Book,  Par.

 1    II,      3|         They also ridiculed his Greek attendants and his keeping
 2    II,     77|        and apparelled after the Greek fashion, in imitation of
 3    II,     83|     towns, and what bordered on Greek territories, fell to Cotys;
 4    II,    118|    barbarous nations, though to Greek historians, who admire only
 5   III,     84|        of the provinces. In the Greek cities license and impunity
 6   III,     91| Senate-House used to exclaim in Greek, "How ready these men are
 7    IV,     18|      brought embassies from the Greek communities. The people
 8    IV,     70|        rebuked Agrippina with a Greek verse, and reminded her
 9     V,     13| attracted the ignorant, and the Greek mind eagerly fastens on
10    VI,     24|        and that after his death Greek flattery had paid him divine
11    VI,     27|        at last addressed him in Greek to this effect: "You too,
12    VI,     63|   founded by Macedonians, claim Greek names, also of the Parthian
13    XI,     16|       as he said, that even the Greek alphabet had not been completed
14    XI,     17|         same form as the oldest Greek characters. At first too
15   XII,     52|       he was the offspring of a Greek concubine, and he obtained
16   XIV,     20|     Roman temples as well as in Greek cities. He could no longer
17   XIV,     21|         practising the art of a Greek or Latin actor and even
18   XIV,     27|        Rome in imitation of the Greek festival. Like all novelties,
19   XIV,     28|       for demanding of them the Greek contests, when once the
20   XIV,     29|         emperor was victorious. Greek dresses, in which most people
21    XV,     42|      Neapolis, because it was a Greek city. From this as his starting-point
22    XV,     51|  victories, various beauties of Greek art, then again the ancient
23    XV,     56|       was thoroughly trained in Greek learning, but he had not
24    XV,     92|        gifts and assumed in its Greek equivalent the name of Saviour.
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