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Alphabetical    [«  »]
might 37
milan 18
miles 3
military 40
militia 1
millions 1
milonius 1
Frequency    [«  »]
40 fortresses
40 injury
40 let
40 military
40 soon
40 wants
40 within
Niccolò Machiavelli
Discourses on the first Ten (Books) of Titus Livius

IntraText - Concordances

military

   Book,  Chapter
1 1, I | Mamelukes, and of their military [organization] before it 2 1, IV | that if good fortune and military virtu had not supplied her 3 1, IV | deny that fortune and the military were the causes of the Roman 4 1, IV | would not happen except when military discipline is good, it happens 5 1, IX | institutions, her religion, and her military establishment. And therefore, 6 1, XI | make the other civil and military arrangements, the authority 7 1, XII | both as far as Religion and military institutions [are concerned] 8 1, XIV | theirs, whether civil or military: and they never would go 9 1, XXI | of men suitable for the military, but that by their own fault 10 1, XXI | know how to train them in military service, as is seen [in 11 1, XLIV | and by his order twenty military Tribunes were created who 12 1, LI | men, it having been the military custom of they maintaining 13 1, LIII | he had some rank in the military), and offered them that 14 2 | religion, of laws, or of military discipline, but are stained 15 2, IV | ashamed to enlist in the military service for one, and then 16 2, XIV | patience in denying them military aid: why do you doubt this 17 2, XVIII | the Romans in all their military actions esteemed the foot 18 2, XVIII | twenty five years the Italian military have been brought under 19 2, XVIII | accompanied it) made the Italian military so weak, that their province 20 2, XVIII | to give reputation to the military of a Province or a State 21 2, XIX | citizen poor, to maintain military exercises with the greatest 22 2, XIX | the least conducive to military discipline, turned the spirit 23 2, XIX | turned the spirit of the military away from the memory of 24 3, VI | more fit for civil than military matters: and as it happens 25 3, X | we deviate especially in military actions, where at present 26 3, XXII | his decrees retained the military discipline in Rome, constrained 27 3, XXII | the lowest soldiers. In military exercises, he contested 28 3, XXIV | XXIV~THE PROLONGATION OF [MILITARY] COMMANDS MADE ROME SLAVE~ 29 3, XXIV | the prolongation of the [military] Commands; if these matters 30 3, XXXI | the bad quality of their military organization, made them 31 3, XXXI | of all States is a good military organization, and that where 32 3, XXXI | and it is seen that the military organization cannot be good 33 3, XXXVI | discipline in those armies, such military discipline had prevailed 34 3, XXXVI | traded, or did any other military or domestic act, without 35 3, XXXVI | testimony of T. Livius how good military organizations are created 36 3, XXXVI | easily seen whether the military of our times are blind and 37 3, XXXVI | that which can be called military, and how far they are from 38 3, XXXVII | Macedonia, father of Perseus, a military man and of great renown 39 3, XXXVIII| only in words, or expert in military matters, and himself a thrower 40 3, XXXVIII| into the real battle. Any military man, therefore, ought not


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