Book, Chapter
1 1, XII | indication of the ruin of a province than to see the divine institutions
2 1, XII | example of that court, this province has lost all devotion and
3 1, XII | kept and still keeps this province [country] of ours divided:
4 1, XII | cause more disorders in that province [country] than could spring
5 1, XXVI | NEW PRINCE IN A CITY OR PROVINCE TAKEN BY HIM OUGHT TO ORGANIZE
6 1, XXVI | anything unchanged in that Province, [and] so that there should
7 1, XXVI | be transferred men from Province to Province, as the Mandrians [
8 1, XXVI | transferred men from Province to Province, as the Mandrians [Shepherds]
9 1, XXXVII| results the ruin of that province and the elevation of another.
10 1, LIII | ten years, had filled this province with killings of Romans,
11 1, LIII | made Consul and desired the province of Africa, he promised to
12 1, LV | are yet unspoiled.~In the province of Germany this goodness
13 1, LV | be remaining only in that province: which result from two things;
14 1, LV | Gentlemen who are in that province: and if, by chance, any
15 1, LV | every Republic and to every Province: but more pernicious are
16 1, LV | the other Cities of that Province are in a way subject to
17 1, LV | lords of castles in that province, and few or no Gentlemen:
18 1, LV | establishing of a Republic in a province better adapted to being
19 1, LVI | EVENTS OCCUR IN A CITY OR A PROVINCE, SIGNS COME WHICH FORETELL
20 1, LVI | takes place in a City or a Province that has not been predicted
21 1, LVIII | ancient period when that province was governed by laws, nor
22 1, LIX | Athenians the arbiters of that Province. Whence Aristedes reported
23 2 | And we see a City or a Province well-organized in its government
24 2 | are born in that City or province after the time when it has
25 2 | this bad and good vary from province to province, as is seen
26 2 | good vary from province to province, as is seen by the historian
27 2, II | times there is only one Province of which it can be said
28 2, II | that each town and each province should recognize him. So
29 2, II | Peloponnesian war, where, the Province being divided into two factions,
30 2, II | cases occurred in the said Province, so that it is seen to be
31 2, IV | is called Lombardy: which province had been seized by the Gauls,
32 2, IV | out the inhabitants of the province, they settled there where
33 2, IV | Cities, and they called that Province Gallia from the name they
34 2, IV | has wanted to rule this province. But if the imitation of
35 2, VIII | the inhabitants out of a province, but the obedience of the
36 2, VIII | seek a new seat in a new province, not in order to seek dominion
37 2, VIII | Republic that assaults a province, it is enough to extinguish
38 2, VIII | and change the name of the province, as Moses did, and those
39 2, XII | men in order to assault a province: but to defend themselves
40 2, XVIII | military so weak, that their province has been easily trampled
41 2, XVIII | reputation to the military of a Province or a State it is necessary
42 2, XIX | that Empire reduced in that Province, the more powerful Cities
43 2, XIX | Swiss. And therefore this Province is divided between the Swiss,
44 2, XIX | have a discord. If this Province was constituted otherwise,
45 2, XIX | they acquire a City or a Province full of luxury, where those [
46 2, XX | opportunity to occupy a City or a Province, than to be requested by
47 2, XXIV | hold either a City or a province, but they did save some
48 2, XXIV | fortresses that existed in that province to be destroyed, judging
49 2, XXVIII| Attalus to the governship of a Province of Greece: Whence Pausanias
50 2, XXIX | more often in a City or a Province which lacks the above mentioned
51 2, XXX | assaulted that Kingdom, all that Province trembled, and the King himself
52 2, XXXI | their means occupy all that province. Whence he, upon their faith
53 3, X | if the Romans were in one province, he would go into another:
54 3, XIII | enemy and preserve that province for the Republic. So that,
55 3, XIX | overcome he fled from his province. Quintius, because he was
56 3, XX | and that many times that province and that City, which, with
57 3, XXI | himself a friend of that province, and with that humanity
58 3, XXI | the door to anyone in a province, who is the head of an innovation;
59 3, XLIII | XLIII~THAT MEN BORN IN A PROVINCE OBSERVE FOR ALL TIME ALMOST
60 3, XLIII | are more virtuous in this province than in another, according
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