Book,  Par.

 1     I,      3|         Marcus Agrippa, of humble birth, a good soldier, and one
 2     I,     78|         The wife of Arminius gave birth to a male child; the boy,
 3    II,      5|           Ariobarzanes, a Mede by birth, whom they willingly accepted,
 4    II,     67|         Tacfarinas. A Numidian by birth, he had served as an auxiliary
 5    II,     69|        time was confined and gave birth to Julia. He then penetrated
 6    II,     80|      Gotones was a youth of noble birth, Catualda by name, who had
 7    II,     96|          person and were of noble birth; neither had much exceeded
 8    II,    112|           married to Drusus, gave birth to twin sons. This, as a
 9   III,     57|      Aedui. Both could show noble birth and signal services rendered
10   III,     86|        olive still standing, gave birth to those two deities, whereupon
11    IV,     11|          as fathers. Such is your birth that your prosperity and
12     V,      1|       Julia Augusta. A Claudia by birth and by adoption a Livia
13    VI,      8|         his distinction. Of noble birth, but beggared by extravagance
14    VI,     30|     future is fixed from his very birth, but that some things happen
15    VI,     41|           nest in the land of its birth and infuses into it a germ
16    XI,     19|        was to all others in noble birth, should they not put his
17    XI,     25|                            Of the birth of Curtius Rufus, whom some
18   XII,      7|       stands first in nobility of birth. She has given proof too
19   XII,     43| prosperity been equal to my noble birth and fortune, I should have
20   XII,     72|           whose supposed spurious birth acquired for him the name
21  XIII,      1|          blameless life, of noble birth, and, as a point then much
22  XIII,     21|      related. Conspicuous for her birth, her beauty, and her wantonness,
23  XIII,     27|      throne, because of his noble birth and connection with Claudius,
24  XIII,     59|         going to her, to the high birth and beauty which had fallen
25   XIV,     18|       meant nothing. A woman gave birth to a snake, and another
26   XIV,     56|         thus inherited from their birth an affection for their masters.
27   XIV,     79|       Eucaerus, an Alexandrine by birth, skilled in singing to the
28    XV,     29|          more than mortal joy the birth of a daughter by Poppaea,
29    XV,     30|       Antium to honour the recent birth, Thrasea was forbidden to
30   XVI,      1|         Bassus, a Carthaginian by birth and a man of a crazed imagination,
31   XVI,      7|           for the nobility of his birth and the quiet demeanour
32   XVI,      7|         Silanus, a youth of noble birth and reckless spirit, to
33   XVI,     15|    discovered some remarks on the birth and life of Ostorius Scapula,
34   XVI,     25|       them. That sect of his gave birth to the Tuberones and Favonii,
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