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Browsing named entities in a specific section of C. Julius Caesar, Commentaries on the Civil War (ed. William Duncan). Search the whole document.
Found 12 total hits in 4 results.
Africa (search for this): book 2, chapter 37
Curio received the same news, but for some time would not believe it, so
greatly did he confide in his good fortune. Besides, Caesar's success in Spain was already known in Africa; whence he concluded it improbable
that Juba would attempt any thing against him.
But when he was for certain informed with his whole army, he retired from
before the town to the Cornelian camp, laid in great quantities of corn and
wood, began to fortify himself, and sent directly to Sicily for the cavalry, and the two
legions he had left there. The camp itself was very advantageous for
protracting the war, being strong both by nature and art, near the sea, and
abounding in water and salt, great quantities of which had been carried
thither from the neighbouring saltpits. Neither ran he any h
Sicily (Italy) (search for this): book 2, chapter 37
Juba (Sudan) (search for this): book 2, chapter 37
Curio received the same news, but for some time would not believe it, so
greatly did he confide in his good fortune. Besides, Caesar's success in Spain was already known in Africa; whence he concluded it improbable
that Juba would attempt any thing against him.
But when he was for certain informed with his whole army, he retired from
before the town to the Cornelian camp, laid in great quantities of corn and
wood, began to fortify himself, and sent directly to Sicily for the cavalry, and the two
legions he had left there. The camp itself was very advantageous for
protracting the war, being strong both by nature and art, near the sea, and
abounding in water and salt, great quantities of which had been carried
thither from the neighbouring saltpits. Neither ran he any h
Spain (Spain) (search for this): book 2, chapter 37
Curio received the same news, but for some time would not believe it, so
greatly did he confide in his good fortune. Besides, Caesar's success in Spain was already known in Africa; whence he concluded it improbable
that Juba would attempt any thing against him.
But when he was for certain informed with his whole army, he retired from
before the town to the Cornelian camp, laid in great quantities of corn and
wood, began to fortify himself, and sent directly to Sicily for the cavalry, and the two
legions he had left there. The camp itself was very advantageous for
protracting the war, being strong both by nature and art, near the sea, and
abounding in water and salt, great quantities of which had been carried
thither from the neighbouring saltpits. Neither ran he any