Book, Chapter
1 Gre | the Macedonian when he was King, for to Hiero nothing was
2 Gre | possess any part of the King than the Kingdom. Enjoy
3 1, II | that in giving parts to the King, the Aristocracy, and the
4 1, II | should be in the place of the King, [and] so it happened that
5 1, II | that while the name [of King] was driven from Rome, the
6 1, VI | by me. Sparta created a King with a small Senate which
7 1, VI | said, being governed by a King and limited Senate could
8 1, VI | Citizens: which, in creating a King for life and a small number
9 1, IX | in place of an hereditary King there should be two Consuls [
10 1, IX | this is that of Agis, King of Sparta, who desiring
11 1, XIX | fortune, having the first King most ferocious and warlike,
12 1, XIX | chance had as her third King a man who had not known
13 1, XIX | ruined under a weak or bad King.~
14 1, XXI | that in recent times the King of England assaulted the
15 1, XXI | which resulted from that King being a prudent man and
16 1, XXII | THREE ALBAN CURATII~Tullus, King of Rome, and Metius, King
17 1, XXII | King of Rome, and Metius, King of Alba, agreed that that
18 1, XXII | because of this Metius, King of the Albans, with his
19 1, XXIII | can be cited. When Francis King of France planned to cross
20 1, XXIII | theirs was vain, for that King, leaving aside two or three
21 1, XXIV | wanting to murder Porsenna, King of the Tuscans. For these
22 1, XXV | reason, had in place of one King created two Consuls, [and]
23 1, XXV | not be done except by the King in person, and as the Romans
24 1, XXV | because of the absence of the King, created a chief for the
25 1, XXV | sacrifice, whom they called the King of sacrifice, and placed
26 1, XXV | desire the return of the King. And this ought to be observed
27 1, XXVI | David did when he became King, who piled good upon the
28 1, XXVI | these methods, from a petty King became Prince of Greece.
29 1, XXVI | private individual than as a King at the [expense of the]
30 1, XXIX | Kingdom of Naples for Ferrando King of Aragon against the French,
31 1, XXXV | the Spartans gave to their King, and how the Venetians give
32 1, XXXVIII| thousand five hundred [1500].~King Louis XII of France having
33 1, XXXVIII| under the pledge of the King he promise not to put them
34 1, XXXVIII| mistrust of the faith of the King, into whose hands they had
35 1, XXXVIII| have been easier for the King to restore Pisa to them
36 1, XXXVIII| Imbault was sent by the King of France to the succor
37 1, XXXVIII| Arezzo, they should let the King know, who was much better
38 1, XL | such disorders. For men, as King Ferrando said, often act
39 1, LV | lacking) as from having a King who keeps them united, not
40 1, LVI | knows how the coming of King Charles VIII of France into
41 2, I | Carthaginians, and also to Philip King of Macedonia and to Antiochus;
42 2, II | discussion whether there was any King outside those who reigned
43 2, II | reigned in Rome, and Porsenna, King of Tuscany, whose line was
44 2, II | the Veientians created a King for the defense of Veii,
45 2, II | as they lived under the King, judging it not to be good
46 2, III | in the time of the sixth King of Rome, that there lived
47 2, IV | where he tells of Philip, King of Macedon, coming to negotiate
48 2, IX | and the Florentines to King Robert of Naples, who, unwilling
49 2, X | Antipater the Macedonian and the King of Sparta, where he narrates
50 2, X | because of a want of money the King of Sparta was obliged to
51 2, X | other things that Croesus, King of Lydia, showed to Solon
52 2, X | sent Ambassadors to the King of Macedonia to treat of
53 2, X | of certain accords, that King to show his power and to
54 2, X | gold. And thus was that King despoiled by the very thing
55 2, X | feared them. And if that King of Sparta, because of a
56 2, XI | 1479] the Pope and the King of Naples assaulted them,
57 2, XI | that being friends of the King of France derived from that
58 2, XII | gave Antiochus when that king planned to make war against
59 2, XII | it is shown that Anteus, King of Libya, being assaulted
60 2, XII | Everyone knows that Ferrando, King of Naples, was held to be
61 2, XII | death, news came that the King of France, Charles VIII,
62 2, XII | order to be defended) to King Robert of Naples. But after
63 2, XIII | has Cyrus make against the King of Armenia is full of fraud,
64 2, XIII | to this, he made Cyraxes, King of the Medes, his maternal
65 2, XV | they had in the passage of King Louis XII of France to make
66 2, XV | Milan, in Italy. For the King when he was considering
67 2, XV | and the ambassadors to the King made an accord with him
68 2, XV | remain neutral, and that the King after coming into Italy
69 2, XV | of Lodovico, so that the King having already achieved
70 2, XV | Florentines than did the King.~And although above in another
71 2, XVI | the passage of Charles, King of France, into Italy; that
72 2, XVII | being still held by the King of France, the Venetians,
73 2, XVIII | encounter north of Milan the King of the French, Francis,
74 2, XIX | fifty thousand cavalry of [King] Tigranes, and that among
75 2, XXI | the French many times, the King always (except at the present
76 2, XXI | not by election of the King, but because necessity so
77 2, XXI | gives more security to the King from the Rule [Empire] over
78 2, XXII | by many, when Francis I, King of France, attempted the
79 2, XXII | addition to the Venetians whom King Louis and gained over to
80 2, XXII | inasmuch as the forces of the King of Spain were in Lombardy,
81 2, XXII | yield to the desires of the king, but was persuaded by those
82 2, XXII | Church not to have either the King [of France] or the Swiss
83 2, XXII | indifference of the [French] King, who did not seek a second
84 2, XXIV | rebelled against Louis XII, King of France, who had come
85 2, XXIV | building of it protected the King of France. For when he was
86 2, XXIV | is seen in the coming of King Charles, to whom they all
87 2, XXIV | holding Pisa on it, and the King [of France] could never
88 2, XXIV | De Foix, Captain of the King, being with his army at
89 2, XXX | but the Venetians and the King of France, who with so great
90 2, XXX | tributary to the Swiss and the King of England. All of which
91 2, XXX | people, and because that King and the others mentioned
92 2, XXX | Province trembled, and the King himself and everyone else
93 3, I | times even by condemning the King in some of his decisions.
94 3, II | suffer no one to reign [as King] in Rome.~From this example,
95 3, IV | Queen than a daughter to a King. If, therefore, Tarquinius
96 3, V | CHAPTER V~THAT WHICH MAKES A KING LOSE THE KINGDOM THAT WAS
97 3, VI | abject Spaniard stabbed King Ferrando of Spain in the
98 3, VI | that of Coppola against King Ferrando of Aragon; this
99 3, VI | as it was made by another King, so to speak, and one who
100 3, VI | Ciballinus, and Ciballinus to the King. As to being discovered
101 3, VI | formed against Hieronymus, King of Syracuse, where Theodorus,
102 3, VI | accused the friends of the King; and on the other hand,
103 3, VI | conspired against Sitalces, King of Thracia; they fixed the
104 3, X | practice: and even if a King of our times is sometimes
105 3, XIV | turn useless; as did the King of India against Semiramis,
106 3, XIV | the Queen] seeing that the King had a good number of elephants,
107 3, XIV | being recognized by the King, that design turned out
108 3, XV | five hundred [1500], after King Louis XII of France had
109 3, XVIII | engagement which Francis, King of France, made in Lombardy
110 3, XVII | and by corruption of every king to make friends for themselves.
111 3, XVII | Monsignor Di Lante sent by the King of France to cause a restitution
112 3, XVII | should say he was of the King’s party, he would be castigated,
113 3, XVII | be forces hostile to the King in that town, and that the
114 3, XVII | that town, and that the King wanted all the towns to
115 3, XXXI | insolence that they called the King of France a son of Saint
116 3, XXXI | Vaila at the hands of the King of France, they not only
117 3, XXXI | to both the Pope and the King of Spain, and were so demoralized
118 3, XXXV | those friends of Perseus, King of the Macedonians, who,
119 3, XXXIX | was going to assault the King of Armenia, in dividing
120 3, XLI | defending the majesty of their King and the power of the Kingdom,
121 3, XLI | proceeding is ignominious to the King; for they say that their
122 3, XLI | for they say that their King cannot suffer disgrace in
123 3, XLI | matter that only concerns the King.~
124 3, XLIII | times money was given to King Charles VIII on his promise
125 3, XLIII | restored them: in which the King showed the bad faith and
126 3, XLIV | De Foix, Captain of the King of France against the Marquis
127 3, XLIV | remain neutral and to the King of France to send his forces
128 3, XLIV | to his desires, and the King sent him aid and the Venetians
129 3, XLIV | through the dominion of the King, and the other, short, through
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