Book,  Par.

  1    II,      1|        disdained as a foreigner a king whom they had sought and
  2    II,      2|          at their having sought a king from another world, one
  3    II,      4|         had inveigled Artavasdes, king of the Armenians, then loaded
  4    II,      5|           they received for their king the fugitive Vonones. When,
  5    II,     32|          and the Suevi with their king Maroboduus had been forced
  6    II,     54|                                   King Archelaus had been in possession
  7    II,     54|           from being unused, as a king, to equality, much less
  8    II,     58|           equal. But the title of king rendered Maroboduus hated
  9    II,     72|            It had at this time no king, Vonones having been expelled,
 10    II,     72|     towards Zeno, son of Polemon, king of Pontus, who from his
 11    II,     72|         homage and saluted him as King Artaxias, which name they
 12    II,     75|         at a banquet given by the king of the Nabataeans, when
 13    II,     75|        emperor, not of a Parthian king. At the same time he threw
 14    II,     76|           arrived from Artabanus, king of the Parthians. He had
 15    II,     76|          was dignified; as to the king's visit and the respect
 16    II,     78|         and how with such an army king Rhamses conquered Libya,
 17    II,     80| Maroboduus, and who now, when the king's fortunes were declining,
 18    II,     81|  greatness. When as a most famous king in former days he received
 19    II,     82|          Marus and Cusus, under a king, Vannius, of the nation
 20    II,     83|    arrived of Artaxias being made king of Armenia by Germanicus,
 21    II,     83|       scheme against Rhescuporis, king of Thrace. That entire country
 22    II,     83|     Augustus assigned half to the king's brother Rhescuporis, half
 23    II,     84|         the sacred character of a king, to the gods of their common
 24    II,     86|           close intimacy with the king and his consequent ability
 25    II,     87|    arriving in Thrace induced the king by great promises, though
 26    II,     88|           and to his kinsman, the king of Scythia. Quitting the
 27    II,     88|         soon as they heard of the king's escape. Nor was there
 28    II,     88|           been entrusted with the king's custody, in pretended
 29    II,     96|          the power and title of a king, he would have attained
 30    II,    117|        denounced the poisoning of king Pyrrhus. ~ ~
 31   III,     54|         of Rhescuporis, when that king after the murder of his
 32   III,     55|         disciplined, besieged the king in the city of Philippopolis,
 33   III,     56|      among the besiegers, and the king made a well-timed sally
 34   III,     79|      without assuming the name of king or dictator he might have
 35   III,     89|           again Miletus relied on king Darius. But in each case
 36    IV,      6|          by three. Mauretania was king Juba's, who had received
 37    IV,     18|       temple of Aesculapius, when king Mithridates ordered a general
 38    IV,     32|   freedmen and slaves. He had the king of the Garamantes to receive
 39    IV,     33|            he summoned to his aid king Ptolemaeus and his people,
 40    IV,     35|       confer on him the titles of king, ally, and friend. ~ ~
 41    IV,     50|        and when they repulsed the king as much by their own bravery
 42    IV,     59|        stood) had fallen to their king. Records of this event still
 43    IV,     59|        but according to fact, and king Antigonus, as also the general
 44    IV,     65|         legion from Moesia and of king Rhoemetalces with some reinforcements
 45    IV,     73|         it was said, "the sons of King Atys, divided the nation
 46    VI,     41|            and Ptolemy, the third king of the Macedonian dynasty,
 47    VI,     45|    without the knowledge of their king Artabanus. Dread of Germanicus
 48    VI,     46|    demanded that Phraates, son of king Phraates, should be sent
 49    VI,     49|       insults, gathered round the king and demanded battle. Their
 50    VI,     52|         his subjects to forsake a king who was a tyrant in peace,
 51    VI,     54|       were inclined to have a new king, urged Tiridates to seize
 52    VI,     55|      sought the friendship of his king, by whom he had been raised
 53    VI,     55|           show obedience to their king, and respect for us, each
 54    VI,     62|           the country against the king's unwarlike troops, till
 55    VI,     66|       ruled the court and the new king, transferred their allegiance
 56    VI,     67|                    An experienced king, Artabanus knew that men
 57    VI,     68|           rumour. and then by the king's presence in person, was
 58    XI,     10|         This Pharasmanes, who was king of the Iberians and Mithridates'
 59    XI,     11|           had been routed. Cotys, king of Lesser Armenia, to whom
 60    XI,     19|         Cherusci asked Rome for a king. They had lost all their
 61    XI,     19|      country to fill the place of king without raising the son
 62    XI,     20|         among the barbarians, the king was victorious. Subsequently,
 63   XII,      9|           after the ordinances of King Tullius, and atonements
 64   XII,     12|           them, they had sought a king, but omitted to mention
 65   XII,     14|       those at whose suggestion a king had been sought from Rome,
 66   XII,     14|           Parthia and of Acbarus, king of the Arabs, he reminded
 67   XII,     15|    country of the Adiabeni, whose king Izates had avowedly embraced
 68   XII,     16|       barbarians prefer to seek a king from Rome than to keep him.
 69   XII,     17|  collected an army, drove out the king of the Dandaridae, and possessed
 70   XII,     17|         also resumed by Zorsines, king of the Siraci, distrusted
 71   XII,     35|       whom Drusus Caesar had made king of the Suevi, was driven
 72   XII,     35|          was his ruin. Vibillius, king of the Hermunduri, and Vangio
 73   XII,     42|          and the spoils which the king had won in wars with other
 74   XII,     42|          supplication; not so the king, who neither by humble look
 75   XII,     43|        under a treaty of peace, a king descended from illustrious
 76   XII,     45|         compassion for so great a king, was more ardent in his
 77   XII,     52|           and Rome. Vologeses was king of the Parthians; on the
 78   XII,     53|          he was fighting with the king of the Albanians and appealing
 79   XII,     54|        the overthrow of an allied king and of Armenia, the gift
 80   XII,     55|         he had seduced one of the king's concubines and was reputed
 81   XII,     59|          was thus again without a king, and was invaded by Rhadamistus,
 82   XII,     65|          After a time, Antiochus, king of that coast, having broken
 83   XII,     72|       when we fought against that king of Macedonia whose supposed
 84  XIII,     10|    Meantime both sent messages to king Vologeses, advising him
 85  XIII,     10|       after an interview with the king. Corbulo, on knowing this,
 86  XIII,     10|     conduct of the war turned the king's hopes into fears. Nero,
 87  XIII,     17|           game of lot drawing for king, the lot fell to Nero, upon
 88  XIII,     45|          the same time instructed king Antiochus to hasten to the
 89  XIII,     47|          allied infantry with the king's auxiliaries on the wings,
 90  XIII,     48|                               The king either suspecting a stratagem
 91  XIII,     51|          scouts reported that the king had undertaken a long march,
 92   XIV,     25|          which were bequeathed by king Apion, their former possessor,
 93   XIV,     36| Cappadocian noble and grandson of king Archelaus, yet, from having
 94   XIV,     36|    Parthian arrogance preferred a king given them by Rome. He was
 95   XIV,     42|         the province. Prasutagus, king of the Iceni, famed for
 96   XIV,     42|    ancestral possessions, and the king's relatives were made slaves.
 97    XV,      1|           Meanwhile, the Parthian king, Vologeses, when he heard
 98    XV,      1|         own, it is the glory of a king to fight for the possessions
 99    XV,      3|         of cavalry, which was the king's customary escort, giving
100    XV,      6|         of an allied and friendly king and of Roman cohorts. "He
101    XV,      6|         had an interview with the king at the town Nisibis, thirty-seven
102    XV,      7|      these results, as due to the king's alarm and the threats
103    XV,      7|          of the empty shadow of a king. ~ ~
104    XV,     11|       taurus, in order to bar the king's passage. He also stationed
105    XV,     12|  exaggerating in their terror the king's valour, and the warlike
106    XV,     16|         dominion, or subject to a king chosen by the emperor. Peace,
107    XV,     17|      interview requested with the king, who ordered Vasaces, the
108    XV,     19|        presence of those whom the king had sent to be witnesses,
109    XV,     20|        throughout it. At last the king yielded, all the positions
110    XV,     31|     envoys brought a message from king Vologeses, with a letter
111    XV,     37|          him twenty horsemen. The king, seeing Corbulo, was the
112    XV,     39|         and hospitality. When the king continually asked the reason
113   XVI,     27|           the emperor and see the king, Thrasea, though forbidden
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