Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|       consular jurisdiction of the military tribunes of long duration.
 2     I,      6|   centurion reported, according to military custom, that he had executed
 3     I,     21|        allowed his men a rest from military duties, either for mourning
 4     I,     21|         what would be the terms of military service after Augustus,
 5     I,     22|     mountainous wastes. Assuredly, military service itself is burdensome
 6     I,     22|          only relief can come from military life being entered on under
 7     I,     30|            looks or the glitter of military decorations, but in unsightly
 8     I,     33|       first to scorn such blots on military discipline. Soon after,
 9     I,     44|           separate itself into its military companies. They replied
10     I,     55|          who were renouncing their military obedience 'citizens.' The
11     I,     58|            had done in battle, his military rewards, if any. If the
12     I,     80|         were associated with us in military fellowship. Lucius Stertinius
13     I,    103|        declared by edict "that the military exchequer depended on that
14     I,    105|            to prolong indefinitely military commands and to keep many
15     I,    106|       their origin, their life and military career, so that it might
16    II,     11|          chain, a crown, and other military gifts, while Arminius jeered
17    II,     15|       their hopes and fears at the military mess, among themselves,
18    II,     45|        praetorship discharged this military service should at once become
19    II,     50|         crush this slave of his by military force or allow time to dissipate
20    II,     58|            to be familiarised with military service, and to win the
21    II,     67|       years the name of Furius won military renown. Since the days of
22    II,     78|            hundred thousand men of military age, and how with such an
23    II,     96|             he would have attained military glory as much more easily
24    II,    114|          superstitions and were of military age should be transported
25   III,     32|       Lepida's slaves, who were in military custody, but would not allow
26   III,    104|             Unequal to us in solid military strength, but better in
27    IV,      7|          regard to noble ancestry, military renown, or brilliant accomplishments
28    IV,     20|       powers of a praetor and used military force, he had disregarded
29    IV,     58|           the witness, Aemilius, a military man, in his eagerness to
30    IV,     92|         furnishing of ox hides for military purposes. No one ever severely
31     V,     11|            he was prefect, and the military chest in aid of a revolution.
32    VI,      3|    pretence of compliment, to ruin military discipline? This was Gallio'
33    VI,     11|            the duties of civil and military life. His kinsfolk and connections
34   XII,     24|        gaze near the Rostra, under military guard. To Cilo and Aquila
35   XII,     39|           the Britons. Inferior in military strength, but deriving an
36   XII,     41|         but when he had formed the military testudo, and the rude, ill-compacted
37   XII,     47|      mentioned, was pre-eminent in military skill; he had long been
38   XII,     54|      barbarians are so ignorant as military engines and the skilful
39   XII,     54|          while that is a branch of military science which we especially
40   XII,     66|       presided; he wore a splendid military cloak, she, a mantle of
41   XII,     79|      approach to the palace with a military guard, and repeatedly gave
42   XII,     80|           which was on guard after military custom. There, at the suggestion
43  XIII,      3|           tribune who according to military custom asked the watchword,
44  XIII,     20|       ordered the departure of the military guard now kept for the emperor'
45   XIV,     25|            and had tampered with a military levy by bribery and corruption.
46   XIV,     37|           they had completed their military service. Not being accustomed
47   XIV,     40|         Suetonius Paulinus, who in military knowledge and in popular
48   XIV,     43|           in the place but a small military force. Trusting to the protection
49   XIV,     44|      passed by the fortresses with military garrisons, and attacked
50   XIV,     49|            and had contrary to all military usage disregarded the general'
51   XIV,     79|         banished to Campania under military surveillance. This led to
52    XV,     11|        those of others. But though military men had put him on his guard
53    XV,     33|            to Caius Itius, and the military forces to Corbulo, to which
54    XV,     34| impressiveness, which in him, as a military man, was as good as eloquence. ~ ~
55    XV,     39|                                 To military glory Corbulo added courtesy
56    XV,     57|          loose, were put down by a military guard stationed on the spot
57    XV,     61|            they invited the aid of military strength, of Gavius Silvanus
58    XV,     87|           this is not according to military rule." When bidden to offer
59   XVI,     16|           Ostorius, with his great military fame and the civic crown
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