Acts 10:1
Now there was at Caesarea a man named Cornelius, a captain in the Italian regiment.
Acts 8:40
Philip found himself at Ashdod. Then visiting town after town, he kept preaching the good news in all the cities until he reached Caesarea.
Acts 27:1
When it was decided that we should sail for Italy, they proceeded to hand over Paul and a few other prisoners to the custody of Julius, a centurion of the Imperial Regiment.
Matthew 8:5-13
When he entered Capernaum, an army captain came, and entered him,
Matthew 27:27
Then the soldiers of the Governor took Jesus into the Praetorium, and gathered all the battalion together.
Matthew 27:54
When the Roman captain and the soldiers who were with him, guarding Jesus, saw the earthquake and all that happened, they were greatly terrified and said, "Certainly this man must have been God's Son."
Mark 15:16
The soldiers then led him away into the courtyard (Praetorium), and called together the whole battalion.
Luke 7:2
Here the slave of a certain Roman captain, a man dear to his master, was ill, and at the point of death.
John 18:3
So after getting troops and some Temple police from the chief priests and Pharisees, Judas came there with lanterns and torches and weapons.
John 18:12
So the troops and their commandant and the Jewish police took Jesus, and bound him,
Acts 21:8
On the morrow we started for Caesarea, where we went into the house of Philip, the evangelist, who was one of the seven, and stayed with him.
Acts 22:25
But when they had tied him up with the thongs, Paul said to the centurion who was standing near, "If a man is a Roman citizen, and uncondemned, is it lawful for you to scourge him?"
Acts 23:23
Then he called two centurions to him and said: "Get ready by nine o'clock tonight two hundred infantry to march as far as Caesarea, and also seventy troopers and two hundred spearmen."
Acts 23:33
They reached Caesarea and delivered the letter to the governor, and also presented Paul before him.
Acts 25:1
Three days after Festus entered his province, he went up from Caesarea to Jerusalem.
Acts 25:13
A short time after this King Agrippa and Bernice came to Caesarea to pay their respects to Festus.
Acts 27:43
But the centurion kept them from their purpose, because he wished to save Paul. He gave orders that those who could swim should first jump overboard and get to land;
Acts 27:31
Paul said to the centurion and to the soldiers, "Unless these men remain on the ship, you cannot be saved."