Book,  Par.

 1     I,     72|        by a sudden inroad on the Chatti in the beginning of spring.
 2     I,     73|       marching order against the Chatti, leaving Lucius Apronius
 3     I,     73|      suddenly did he come on the Chatti that all the helpless from
 4     I,     74|         the Cherusci to help the Chatti; but Caecina thoroughly
 5    II,      9|         to make an inroad on the Chatti with a flying column. He
 6    II,      9|          Arpus, the chief of the Chatti. And Caesar had no opportunity
 7    II,     31|     cavalry to march against the Chatti. He himself, with a larger
 8    II,     52|       triumph over the Cherusci, Chatti, and Angrivarii, and the
 9    II,    117|      Adgandestrius, chief of the Chatti, was read in the Senate,
10    XI,     19|          Catumerus, chief of the Chatti. The youth himself was of
11   XII,     33| irruption of plundering bands of Chatti. Thereupon Lucius Pomponius,
12   XII,     34|      legions, to see whether the Chatti, in their eagerness for
13  XIII,     72|      they sought refuge with the Chatti and then with the Cherusci,
14  XIII,     73|   between the Hermunduri and the Chatti, both forcibly claiming
15  XIII,     73|       the more disastrous to the Chatti because they had devoted,
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