Book, Chapter
1 1 | have been accomplished by ancient Kingdoms and Republics,
2 1 | respect that no sign of that ancient virtu remains, I cannot
3 1 | the decisions given by the ancient Jurisconsults, which reduced
4 1 | the experience had by the ancient Doctors, [and] on which
5 1 | might judge by comparing ancient and modern events what is
6 1, VII | with examples, among the ancient ones I want this one of
7 1, IX | INSTITUTIONS ENTIRELY OUTSIDE THE ANCIENT ONES~And it may appear perhaps
8 1, IX | other innovation made on the ancient institutions except that
9 1, IX | City had lost much of that ancient virtu, and consequently
10 1, X | history and the records of ancient events, would do well living
11 1, X | citizens destroyed, the ancient temples desolate, ceremonies
12 1, XII | who live accordingly to ancient customs both as far as Religion
13 1, XIII | saying in favor of the ancient Religion these words: “He
14 1, XIV | foundation in good part of the ancient Religion of the Gentiles,
15 1, XV | decided to repeat their ancient sacrifices through the medium
16 1, XVI | derived from the records of ancient history will show how difficult
17 1, XVII | died, it returned to the ancient Tyranny. But there is no
18 1, XIX | which is maintained by its ancient institutions: and those
19 1, XXV | WHOEVER WANTS TO REFORM AN ANCIENT STATE INTO A FREE CITY,
20 1, XXV | AT LEAST A SHADOW OF THE ANCIENT FORMS~He who desires or
21 1, XXV | to retain the shadow of ancient forms, so that it does not
22 1, XXV | should not desire any of the ancient things because of the absence
23 1, XXV | those who want to abolish an ancient [system of] living in a
24 1, XXV | much as possible of the ancient [forms]; and if the magistrates
25 1, XXXI | mentioned, to maintain their ancient customs.~As to errors [committed]
26 1, XXXIV | the people, to destroy the ancient institutions of the City
27 1, XXXVII| PAST BUT CONTRARY TO THE ANCIENT CUSTOMS OF THE CITY~It was
28 1, XXXVII| CITY~It was the verdict of ancient writers that men afflict
29 1, XXXIX | who consider present and ancient affairs that the same desires
30 1, XL | restored to the form of its ancient liberty.~It is to be noted
31 1, XLIII | endings according to their ancient custom.~
32 1, XLV | and Rome restored to its ancient form, Virginius cited Appius
33 1, XLIX | which being mixed with ancient ones that were bad, could
34 1, LIII | and foreign, modern and ancient.~For, from this, there arose
35 1, LV | exists a good part of that ancient goodness, I would like to
36 1, LV | man who had knowledge of ancient civilizations, to introduce
37 1, LVI | I do not know, but from ancient and modern examples it is
38 1, LVIII | who arose in Egypt in that ancient period when that province
39 2 | not always reasonably) the ancient times and find fault with
40 2 | by the historian of those ancient Kingdoms which varied from
41 2 | whether the present or the ancient age is better, in those
42 2 | too much the times of the ancient Romans and censure ours.
43 2, II | has in it free Cities, in ancient times in all the Provinces
44 2, II | wonder, therefore, that the ancient people should have persecuted
45 2, II | should happen that in those ancient times the people were greater
46 2, II | In addition to this, the ancient Religion did not beatify
47 2, II | arts, and almost all their ancient institutions. So that if
48 2, IV | Whoever has studied the ancient histories finds that Republics
49 2, IV | has been that which the ancient Tuscans observed, of being
50 2, IV | Achaens and Aetolians did in ancient times in Greece. And as
51 2, IV | appeared difficult, that the ancient Tuscans ought not to appear
52 2, V | extinguished every record of that ancient Theology. It is true that
53 2, V | they persecuted all the ancient memorials, burning the works
54 2, VIII | those arms lost their ancient valor, that Empire was destroyed
55 2, VIII | of the Maurusians, a most ancient people of Syria, who, hearing
56 2, XVI | TIMES ARE DIFFERENT FROM THE ANCIENT ORGANIZATION~The most important
57 2, XVI | no longer observing the ancient discipline, have thus abandoned
58 2, XVI | Captains who have imitated the ancient order and corrected the
59 2, XVI | not possible to use the ancient virtu.~
60 2, XVII | the first opinion that the ancient Roman armies would not have
61 2, XVII | armies according to the ancient virtu: For whoever wants
62 2, XVII | when it is mixed with the ancient virtu, but, without that,
63 2, XVIII | ROMANS AND BY THE EXAMPLE OF ANCIENT ARMIES, THE INFANTRY OUGHT
64 2, XVIII | corroborated (in addition to many ancient and modern examples) by
65 2, XIX | also ought all the other ancient institutions to be believed
66 2, XX | result from it. Nor do the ancient examples move him, as well
67 2, XXI | truth, in addition to the ancient examples which could be
68 2, XXII | bring it [the Church] to its ancient liberty, it was necessary
69 2, XXIII | of their honors and their ancient ranks in the City, but left
70 2, XXIV | example] of Tarantum in ancient times and of Brescia in
71 2, XXIV | leave behind, as is seen in ancient histories; and as Francesco
72 2, XXVII | demonstrated in detail by ancient and modem examples, as it
73 2, XXX | present Republics from the ancient ones. Because of this every
74 3, I | the institutions of their ancient Religion, punished the Fabii
75 3, III | known by those who read ancient history, that after a change
76 3, IV | observing the institution of the ancient Kings, as will be shown
77 3, V | less had he observed the ancient institutions of the other
78 3, V | begin to break the laws and ancient institutions under which
79 3, X | different from those of ancient times, none the less, it
80 3, XI | do not want here to cite ancient examples, of which there
81 3, XII | pushed by necessity. The ancient Captains having recognized
82 3, XII | Crassus and his army [in ancient times] who, although he
83 3, XV | others, both modern and ancient, to clarify this further.
84 3, XXII | it brings her back to her ancient virtu. And if one Republic
85 3, XXII | Magistrates. Among the other ancient history of the Venetian
86 3, XVII | affairs, makes them regard the ancient judgments as partly inhuman,
87 3, XXXIX | other exercise. For the ancient writers say that those Heroes
88 3, XLIII | resemblance as those of ancient times. This arises because
89 3, XLIII | having studied and known the ancient customs of the barbarians,
90 3, XLIII | as is seen they did in ancient times to the Tuscans; who,
91 3, XLIII | from the example of the ancient Tuscans and from that of
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