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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Cornelius Tacitus, The History (ed. Alfred John Church, William Jackson Brodribb). Search the whole document.
Found 9 total hits in 3 results.
Mevania (Italy) (search for this): book 3, chapter 59
As the occupation of Mevania, and the
apparent revival of the war with new vigour, had struck terror into Italy, so now did the timorous retreat of Vitellius give
an unequivocal bias in favour of the Flavianists. The Samnites, the Peligni,
and the Marsi, roused themselves, jealous at having been anticipated by Campania, and, as men who serve a new master, were
energetic in all the duties of war. The army, however, was much distressed
by bad weather in its passage over the Apennines,
and since they could hardly struggle through the snow, though their march
was unmolested, they perceived what danger they would have had to encounter,
had not Vitellius been made to turn back by that good fortune, which, not
less often than the wisdom of their counsels, helped the Flavianist
generals. Here they fell in with Petilius Cerialis, who had escaped the
sentries of Vitellius by a rustic disguise and by his knowledge of the
country. There was a near relationship between Cerialis and Ves
Campania (Italy) (search for this): book 3, chapter 59
As the occupation of Mevania, and the
apparent revival of the war with new vigour, had struck terror into Italy, so now did the timorous retreat of Vitellius give
an unequivocal bias in favour of the Flavianists. The Samnites, the Peligni,
and the Marsi, roused themselves, jealous at having been anticipated by Campania, and, as men who serve a new master, were
energetic in all the duties of war. The army, however, was much distressed
by bad weather in its passage over the Apennines,
and since they could hardly struggle through the snow, though their march
was unmolested, they perceived what danger they would have had to encounter,
had not Vitellius been made to turn back by that good fortune, which, not
less often than the wisdom of their counsels, helped the Flavianist
generals. Here they fell in with Petilius Cerialis, who had escaped the
sentries of Vitellius by a rustic disguise and by his knowledge of the
country. There was a near relationship between Cerialis and Vesp
Apennines (Italy) (search for this): book 3, chapter 59
As the occupation of Mevania, and the
apparent revival of the war with new vigour, had struck terror into Italy, so now did the timorous retreat of Vitellius give
an unequivocal bias in favour of the Flavianists. The Samnites, the Peligni,
and the Marsi, roused themselves, jealous at having been anticipated by Campania, and, as men who serve a new master, were
energetic in all the duties of war. The army, however, was much distressed
by bad weather in its passage over the Apennines,
and since they could hardly struggle through the snow, though their march
was unmolested, they perceived what danger they would have had to encounter,
had not Vitellius been made to turn back by that good fortune, which, not
less often than the wisdom of their counsels, helped the Flavianist
generals. Here they fell in with Petilius Cerialis, who had escaped the
sentries of Vitellius by a rustic disguise and by his knowledge of the
country. There was a near relationship between Cerialis and Ves