Book,  Par.

 1     I,     72|    Arminius and all the other chiefs, assuring him that the people
 2     I,     91|   conflicting opinions of its chiefs. Arminius advised that they
 3    II,     11|       Arminius with the other chiefs. He asked whether Caesar
 4    II,     14|      and round him many noble chiefs. The rest were rescued from
 5    II,     18| Arminius and the other German chiefs slow to call their respective
 6    II,     19|       demanding battle, their chiefs led them down into a plain
 7    II,     24|       arms. Common people and chiefs, young and old, rushed on
 8    II,     30|   were sent back by the petty chiefs. Every one, as he returned
 9    II,     58|  nations, the valour of their chiefs were equal. But the title
10    II,     72|     had thus bound to himself chiefs and people alike. Germanicus
11    II,     76|   distance, he might draw the chiefs of the tribes into civil
12    IV,     33|       same time beheaded some chiefs of the Musulamii, who were
13    IV,     68|                  One of their chiefs, Dinis, an old man who well
14    VI,     48|                  Of the petty chiefs Mithridates was the first
15    VI,     48|       Sarmatae, whose highest chiefs took bribes from both sides,
16   XII,     65|       slew Troxobor and a few chiefs, and pacified the rest by
17   XIV,     20|       the practice of ancient chiefs; it was celebrated too in
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