Book, Chapter
1 1, II | Republics say there are [one of] three States [governments] in
2 1, II | Those that are good are three mentioned above: those that
3 1, II | those that are bad, are three others which derive from
4 1, II | derive from those [first three], and each is so similar
5 1, II | institutes one of those three States [governments] in
6 1, II | of the existence of those three that are good, and of the
7 1, II | of the malignity of those three that are bad. So that those
8 1, II | remained shared [between the three] it made the Republic perfect:
9 1, IV | Gracchi which was more than three hundred years, the tumults
10 1, XVII | continued so for two or three successions, [and] that
11 1, XIX | and of Tullus, the first three Kings of Rome, it will be
12 1, XXII | NOTED IN THE CASE OF THE THREE ROMAN HORATII AND OF THE
13 1, XXII | ROMAN HORATII AND OF THE THREE ALBAN CURATII~Tullus, King
14 1, XXII | those whose above mentioned three men should overcome [those
15 1, XXII | was married to one of the three dead Curatii, and who was
16 1, XXII | of his own merits. Here three things are to be noted.
17 1, XXII | People should be content that three of their Citizens should
18 1, XXIII | the virtu and fortune of three of their Citizens, which
19 1, XXIII | King, leaving aside two or three places guarded by them [
20 1, XXXVII| make himself Consul another three times. Against which plague
21 1, XXXVII| about the Agrarian law took three hundred years in bringing
22 1, XL | outside. And this may be of three kinds; the one, foreigners
23 1, LV | existed for a long time three Republics, Florence, Siena,
24 1, LX | was made Consul at twenty three years [of age]; and Valerius
25 2, IV | CHAPTER IV~REPUBLICS HAVE HAD THREE WAYS OF EXPANDING~Whoever
26 2, IV | finds that Republics had three ways of expanding. One has
27 2, IV | and Athenians. Of which three methods this last is entirely
28 2, V | these sects changed two or three times in five or six thousand
29 2, V | purges itself in one of the three ways, so that men having
30 2, VII | and distributed to each three and seven-twelfths [3 7/
31 2, VIII | others lived.~The Romans had three of these most perilous wars.
32 2, VIII | Romans, therefore, won these three most perilous wars. And
33 2, X | vanquished the Romans, he showed three things to be necessary for
34 2, XII | had experienced in Gaul three such defeats in so great
35 2, XVI | armies were composed of three principal divisions, which
36 2, XVI | right and the left of these three battalions, the ranks of
37 2, XVI | Principi, and Astati. These three ranks thus deployed kindled
38 2, XVI | to be able to reorganize three times in an engagement,
39 2, XVI | fortune inimical to him three times in order to lose,
40 2, XVI | pitted] against him a virtu three times as adept to overcome
41 2, XVI | being able to reorganize three times is to have lost the
42 2, XVI | also divide their army into three parts, calling one part
43 2, XVIII | cavalry; for two hundred or three hundred cavalry paid by
44 2, XXIV | which had to succor it in three days: Hence this example
45 2, XXVII | money from it. If of the three things, they [Spaniards]
46 2, XXVIII| Romans when they sent the three Fabii as ambassadors to
47 2, XXVIII| for the harm done that the three above-mentioned Fabii should
48 2, XXX | Hannibal into Italy, that after three defeats and after so many
49 3, VI | Prince. This alone, of the three dangers that Conspiracies
50 3, VI | are increased to two or three persons, they find an accuser
51 3, VI | conspiracies, there are to be found three dangerous periods of time;
52 3, VI | thoughtlessness, whenever they exceed three or four in number. And as
53 3, VI | sometimes reproached by these [three] for the way he stained
54 3, VI | and Electus, and when all three recognized the danger they
55 3, X | the other would have had three remedies, that is, the two
56 3, XV | guard Rome, and the other three were sent against the Fidenati
57 3, XV | would restore that which three had destroyed. Whence the
58 3, XV | with these forcible words: Three Tribunes with Consular power,
59 3, XVI | so that having to select three Commissaries to besiege
60 3, XVII | necessary to take one of three ways: either to kill them
61 3, XVII | each other again. Of these three methods this last is the
62 3, XXX | its word, commanded that three armies should be raised.
63 3, XXX | having been made Dictator three times, and having always
64 3, XXXIV | honorably. And of all these three things, which in the beginning
65 3, XXXIV | defeated the enemy. Which three acts gave him fame at that
66 3, XXXIV | Citizens, if founded on those three reasons mentioned above,
67 3, XXXVI | this I say that there are three kinds of armies: the one,
68 3, XXXIX | the Consul to take it with three thousand soldiers, he saved
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