Book 33. (1 results) Rebels of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
40
There were, of course, or had been, in his holding, auxiliary personnel, freewomen, contract women, and slaves.
There were, of course, or had been, in his holding, auxiliary personnel, free women, contract women, and slaves.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 1, Sentence #40)
Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
1
37
Following the defeat of the exploratory force Lords Nishida and Okimoto had retained some three hundred and fifty Pani warriors, and some eleven hundred mercenaries and mariners, the latter most recruited in, or in the vicinity of, the great port, Brundisium.
1
38
Lord Temmu had had at his disposal some two thousand warriors, all Pani, which were billeted within what was, in effect, a walled, mountaintop town, dominated by his castle, included here within what we speak of as the "holding".
1
39
Of fighting men then, discounting the tarnsmen withdrawn into the mountains, at their camp, Lords Nishida, Okimoto, and Temmu had less than thirty-five hundred men.
1
40
There were, of course, or had been, in his holding, auxiliary personnel, freewomen, contract women, and slaves.
1
41
At the time of the debacle of the exploratory force we had had some one hundred and forty tarns in the mountains, not yet committed, with their riders and support personnel.
1
42
Unfortunately this was no longer the case.
1
43
Picked units of Yamada's infantry, it was conjectured of some two hundred troops each, undetected, or unreported, by scouts, approaching through four narrow passes, had surprised, and stormed, the cots and ancillary structures of Lord Temmu's tarn cavalry.
Following the defeat of the exploratory force Lords Nishida and Okimoto had retained some three hundred and fifty Pani warriors, and some eleven hundred mercenaries and mariners, the latter most recruited in, or in the vicinity of, the great port, Brundisium.
Lord Temmu had had at his disposal some two thousand warriors, all Pani, which were billeted within what was, in effect, a walled, mountaintop town, dominated by his castle, included here within what we speak of as the "holding".
Of fighting men then, discounting the tarnsmen withdrawn into the mountains, at their camp, Lords Nishida, Okimoto, and Temmu had less than thirty-five hundred men.
There were, of course, or had been, in his holding, auxiliary personnel, free women, contract women, and slaves.
At the time of the debacle of the exploratory force we had had some one hundred and forty tarns in the mountains, not yet committed, with their riders and support personnel.
Unfortunately this was no longer the case.
Picked units of Yamada's infantry, it was conjectured of some two hundred troops each, undetected, or unreported, by scouts, approaching through four narrow passes, had surprised, and stormed, the cots and ancillary structures of Lord Temmu's tarn cavalry.
- (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 1)