153    XV,     31|      there in the presence of the legions inaugurate his reign." ~ ~
154    XV,     34|      Syria the fourth and twelfth legions, which, from the loss of
155    XV,     34|       Armenia the third and sixth legions, troops in thorough efficiency,
156    XV,     37|           in which Paetus and his legions had been lately besieged,
157    XV,     38|          stood the columns of our legions with glittering eagles and
158   XVI,     14|          and Asia, to fill up the legions of Illyricum, all soldiers
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