Book,  Par.

 1     I,      1|        Brutus. Dictatorships were held for a temporary crisis.
 2     I,     21|      emperors and the prospect it held out of license in tumult
 3     I,     23|         up. He upbraided them and held back man after man with
 4     I,     43|          the memory of Drusus was held in honour by the Roman people,
 5     I,     45|           him seized his hand and held it by force. The remotest
 6     I,     52|      measures. Even if Germanicus held his own life cheap, why
 7     I,     77|        they prefer) but because I held that Romans and Germans
 8     I,    106|           consular elections, now held for the first time under
 9    II,     44|          that he would be absent, held that all the more ought
10    II,     45|          of magistrates should be held every five years, and that
11    II,     68|           following year Tiberius held his third, Germanicus his
12    II,     77|           a fear that any one who held a province containing the
13    II,     78|         Bactria, and Scythia, and held under his sway the countries
14    II,    102|     spirit in which he had before held it. At the same time he
15   III,     24|      through the duty of voting), held that Piso's name ought to
16   III,     42|           the consulship; he also held the office of censor for
17    IV,      6|            lately subjugated, was held by three. Mauretania was
18    IV,      6|         foreign power. Thrace was held by Rhoemetalces and the
19    IV,     42|           a judicial decision, he held that the man ought to be
20    IV,     65|           established a camp, and held with a strong detachment
21    IV,     78|         the young prince spoke or held his tongue, silence and
22    VI,      2|       Were they to be men who had held office or youths, private
23    VI,     41|          tints of its plumage, is held unanimously by those who
24    VI,     44|           mistake ought not to be held innocent in the prince and
25    VI,     47|          brother Pharasmanes, who held the throne of that country.
26    VI,     65|           Phraates and Hiero, who held two very powerful provinces,
27    VI,     66|           that the throne was not held by an Arsacid, but that
28    VI,     78|          was a private citizen or held high offices; a time of
29   XII,     56|        common people, whom he had held under a harsh sway, heaped
30   XII,     59|         through a monstrous crime held by a foreign prince, raised
31   XII,     64|            Ventidius Cumanus, who held a part of the province,
32   XII,     75|          one could doubt that she held honour, modesty and her
33  XIII,     29|           but one who had not yet held any office, happened to
34  XIII,     31|    freedom-giving rod, were still held, as it were, by the bonds
35  XIII,     43|           places, and levies were held in Galatia and Cappadocia,
36  XIII,     44|          Paccius Orfitus, who had held the post of a first-rank
37  XIII,     51|        ground, as it could not be held without a strong garrison
38  XIII,     52|         decree a thanksgiving was held; statues also, arches and
39  XIII,     67|           which province they had held proconsular authority, Sulpicius
40   XIV,     25| prosecuted Acilius Strabo who had held the office of praetor, and
41   XIV,     32|        caverns with all that they held dearest. The Roman general
42    XV,      1|   inaction that great empires are held together; there must be
43    XV,      9|      districts which could not be held, the supplies which had
44    XV,     11|          the camp might have been held, and the Parthian foe baffled,
45    XV,     15|          defend their lives, some held back by the general's order,
46    XV,     22|           found that the promises held out by the laws, for which
47    XV,     61|          great enterprises, which held him back. ~ ~
48    XV,     67|          suggestion; for she even held over him a dreadful thought,
49    XV,     84|           that Sabrius Flavus had held a secret consultation with
50   XVI,     14|        year levies of troops were held in Narbon Gaul, Africa and
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