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  1     I,      1|     histories of Tiberius, Caius, Claudius, and Nero, while they were
  2     I,      3| pontificate and curule aedileship Claudius Marcellus, his sister's
  3     I,      3|     son-in-law. Tiberius Nero and Claudius Drusus, his stepsons, he
  4     I,     71|          State; Tiberius, Drusus, Claudius, and Germanicus, were added
  5   III,      3|          as far as Tarracina with Claudius, brother of Germanicus,
  6   III,      4|    besides Agrippina, Drusus, and Claudius, all his other kinsfolk
  7   III,     26|         He omitted all mention of Claudius. Thereupon he was pointedly
  8   III,     26|        only then that the name of Claudius was added. For my part,
  9   III,     41|       father-in-law of the son of Claudius. The emperor was thought
 10    IV,     42|           creature of the emperor Claudius, whose friendship he long
 11    VI,     47|          Caesar and intimacy with Claudius, he degenerated into a servility
 12    VI,     71|      Tiberius had even thought of Claudius, as he was of sedate age
 13  Miss        |         six years of the reign of Claudius. Caius Caesar's reign was
 14  Miss        |           eight days in duration. Claudius (Tiberius Claudius Drusus
 15  Miss        |      duration. Claudius (Tiberius Claudius Drusus Nero Germanicus),
 16  Miss        |          with the seventh year of Claudius's reign. The power of his
 17  Miss        |       Caesar, a second time under Claudius in A.D. 46. He was rich
 18    XI,      1|      Britannicus, who was to give Claudius an apparently friendly warning
 19    XI,      1|      nations allied to his house. Claudius made no further inquiry,
 20    XI,      2|           entered on his defence. Claudius he moved profoundly, and
 21    XI,      3|                              When Claudius began to deliberate about
 22    XI,      3|         free to choose his death. Claudius's reply was in the same
 23    XI,      4|            it was alleged, beheld Claudius crowned with a garland of
 24    XI,      5|       benefit of his teaching and Claudius that of his counsels. I
 25    XI,     10|      kingdom at the suggestion of Claudius and in reliance on the help
 26    XI,     11|        stopped by a despatch from Claudius, and then everything passed
 27    XI,     14|           these ceremonies. While Claudius sat to witness the games
 28    XI,     16|                                   Claudius meanwhile, who knew nothing
 29    XI,     17|          Following this precedent Claudius added three letters, which
 30    XI,     18|                                   Claudius then brought before the
 31    XI,     22|     subject for a timid emperor." Claudius accordingly forbade fresh
 32    XI,     33|       consul Vipstanus moved that Claudius should be called "Father
 33    XI,     34|           mind, if only they took Claudius by surprise, who, though
 34    XI,     35|    reckless. She waited only till Claudius set out for Ostia to perform
 35    XI,     37|          thought of the apathy of Claudius, of his devotion to his
 36    XI,     38|       mistresses to whose society Claudius was especially partial,
 37    XI,     40|                                   Claudius then summoned all his most
 38    XI,     40|          It is quite certain that Claudius was so overwhelmed by terror
 39    XI,     42|           everything was known to Claudius, and that he was coming,
 40    XI,     43|    undertake it himself. And that Claudius might not be induced by
 41    XI,     45|                   All throughout, Claudius preserved a strange silence;
 42    XI,     45|         were purposely assembled. Claudius spoke to them a few words
 43    XI,     46|           clothes, he insisted on Claudius looking at the scars of
 44    XI,     48|          recoiled on her accuser. Claudius had returned home to an
 45    XI,     49|           given up to her mother. Claudius was still at the banquet
 46   XII,      1|          should choose a wife for Claudius, impatient as he was of
 47   XII,      5|           and the lustrum closed. Claudius at the same time broke off
 48   XII,      6|         marriage arranged between Claudius and Agrippina was confirmed
 49   XII,      6|     authority of the Senate. When Claudius replied that he was one
 50   XII,      8|       prayer of the Roman people. Claudius without further delay presented
 51   XII,      9|          was banished from Italy. Claudius further added that sacrifices
 52   XII,      9|         kindness, and an enemy to Claudius from a bitter sense of wrong.~ ~
 53   XII,     10|         deliver a speech, praying Claudius to betroth Octavia to Domitius.
 54   XII,     12|          these and like arguments Claudius began to speak of the grandeur
 55   XII,     21|          that between himself and Claudius there was the tie of a common
 56   XII,     22|                                   Claudius, though merciful to foreign
 57   XII,     23|          by these considerations, Claudius wrote to Eunones that Mithridates
 58   XII,     25|     imperial marriage. Upon this, Claudius, without hearing the accused,
 59   XII,     28|           boundaries now fixed by Claudius may be easily recognized,
 60   XII,     29|          paramour, he still urged Claudius to think of the interests
 61   XII,     29|           had adopted Germanicus. Claudius also would do well to strengthen
 62   XII,     35|        Vannius, led the movement. Claudius, though often entreated,
 63   XII,     49|      fifth consulship of Tiberius Claudius with Sextius Cornelius Orfitus
 64   XII,     49|         in the ruin of the State. Claudius, enraged by what he took
 65   XII,     51|       whispered complaints; while Claudius was administering justice,
 66   XII,     58|        however very intimate with Claudius, who, when in private life,
 67   XII,     63|          the emperor's ministers. Claudius assured them that Pallas
 68   XII,     64|         by Cumanus and Felix; for Claudius on hearing the causes of
 69   XII,     66|           and on a smaller scale. Claudius equipped galleys with three
 70   XII,     69|                                   Claudius, on the other hand, was
 71   XII,     70|         submitted to the knights. Claudius handed over to them the
 72   XII,     70|        would be superfluous, when Claudius, we know, raised freedmen
 73   XII,     71|         fame by his descendants." Claudius named them one by one, with
 74   XII,     71|        might have been recounted. Claudius however did not seek to
 75   XII,     74|          by some words dropped by Claudius when half intoxicated, that
 76   XII,     75|         under such obligations to Claudius that he would sacrifice
 77   XII,     77|     poison, there was a fear that Claudius, when near his end, might,
 78   XII,     80|           honours were decreed to Claudius, and his funeral rites were
 79  XIII,      2|         precipitation, Narcissus, Claudius's freedman, whose quarrels
 80  XIII,      3|         side, at whose suggestion Claudius had ruined himself by an
 81  XIII,      3|        the office of priestess to Claudius, and voted to the late emperor
 82  XIII,      4|     funeral the prince pronounced Claudius's panegyric, and while he
 83  XIII,      4|        faculty of speech. Nor did Claudius, when he spoke with preparation,
 84  XIII,      6|    reversal of the legislation of Claudius, but it was carried by the
 85  XIII,      7|           it would have been, had Claudius in his feeble and spiritless
 86  XIII,     13|           his confidence Otho and Claudius Senecio, two young men of
 87  XIII,     16|          he had been entrusted by Claudius, and in which he acted,
 88  XIII,     16|           appealed to the deified Claudius, to the infernal shades
 89  XIII,     27|         birth and connection with Claudius, whose son-in-law he was
 90  XIII,     35|    strayed away to unfit persons. Claudius then again appointed quaestors,
 91  XIII,     39|       sorrowful. For this, during Claudius's reign, she escaped unpunished,
 92  XIII,     53|         terrible and venal, while Claudius reigned, and when times
 93  XIII,     53|     enmity against the friends of Claudius, under whose reign he had
 94  XIII,     54|           with all the cruelty of Claudius. His defence was that of
 95   XIV,     16|   indirect censure at the days of Claudius, and ascribed all the abominations
 96   XIV,     25|     praetor, and had been sent by Claudius to adjudicate on some lands
 97   XIV,     25|         the instructions given by Claudius, and that the emperor must
 98   XIV,     42|        also erected to the Divine Claudius was ever before their eyes,
 99   XIV,     71|        thrice a consul, and me to Claudius. Such wealth as long thrift
100   XIV,     83|     fresher memory of Julia, whom Claudius exiled, was present to men'
101    XV,     24|           came the prosecution of Claudius Timarchus of Crete, on such
102    XV,     66|          Antonia, the daughter of Claudius Caesar, with a view to evoke
103   XVI,     10|          He had as his accomplice Claudius Demianus, whom Vetus, when
104   XVI,     13|       from Maius into the name of Claudius, and Junius into that of
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