0 a group of people who travel with an important person to help them:
The president travels with a large retinue of aides and bodyguards.
1 a group of people who help and who travel with an important person:
The surveyor therefore did not travel alone: he was attended with a retinue of local labourers, who were eventually erased from the account.
They wanted real, visible i assurances that she and her retinue would be respected, protected, and prominent in the public arena.
Each tomb was originally built for the burial of the ruler and his retinue, taking up the whole space of each chamber.
She stays alone at a palatial house stretching over two blocks with a retinue of about 20.
The pinhead represents the atomic nucleus; the dust motes are its retinue of electrons.
He found that he was able to meet with the chief, but that on each occasion the chief was surrounded by a large retinue of armed men.
We then had in the consular service over 70 people and five of the major regions had consul-generals and a whole retinue of followers.
I believe the days have gone when whole retinues of royal families were supported at public expense.