Book,  Par.

 1     I,     44|         he extolled the unity of Italy, the loyalty of Gaul, the
 2     I,     61|         Gaul; the latter menaced Italy. Which was he to prefer,
 3     I,     94|       Meanwhile Gaul, Spain, and Italy vied in repairing the losses
 4     I,    104|          most fruitful plains of Italy, they said, would be destroyed
 5    II,     40|        also passed to expel from Italy astrologers and magicians.
 6    II,     44| therefore the gathering from all Italy and the influx from the
 7    II,     50|    rumoured meanwhile throughout Italy, and was believed at Rome,
 8    II,     65|         was forbidden to live in Italy or Africa. ~ ~
 9    II,     77|   mightiest army, might distress Italy by famine. ~ ~
10    II,     81|      safe and honourable home in Italy, if he would remain there,
11    II,     81|       his sway, his proximity to Italy as a foe, finally his own
12    II,     81|     obedience. But he never left Italy for eighteen years, living
13    II,    101|        Are we hastening to reach Italy along with the ashes of
14    II,    114|   climate. The rest were to quit Italy, unless before a certain
15   III,     40|          searching, and Rome and Italy and Roman citizens everywhere
16   III,     46|        that most of the roads in Italy were obstructed or impassable
17   III,     48|    public, by having kept her in Italy, though he had himself served
18   III,     57|    vigour with the exhaustion of Italy, the unwarlike character
19   III,     75|         dominion was confined to Italy. Victories over the foreigner
20   III,     75|    represents to the Senate that Italy requires supplies from abroad,
21   III,     82|      priests of Jupiter to leave Italy; in fact, his own legal
22   III,     99|     sacred rites in the towns of Italy as well as temples and images
23   III,    103|  consular armies and was burning Italy with impunity, though the
24    IV,      6|                                  Italy on both seas was guarded
25    IV,      6|          other four, and, should Italy suddenly require aid, not
26    IV,      9|        had only a few estates in Italy, slaves on a moderate scale,
27    IV,     19|         this, were banished from Italy.~ ~
28    IV,     36|          germs of a slave war in Italy were crushed by a fortunate
29    IV,     42|          was to be expelled from Italy on a conviction of having
30    IV,     73|         Asia and to the other in Italy. The resources of the Lydians
31    IV,     74|      under which we struggled in Italy. They had also been the
32     V,     13|   intending, it seemed, to go to Italy. Sabinus sent this account
33    VI,      3|        the Senate, and then from Italy. And as men complained that
34    VI,     16|        of everything in Rome and Italy. When he rose to supreme
35    VI,     21|        and of holding estates in Italy, a law long obsolete because
36    VI,     22|    capital secured on estates in Italy. Creditors however were
37    XI,     17|    Simonides, added the rest. In Italy the Etrurians learnt them
38    XI,     27|          to the contributions of Italy was added the tribute of
39    XI,     28|       with vehement opposition. "Italy," it was asserted, "is not
40    XI,     29|         Lucania and the whole of Italy, that Italy itself was at
41    XI,     29|         the whole of Italy, that Italy itself was at last extended
42    XI,     29|      relations, in the days when Italy beyond the Po was admitted
43   XII,      9|       Calvina, was banished from Italy. Claudius further added
44   XII,     25|        she herself banished from Italy. Thus out of immense wealth
45   XII,     42|       was actually celebrated in Italy. All were eager to see the
46   XII,     51|   relieved. And yet in past days Italy used to send supplies for
47   XII,     62|          of the astrologers from Italy, stringent but ineffectual.
48   XII,     75|          disturbing the peace of Italy by an imperfect control
49  XIII,      5|       retain its ancient powers; Italy and the State-provinces
50  XIII,     29|        the offending actors from Italy, and the presence once more
51  XIII,     33|          summon from any part of Italy persons liable to legal
52  XIII,     36|      caused grievous distress to Italy by his profligacy and cruelty,
53  XIII,     53|        caught in his snare while Italy and the provinces were drained
54   XIV,     37|         by its own resources. In Italy meanwhile the old town of
55   XIV,     39|     extortion, and banished from Italy, contriving through the
56   XIV,     51|       suite had been a burden to Italy and Gaul, failed not, as
57   XIV,     53|   Fabianus. He was outlawed from Italy, and from Spain, where he
58   XIV,     57|       should be transported from Italy. This the emperor forbade,
59   XIV,     63|    Veiento, he banished him from Italy, and ordered the burning
60    XV,     56|                        Meanwhile Italy was thoroughly exhausted
61    XV,     93|        were forbidden to live in Italy, their penalty being the
62   XVI,      5|           and still retained the Italy of strict morals and primitive
63   XVI,     38|      Paconius were banished from Italy. Montanus was spared to
64   XVI,     40|         was merely excluded from Italy. ~ ~
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