Book,  Par.

 1     I,     10|            forty-three million five hundred thousand sesterces "to the
 2     I,     10|    praetorian soldier, and of three hundred to every man in the legionary
 3    II,     16|           lands with daily pay of a hundred sesterces as long as war
 4    II,     48|          right, he would bestow two hundred thousand sesterces on each
 5    II,     53|             the city populace three hundred sesterces, and nominated
 6    II,     65|       forefathers, to more than two hundred miles from Rome. Her paramour,
 7    II,     78|           had dwelt in Thebes seven hundred thousand men of military
 8   III,     30|        numbering not more than five hundred, routed those same troops
 9    IV,     73|            affirmed that for twelve hundred years their homes had not
10    IV,     81|          fortune fell short of four hundred thousand sesterces, and
11    IV,     93|            from deserters that nine hundred Romans had been cut to pieces
12    IV,     93|           that another body of four hundred, which had taken possession
13    VI,     22| distributing throughout the banks a hundred million sesterces, and allowing
14    VI,     41|         general tradition says five hundred years. Some maintain that
15    VI,     41|            at intervals of fourteen hundred and sixty-one years, and
16    VI,     41|            period of less than five hundred years. Consequently some
17    VI,     64|             tone of flattery. Three hundred citizens, chosen for wealth
18    VI,     69|          and blocks of tenements. A hundred million of sesterces was
19    XI,      5|                             Fifteen hundred thousand sesterces and the
20    XI,      6|             rank, who had paid four hundred thousand sesterces to Suilius,
21   XII,     63|              the possessor of three hundred million sesterces.~ ~
22  XIII,     30|            banishing the freedman a hundred miles off to the shores
23  XIII,     37|           of the city populace four hundred sesterces were given, and
24  XIII,     41|             an annual grant of five hundred thousand sesterces on which
25  XIII,     53|          royal favour amassed three hundred million sesterces? At Rome
26   XIV,     43|          All he did was to send two hundred men, and no more, without
27   XIV,     49|          our soldiers of about four hundred, and only as many wounded.
28   XIV,     55|             of his slaves when four hundred have not protected Pedanius
29    XV,     21|           price, although about two hundred ships were destroyed in
30    XV,     21|            a violent storm, and one hundred more, which had sailed up
31   XVI,     38|          sesterces, Ostorius twelve hundred thousand, with the decorations
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