Book,  Par.

 1     I,     19|         pro-consular powers, and envoys were despatched to confer
 2     I,     24|      violence? Decide on sending envoys, and give them instructions
 3     I,     37|          it was best to wait the envoys' return and meanwhile humour
 4     I,     39|     Drusus, without awaiting the envoys' return, as for the present
 5     I,     46|        preparing the despatch of envoys who were to draw the upper
 6     I,     50|                        Meanwhile envoys from the Senate had an interview
 7     I,     50|       camp-streets, they met the envoys, who on hearing of the tumult
 8     I,     51|     explained the reasons of the envoys' arrival. On the rights
 9     I,     51|       appeased, he dismissed the envoys with an escort of auxiliary
10     I,     55|  murdered, tribunes driven away, envoys imprisoned, camps and rivers
11     I,     56|      restore to the Senate their envoys, to the emperor his due
12     I,     75|                   Not long after envoys came from Segestes, imploring
13     I,     75|          of revolution. With the envoys Segestes had associated
14    II,      2|         wars, there came to Rome envoys from the chief men of Parthia,
15    II,     61|          the Marcomanni, he sent envoys to Tiberius with entreaties
16    II,     76|                         Meantime envoys arrived from Artabanus,
17   III,     85|          send their charters and envoys to Rome. Some voluntarily
18   III,    103|    become so insolent as to send envoys to Tiberius, actually demanding
19    IV,     35|       the war. In his train were envoys from the Garamantes, a rare
20    IV,     64|          took up arms, they sent envoys with assurances of their
21    IV,     73|   between Sardis and Smyrna. The envoys from Sardis read a decree
22    IV,     74|                              The envoys from Smyrna, after tracing
23    VI,     45|   further added insult, and sent envoys to reclaim the treasures
24    XI,     22|        among them, while he sent envoys to invite the Greater Chauci
25   XII,     12|      them. Then he turned to the envoys and bestowed high praise
26   XII,     17|         the foreigner by sending envoys to Eunones, who was then
27   XII,     21|         He sent at the same time envoys to Caesar with a letter
28   XII,     34|        perpetually at feud, sent envoys and hostages to Rome. To
29   XII,     57|         orders from the emperor, envoys were sent to Pharasmanes,
30   XII,     72|                                  Envoys from Byzantium having received
31  XIII,      6|         not out of hearing. When envoys from Armenia were pleading
32  XIII,     10|          the hostages and to the envoys who conducted them. They
33  XIII,     45|     wholly reversed, and he sent envoys to ask on behalf of himself
34  XIII,     70|       this honour was granted to envoys from those nations which
35   XIV,     34|       Soon afterwards, Corbulo's envoys whom he had sent to Tigranocerta,
36   XIV,     35|      pledge of amity. When these envoys were on their way home,
37    XV,      6|       replied that he would send envoys to the Roman emperor for
38    XV,      8|          About the same time the envoys of Vologeses, who had been
39    XV,     17|          full permission to send envoys to Nero. ~ ~
40    XV,     31|    beginning of spring, Parthian envoys brought a message from king
41    XV,     32|         who had arrived with the envoys was questioned as to the
42    XV,     33|                           So the envoys were sent back without an
43    XV,     35|      obstructions of long years. Envoys who came to him from Tiridates
44   XVI,     22| influence had crushed him, while envoys from Cilicia, supported
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