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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 24 total hits in 7 results.
Egypt (Egypt) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Caesar, after a short stay in Asia, hearing that Pompey had been seen at Cyprus, and thence conjecturing that he
was for Egypt, because of the interest he had in
that kingdom, and the advantages it would afford him, left Rhodes, with a convoy of ten Rhodian
galleys, and a few others from Asia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached from Fufius's
army in Achaia; and eight hundred horse. In these
legions were no more than three thousand two hundred men: the rest, fatigued
with the length of the march, or weakened with wounds, had not been able to
follow him. But Caesar depending on the reputation of his former exploits,
scrupled not to trust the safety of his person to a feeble escort,
Cyprus (Cyprus) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Caesar, after a short stay in Asia, hearing that Pompey had been seen at Cyprus, and thence conjecturing that he
was for Egypt, because of the interest he had in
that kingdom, and the advantages it would afford him, left Rhodes, with a convoy of ten Rhodian
galleys, and a few others from Asia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached from Fufius's
army in Achaia; and eight hundred horse. In these
legions were no more than three thousand two hundred men: the rest, fatigued
with the length of the march, or weakened with wounds, had not been able to
follow him. But Caesar depending on the reputation of his former exploits,
scrupled not to trust the safety of his person to a feeble escort,
Asia (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Caesar, after a short stay in Asia, hearing that Pompey had been seen at Cyprus, and thence conjecturing that he
was for Egypt, because of the interest he had in
that kingdom, and the advantages it would afford him, left Rhodes, with a convoy of ten Rhodian
galleys, and a few others from Asia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached frAsia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached from Fufius's
army in Achaia; and eight hundred horse. In these
legions were no more than three thousand two hundred men: the rest, fatigued
with the length of the march, or weakened with wounds, had not been able to
follow him. But Caesar depending on the reputation of his former exploits,
scrupled not to trust the safety of his person to a feeble escort,
Thessaly (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Caesar, after a short stay in Asia, hearing that Pompey had been seen at Cyprus, and thence conjecturing that he
was for Egypt, because of the interest he had in
that kingdom, and the advantages it would afford him, left Rhodes, with a convoy of ten Rhodian
galleys, and a few others from Asia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached from Fufius's
army in Achaia; and eight hundred horse. In these
legions were no more than three thousand two hundred men: the rest, fatigued
with the length of the march, or weakened with wounds, had not been able to
follow him. But Caesar depending on the reputation of his former exploits,
scrupled not to trust the safety of his person to a feeble escort,
Achaia (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Alexandria (Egypt) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Rhodes (Greece) (search for this): book 3, chapter 106
Caesar, after a short stay in Asia, hearing that Pompey had been seen at Cyprus, and thence conjecturing that he
was for Egypt, because of the interest he had in
that kingdom, and the advantages it would afford him, left Rhodes, with a convoy of ten Rhodian
galleys, and a few others from Asia, having on board two legions, one of
which he ordered to follow him from Thessaly, the other detached from Fufius's
army in Achaia; and eight hundred horse. In these
legions were no more than three thousand two hundred men: the rest, fatigued
with the length of the march, or weakened with wounds, had not been able to
follow him. But Caesar depending on the reputation of his former exploits,
scrupled not to trust the safety of his person to a feeble escort,