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| Defeat of Maxentius's Armies in Italy. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXXVII.—Defeat of Maxentius’s
Armies in Italy.
Constantine, however, filled with compassion on account of all these
miseries, began to arm himself with all warlike preparation against the
tyranny. Assuming therefore the Supreme God as his patron, and invoking
His Christ to be his preserver and aid, and setting the victorious
trophy, the salutary symbol, in front of his soldiers and body-guard,
he marched with his whole forces, trying to obtain again for the Romans
the freedom they had inherited from their ancestors.
And whereas, Maxentius, trusting
more in his magic arts than in the affection of his subjects, dared not
even advance outside the city gates,3123
3123 “Because the soothsayers had foretold that if he went out of
it, he should perish.” Lact. De M. P. | but had
guarded every place and district and city subject to his tyranny, with
large bodies of soldiers,3124
3124 Bag.adds “and numberless
ambuscades,” following Valesius and 1709. The word
so rendered is the word for “companies of soldiers.” The
rather awkward “multitude of heavy-armed soldiers and myriads of
companies of soldiers” may be rendered as above, although
“larger bodies of soldiers and limitless supplies”
suggested by the translation is perhaps the real meaning. He had both
“men and means.” | the emperor,
confiding in the help of God, advanced against the first and second and
third divisions of the tyrant’s forces, defeated them all with
ease at the first assault,3125
3125 At
Sigusium, Turin, Brescia, and Verona. | and made his way
into the very interior of Italy.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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