Book,  Par.

 1     I,      2|          dangerous past. Nor did the provinces dislike that condition of
 2     I,     13|             the empire; the legions, provinces, fleets, all things were
 3     I,     16|            fleets, subject kingdoms, provinces, taxes, direct and indirect,
 4     I,     55|          intelligence from our other provinces, that his own recruits,
 5     I,     61|              and longest of all, the provinces.~ ~
 6     I,    103|     precedent thus given for all the provinces. When the people of Rome
 7     I,    105|   irresolution, that he appointed to provinces men whom he did not mean
 8    II,      1|            in the kingdoms and Roman provinces of the East. It had its
 9    II,      2|             and given away among the provinces of Rome. "Where," they asked, "
10    II,      6|             and placing him over new provinces where he would be exposed
11    II,     44|              and the influx from the provinces ought to be reserved for
12    II,     55|             that of their kings. The provinces too of Syria and Judaea,
13    II,     56|            decree of the Senate, the provinces beyond sea were entrusted
14    II,     56|             those who obtained their provinces by lot or by the emperor'
15    II,     69|          gave relief, as he went, to provinces which had been exhausted
16    II,     72|             to a great extent on our provinces and stretching far away
17    II,     80|          summer in visits to several provinces, Drusus gained no little
18    II,     80|       followers and traders from our provinces who had been attracted to
19    II,     82|             disturb the peace of the provinces by mingling with the population,
20   III,     48|           forty campaigns in various provinces. "With good reason," he
21   III,     49|         beset with wars, nor are the provinces hostile. A few concessions
22   III,     75|            have the resources of the provinces as their mainstay, our shrubberies,
23   III,     78|         towns, colonies and even the provinces, introduced their household
24   III,     82|        Quirinus. If these latter had provinces allotted to them, why was
25   III,     82|          pontiff from going into the provinces, was the result of private
26   III,     84| investigation certain demands of the provinces. In the Greek cities license
27    IV,      3|           partisans with offices and provinces, Tiberius readily yielding,
28    IV,      5|            of a progress through the provinces, was again discussed. The
29    IV,      5|       enumerated the legions and the provinces which they had to garrison.
30    IV,      6|          commanding positions in the provinces, allied fleets, cavalry
31    IV,      8|          careful not to distress the provinces by new burdens, and to see
32    IV,     27|         their wives' offences in the provinces as much as for their own. ~ ~
33    IV,     52|            divine throughout all the provinces, and the homage paid to
34    VI,     18|         named too the corn-supplying provinces, and dwelt on the far larger
35    VI,     38|              be prevailed on to take provinces. He forgot that Arruntius
36    VI,     47|             But in the government of provinces he acted with the virtue
37    VI,     58|         charge of the most important provinces, not for any remarkable
38    VI,     65|           who held two very powerful provinces, imploring a brief delay.
39    XI,      1|            widely spread through the provinces, he was planning a journey
40    XI,     24|              were endured in several provinces, the soldiers wrote a secret
41    XI,     27|             added the tribute of the provinces. Subsequently Sulla, by
42   XII,     42|             neighbouring islands and provinces, and was actually celebrated
43   XII,     51|             the legions into distant provinces, and even now it is not
44   XII,     80|             was no hesitation in the provinces. Divine honours were decreed
45  XIII,      8|      recruits levied in the adjacent provinces to be brought up for the
46  XIII,     24|            sapped the loyalty of the provinces, or, in a word, with having
47  XIII,     45|           Antiochus to hasten to the provinces on his frontier, as Pharasmanes,
48  XIII,     53|            snare while Italy and the provinces were drained by a boundless
49  XIII,     66|       propraetor or proconsul in the provinces, should give judicial precedence
50  XIII,     66|        exactions. In our transmarine provinces the conveyance of corn was
51   XIV,     37|          scattered themselves in the provinces where they had completed
52    XV,      3|           way of menace to the Roman provinces. ~ ~
53    XV,     22|             of the assignment of the provinces, by a number of childless
54    XV,     22|             fathers praetorships and provinces, forthwith dismissed from
55    XV,     26|             were sent to inspect the provinces, and to report what they
56    XV,     26|           practices are stopped, our provinces will be ruled more equitably
57    XV,     33|            governed the neighbouring provinces, to obey Corbulo's commands,
58    XV,     40|       embracing the governors of the provinces, or have to present himself
59    XV,     45|           secret imaginations on the provinces of the east, especially
60    XV,     56|          contributions of money, the provinces were ruined, as also the
61    XV,     56|          having been sent into those provinces. The first was a freedman
62   XVI,      5|        private business from distant provinces, where they had been unused
63   XVI,     24|              read attentively in the provinces and the armies that they
64   XVI,     31|              do not come from remote provinces when many, after obtaining
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