Book, Chapter
1 1 | Kingdoms and Republics, by Kings, Captains, Citizens, Lawgivers,
2 1, II | Romulus and all the other Kings made many and good laws,
3 1, II | been established by those Kings. And although those Kings
4 1, II | Kings. And although those Kings lost their Empire for the
5 1, VI | resulted from the Spartan Kings, who, being placed in that
6 1, XII | Lombards who already were the kings of almost all Italy, and
7 1, XVI | the Consuls as under the Kings; so that the liberty of
8 1, XVI | nothing else other than those Kings being bound by an infinite
9 1, XVI | state wanted that those Kings should do (in their own
10 1, XVII | that it was necessary that Kings should be eliminated in
11 1, XVII | degree of] corruption those Kings had come, if it should have
12 1, XVII | disposed to keep away from Kings at that time, it was enough
13 1, XVII | that no sooner had these Kings become corrupt than they
14 1, XIX | Tullus, the first three Kings of Rome, it will be seen
15 1, XIX | necessary that the other Kings should reassume the virtu
16 1, XIX | long as she lived under Kings, she was subject to these
17 1, XX | Rome had driven out her Kings, she was no longer exposed
18 1, XX | succession of weak or bad Kings; for the highest [authority]
19 1, XX | she had existed under her Kings. For it is seen that two
20 1, XXII | believed that any of those Kings or of those People should
21 1, XXIII | action [on the part] of those Kings could not be considered
22 1, XXV | number that ministered to the Kings. In addition to this, an
23 1, XXVIII| from the expulsion of the Kings up to Sulla and Marius)
24 1, XXVIII| after the expulsion of the Kings against Collatinus and Publius
25 1, XXXII | might want to accept the Kings than to sustain a war, in
26 1, XXXII | to this the memory of the Kings, by whom they had been ill-used
27 1, XXXV | appointed who watched that the Kings [and the Doges] could not
28 1, LVIII | among whom are not those Kings who arose in Egypt in that
29 1, LVIII | the same way as they [the Kings] were, and the same goodness
30 1, LVIII | in them as we see in [the Kings], and we will see that they
31 1, LVIII | after the driving out of the Kings, and Athens did after they
32 2, II | liberated itself from its Kings. The cause is easy to understand,
33 2, IV | accustomed to live under Kings, did not care to be subjects,
34 2, VIII | Bellovesus and Sicovesus, two Kings of the Gauls, of whom Bellovesus
35 2, XII | Carthaginians, and as have the Kings of France and the Italians.
36 2, XXX | Syracusan, Eumene and the Kings of Massinissa, who all lived
37 3, I | although the actions of the Kings were great and notable,
38 3, II | opportunity to attack the Kings, and liberate his country
39 3, IV | judged they ought to be the Kings. And this desire to reign
40 3, IV | institution of the ancient Kings, as will be shown in the
41 3, V | institutions of the other Kings, he would have been tolerated,
42 3, V | under the other previous Kings. And it was not enough for
43 3, V | had lived like the other Kings and his son Sextus had not
44 3, VI | verse of Juvenal’s:~Few kings descend to the family place
45 3, VII | change that Rome made from Kings to Consuls, where only the
46 3, XXV | souls; they not esteeming Kings or Republics, nor did anything
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