Book, Chapter
1 1 | Subjects, in expanding the Empire, there will not be found
2 1, I | should have been born that Empire to which that Republic was
3 1, I | the decline of that Roman Empire, began among themselves,
4 1, I | cities, throughout all their Empire] or they are built by a
5 1, I | was built under the Roman Empire, and could not in its beginning
6 1, I | victories, the greatness of the Empire, could not corrupt her for
7 1, II | although those Kings lost their Empire for the reasons and in the
8 1, IV | the causes of the Roman Empire; but it indeed seems to
9 1, V | all the other ranks of the Empire [Government] of the Republic.
10 1, V | which wants to create an Empire, as Rome, or of one which
11 1, VI | order to create a great Empire, you will make it of a kind
12 1, VI | desiring to build a great Empire, she could not, like Sparta,
13 1, X | the long duration of the Empire which, ruling under his
14 1, X | who, after Rome became an Empire, lived under the laws [and]
15 1, X | Aurelius]. And when the Empire became hereditary, it came
16 1, XI | sufficient for so great an Empire, put it into the breasts
17 1, XII | acquired and held temporal Empire, she has not been so powerful
18 1, XIII | ill-used the majesty of its Empire, and that there was no other
19 1, XVII | the form of a Republic and Empire, but after his death returned
20 1, XX | Consuls, who came to that Empire not by heredity or deceit
21 1, XXI | servitude of the Spartan Empire, finding themselves in a
22 1, XXIX | his virtu has conquered an Empire for his Lord, overcoming
23 1, XXIX | the people who ever had an Empire for reasons discussed above,
24 1, XXXIII| reputation, strength, and empire, its neighbors which at
25 1, XXXIII| in the expansion of the Empire. On which subject it will
26 1, XXXIV | perpetuate themselves in the Empire [government]: and if the
27 1, XXXIV | greatness of so great an Empire: For without a similar institution,
28 1, XXXIX | 1494] lost part of her Empire, such as Pisa and other
29 1, XXXIX | them the majesty of the Empire would decline completely,
30 1, XLIX | beginnings subject to the Roman Empire, and having always existed
31 1, L | administered their outside Empire. This resulted in a very
32 2 | and if after the Roman Empire no other Empire followed
33 2 | the Roman Empire no other Empire followed which endured,
34 2 | destroyed the Eastern Roman Empire. In all these provinces,
35 2 | aggrandizement of their Empire.~
36 2, I | THE GREATER CAUSE FOR THE EMPIRE WHICH THE ROMANS ACQUIRED~
37 2, I | people in acquiring the Empire were favored more by Fortune
38 2, I | enabled her to acquire that Empire; and the order of proceeding
39 2, I | begun to combat them for the Empire of Sicily and Spain. The
40 2, I | enabled them to acquire that Empire than did Fortune, in the
41 2, II | rather to be, that the Roman Empire with its arms and greatness
42 2, II | institutions. And although that Empire was later dissolved, yet
43 2, II | very few places in that Empire.~But however it was, the
44 2, III | a City to achieve great Empire ought with all industry
45 2, III | aggrandizing and creating an Empire was necessary and good,
46 2, III | the greatness of the Roman Empire, and Rome appeared more
47 2, IV | of them. Before the Roman Empire, the Tuscans were the most
48 2, IV | a league governed their Empire; nor could they go outside
49 2, IV | commanding the seat of the Empire and the right of sovereignty
50 2, IV | for herself the seat of Empire and the right of command,
51 2, VIII | that seek to extend their Empire, such as were the wars that
52 2, VIII | their ancient valor, that Empire was destroyed by similar
53 2, VIII | occupied all the western Empire.~These people go out from
54 2, VIII | people who occupied the Roman Empire. For these new names that
55 2, VIII | during the decline of the Empire, when more than thirty tribes
56 2, IX | And as the aim of Rome was Empire and Glory, and not Quiet,
57 2, XII | the Romans easier than the Empire, and Italy before the other
58 2, XIII | to have arrived at great Empire only by force and ingenuity,
59 2, XIX | Republic great and to acquire Empire. And if these means of expanding
60 2, XIX | was subject to the Roman Empire, as was France and Spain:
61 2, XIX | when the decline of the Empire came afterwards, and the
62 2, XIX | afterwards, and the rule of that Empire reduced in that Province,
63 2, XIX | ransoming themselves from the Empire by reserving a small annual
64 2, XIX | may very well extend his Empire, but not power; and whoever
65 2, XIX | power; and whoever acquires Empire and not power together,
66 2, XXI | any sign of the authority [Empire] of the Roman people, but
67 2, XXI | the King from the Rule [Empire] over it, and more contentedness
68 2, XXI | voluntarily under the Florentine Empire [Dominion]. Everyone also
69 2, XXIII | increase. Certainly that Empire is more firm which enjoys
70 2, XXIII | would have secured their Empire and greatly increased the
71 2, XXX | the confines of the Roman Empire, in order to have its friendship,
72 2, XXX | the ruin of so great an Empire. Such troubles proceeded,
73 2, XXX | are in the interior of his Empire so as to obtain men who
74 3, VI | their power other than the Empire, and not wanting to be lacking
75 3, VI | dignity] and that of the Empire, decided to have them killed,
76 3, VI | who was aspiring to the Empire and to advise him of it.
77 3, XXXI | minds the creation of an empire similar to the Roman one.
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