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P. Vergilius Maro, Aeneid (ed. Theodore C. Williams) | 2 | 0 | Browse | Search |
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C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 2, chapter 35 (search)
These things being achieved, [and] all Gaul being subdued, so high an
opinion of this war was spread among the barbarians, that embassadors were sent
to Caesar by those nations who dwelt beyond the Rhine
, to promise that they would give hostages and execute his commands.
Which embassies Caesar, because he was hastening into
Italy and Illyricum , ordered to return to him at the beginning of the
following summer. He himself, having led his legions into winter quarters among
the Carnutes, the Andes, and the Turones , which states were close to those regions in which he had
waged war, set out for Italy; and a
thanksgiving of fifteen days was decreed for those achievements, upon receiving
Caesar's letter; [an honor] which before that time
had been c
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 3, chapter 11 (search)
He therefore sends T. Labienus, his lieutenant, with the
cavalry to the Treviri , who are nearest to the river Rhine . He
charges him to visit the Remi and the other
Belgians, and to keep them in their allegiance and repel the
Germans (who were said to have been summoned by
the Belgae to their aid,) if they attempted to cross the river by
force in their ships. He orders P. Crassus to proceed
into Aquitania with
twelve legionary cohorts and a great number of the cavalry, lest auxiliaries
should be sent into Gaul by these states, and such
great nations be united. He sends Q. Titurius Sabinus
his lieutenant, with three legions, among the Unelli, the
Curiosolitae, and the Lexovii, to take care that
their
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 1 (search)
The following winter (this was the year in which Cn. Pompey and
M. Crassus were consuls [55 B.C.]), those Germans [called] the
Usipetes, and likewise the Tenchtheri, with a
great number of men, crossed the Rhine , not far from the place
at which that river discharges itself into the sea. The motive for crossing
[that river] was, that having been for several years harassed by the
Suevi, they were constantly engaged in war, and hindered from
the pursuits of agriculture. The nation of the Suevi is by far the
largest and the most warlike nation of all the Germans. They are said to possess a hundred cantons, from each of
which they yearly send from their territories for the purpose of war a thousand
armed men: the others who remain at home, maintain [both] themselve
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 3 (search)
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 4 (search)
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 6 (search)
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 10 (search)
The Meuse rises from mount
Le Vosge, which is in the territories of the Lingones ; and, having received a branch of the Rhine
, which is called the Waal , forms
the island of the Batavi, and not more than eighty miles from it it
falls into the ocean. But the Rhine takes its source among
the Lepontii, who inhabit the Alps , and is carried with a
rapid currRhine takes its source among
the Lepontii, who inhabit the Alps , and is carried with a
rapid current for a long distance through the territories of the
Sarunates, Helvetii,
Sequani, Mediomatrici, Tribuci, and
Treviri , and when it approaches the ocean, divides into several
branches; and, having formed many and extensive islands, a great part of which
are inhabited by savage and barbarous nations (of whom there are some who are
supposed to live on fish and the e
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 14 (search)
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 15 (search)
The Germans when, upon hearing a noise behind them,
[they looked and] saw that their families were being slain, throwing away their
arms and abandoning their standards, fled out of the camp, and when they had
arrived at the confluence of the Meuse and the Rhine
, the survivors despairing of further escape, as a great number of their
countrymen had been killed, threw themselves into the river and there perished,
overcome by fear, fatigue, and the violence of the stream. Our soldiers, after
the alarm of so great a war, for the number of the enemy amounted to 430,000,
returned to their camp, all safe to a man, very few being even wounded. Caesar granted those whom he had detained in the camp
liberty of departing. They however, dreading revenge and torture from the Gauls, whose lands they had ha
C. Julius Caesar, Gallic War, Book 4, chapter 16 (search)