ect the church of Paul, VI. iv. 10;
suffer famine and pestilence, VI. iv. 16, 17;
retire from the camp near the Appian Way, VI. iv. 18;
decide to abandon the siege, VI. vi. 1, 2;
send envoys to Rome, VI. vi. 3;
arrange an armistice with Belisarius, VI. vi. 36, vii. 13;
abandon Portus, VI. vii. 16, 22;
and Centumcellae, VI. vii. 18;
and Albani, VI. vii. 20;
attempt to enter Rome by stealth, VI. ix. 1 ff.;
assault the Pincian Gate, VI. ix. 12 ff.;
abandon Ariminum, VI. x. 6;
raise the siege of Rome, VI. x. 8, 12, 13;
defeated at the Mulvian Bridge, VI. x. 15 ff.;
besiege Ariminum, VI. xii. 1 ff.;
defeated at Ticinum, VI. xii. 31, 33;
besiege Milan, VI. xii. 39, 40;
no new laws made by the Gothic kings in Italy, VI. vi. 17;
tolerant in religious matters, VI. vi. 18;
respect the churches, VI. vi. 19;
allowed all offices to be filled by Romans, _ibid._;
Gothic language, V. x. 10;
a Goth makes trouble for the Romans at the Salarian Gate, V. xxiii. 9;
killed by a well-directed missile, V. xxiii. 10, 11
Gouboulgoudou, a Massagete, bodyguard of Valerian;
renders signal service at Ancon, VI. xiii. 14, 15
Gratiana, city at the extremity of Illyricum, V. iii. 15, 17
Greece, V. xxiv. 20, xxv. 13;
Magna Graecia, V. xv. 23
Greeks (Hellenes),
include the Epirotes, V. xv. 24;
their capture of Troy, V. xv. 9;
Greek statues of Athena, V. xv. 13;
Greek language, V. xviii. 6
Greeks, contemptuous term for the eastern Romans, V. xviii. 40, xxix. 11
Gripas, Gothic commander,
in Dalmatia, V. vii. 1;
defeated by Constantianus, V. vii. 27-36;
retires to Ravenna, V. vii. 36
Hadrian, tomb of,
near the Aurelian Gate, V. xxii. 12;
its excellent construction and decoration, V. xxii. 13, 14;
attacked by the Goths, V. xxii. 19 ff.;
statues thereon torn down by the Romans and hurled upon the Goths,
V. xxii. 22
Hebrews,
treasures of their king Solomon taken from Rome by Alaric,
V. xii. 42;
a certain Hebrew makes a prophecy to Theodatus by the actions of swine,
V. ix. 3-6;
see also Jews
Hellespont, V. xv. 18
Hermenefridus, ruler of the Thuringians,
betrothed to Amalaberga, V. xii. 22;
killed by the Franks, V. xiii. 1;
wife of, escapes to Theodatus, V. xiii. 2
Herodian,
Roman commander of infantry, V. v. 3;
left in command of the Roman garrison in Naples, V. xiv. 1
Homer, his testimony as to the place where
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