Book,  Par.

 1     I,      5|       ascertained whether at the city of Nola he found Augustus
 2     I,     40|         of Augustus, a rabble of city slaves, who had been enlisted
 3     I,     54|      seemed to be in a conquered city rather than in his own camp,
 4     I,    100|        the level portions of the city. Its subsidence was followed
 5    II,     52|       Marcellus, regarded by the city populace with passionate
 6    II,     53| Germanicus gave every one of the city populace three hundred sesterces,
 7    II,     67|          famous deliverer of our city and his son Camillus, fame
 8    II,     68|       the office at Nicopolis, a city of Achaia, whither he had
 9    II,     68|       with an allied and ancient city, he was attended only by
10    II,     70|      special grudge against this city, because they would not
11    II,     72|   Germanicus accordingly, in the city of Artaxata, with the approval
12    II,     72|      name they gave him from the city. ~ ~
13    II,     76|       removed to Pompeiopolis, a city on the coast of Cilicia.
14    II,     78|      sailed up the Nile from the city of Canopus as his starting-point.
15    II,     78|          complete account of the city's past grandeur. One of
16    II,     83|          Drusus should enter the city with an ovation. Arches
17    II,    104|     having landed at Laodicea, a city of Syria, as he was on his
18    II,    110|       ran to and fro through the city and broke open the doors
19    II,    116|                           As the city populace complained of the
20   III,      2|         adjacent shores, but the city walls too and the roofs
21   III,      5| lamentations. The streets of the city were crowded; torches were
22   III,      6|       his uncle, not even to the city gates. Where were all those
23   III,     28|        afterwards re-entered the city with an ovation. In the
24   III,     55|         besieged the king in the city of Philippopolis, founded
25   III,     57|       unwarlike character of the city populace, and the utter
26   III,     75|          were all members of one city. Nor even afterwards had
27   III,     78|      court and be courted by the city populace, by our allies
28   III,     83|        go as a worshipper to the city's gods, does not enter the
29    IV,      3|      from the temptations of the city. As soon as the camp was
30    IV,      6|          special soldiery, three city, nine praetorian cohorts,
31    IV,      8|        the same employments. The city populace indeed suffered
32    IV,     50|          Mithridates, when their city was besieged, and when they
33    IV,     52|   Pergamos to himself and to the city of Rome, I who respect as
34    IV,     60|    discussed a petition from the city of Massilia, and sanction
35    IV,     62|          grandson he was, to the city of Massilia, where the name
36    IV,     73|      disputed question as to the city in which the temple before
37    IV,     73|        temple of Augustus in the city, on which very fact they
38    IV,     74|      Smyrna, after tracing their city's antiquity back to such
39    IV,     76|         to the very walls of the city. ~ ~
40    IV,     94|         knights, a number of the city populace flocked thither,
41    IV,     94|           from the extent of the city no one knows on what business
42    VI,     13|     Celsus however, tribune of a city cohort, and now one of the
43    VI,     20|       round and avoid his native city by circuitous routes. ~ ~
44    VI,     41|       former birds flew into the city called Heliopolis successively
45    VI,     48|      huge host, and captured the city of Artaxata. Artabanus,
46    VI,     64|         a powerful and fortified city which had never lapsed into
47    XI,     10|       with the siege of a strong city, which the defence of a
48    XI,     11|         Parthians, whom a single city had so long defied.~ ~
49    XI,     29|          of transferring to this city all conspicuous merit, wherever
50    XI,     30|         in array against us. Our city was taken by the Gauls.
51    XI,     36|         have been so obtuse in a city which knows everything and
52    XI,     42|          the whole length of the city, and, mounting on a cart
53   XII,     15|          march they captured the city of Ninos, the most ancient
54   XII,     18|         river Panda besieged the city of Uspe, which stood on
55   XII,     28|       was supposed, added to the city by Romulus, but by Titus
56   XII,     43|         should have entered this city as your friend rather than
57   XII,     49|        name, and presents to the city populace. At the games too
58   XII,     60|         they conveyed her to the city of Artaxata, whence she
59   XII,     65|    shipowners. They besieged the city Anemurium, and routed some
60   XII,     73|        where they should found a city, the oracle replied that
61  XIII,      9|          march, and at Aegeae, a city of Cilicia, met Quadratus
62  XIII,     29|         the scenes of a captured city. Julius Montanus, a senator,
63  XIII,     31|      diffused body; from it, the city tribes, the various public
64  XIII,     37|        leave such details to the city's daily register. I may
65  XIII,     37|           to every member of the city populace four hundred sesterces
66  XIII,     49|          Avaxes which washes the city's walls by a bridge, they
67  XIII,     51|        Artaxata and blockade the city, on which, he supposed,
68  XIII,     51|      This saved their lives; the city was fired, demolished and
69  XIII,     51|  lightning-flashes, and thus the city was thought to be given
70  XIII,     61|          more freely outside the city. So Graptus, taking advantage
71  XIII,     63|         Senate which allowed the city of Syracuse to exceed the
72   XIV,     18|        fourteen districts of the city were struck by lightning.
73   XIV,     34|  Tigranocerta, reported that the city walls were open, and the
74   XIV,     34|        was done to humiliate the city, that remaining uninjured
75    XV,      5|         occupied Tigranocerta, a city strong from the multitude
76    XV,     42|           because it was a Greek city. From this as his starting-point
77    XV,     47|       places, and used the whole city, so to say, as his private
78    XV,     48|       have ever happened to this city by the violence of fire.
79    XV,     48|        the level portions of the city, then rising to the hills,
80    XV,     48|      completely at its mercy the city, with those narrow winding
81    XV,     49|        at the very time when the city was in flames, the emperor
82    XV,     50|        spacious districts of the city. Consequently, though there
83    XV,     50|          glory of founding a new city and calling it by his name.
84    XV,     51|        splendour of the restored city, old men will remember many
85    XV,     53|          added beauty to the new city. Some, however, thought
86    XV,     54|          the crime of firing the city, as of hatred against mankind.
87   XVI,     14|        that what was lost to the city might be replaced. Its people
88   XVI,     32|        the offices of State, the city of Rome seem as nothing.
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