Book, Chapter
1 1, I | among others, have been Athens and Venice: the first under
2 1, II | established the laws in Athens, [and] who by establishing
3 1, II | and liberty returned to Athens, for the Popular state was
4 1, II | that of the Aristocracy, Athens lived a very short time
5 1, XXVIII| find less in Rome than in Athens, and perhaps in any other
6 1, XXVIII| this, speaking of Rome and Athens, I believe it was because
7 1, XXVIII| very contrary happened in Athens, for her liberty having
8 1, XXVIII| been said, will not blame Athens for this, nor praise Rome,
9 1, XXVIII| taken away as it was in Athens, Rome would not have been
10 1, XXVIII| have been ungrateful as Athens was, if she had been offended
11 1, XL | with two other Citizens to Athens for copies of those laws
12 1, LIII | In Greece in the City of Athens, Nicias, a most serious
13 1, LIII | caused the complete ruin of Athens. When Scipio was made Consul
14 1, LVIII | driving out of the Kings, and Athens did after they were free
15 1, LIX | enemies and taking refuge in Athens as a City friendly and obligated
16 1, LIX | it. Whence the people of Athens elected Aristedes to whom
17 2, II | consider to what greatness Athens had arrived in the space
18 2, II | Sparta, the the others [of] Athens: and it happened in the
19 2, III | the example of Sparta and Athens; which two Republics although
20 2, III | under arms, while Sparta and Athens were never able [to raise]
21 2, IV | these two Cities [Sparta and Athens] did not do either the one
22 2, X | perseverance and the money of Athens. But the testimony of Titus
23 2, XXIV | Athenian whether the walls of Athens appeared beautiful to him,
24 3, VI | and Hippias, Tyrants of Athens. They killed Diodes, but
25 3, VI | unendurable, as Florence, Athens, and Heraclea know, as I
26 3, VI | will among the people [of Athens]; one morning he went outside
27 3, VI | that he became Tyrant of Athens. Pandolfo Petrucci returned
28 3, VI | ruin, as did the Duke of Athens and Guglieimo De Pazzi.
29 3, VI | the above named Duke of Athens, who, to show his belief
30 3, XVI | enterprise came to be debated in Athens. Alcibiades and some other
31 3, XVI | among men of reputation in Athens, dissuaded her, and the
32 3, XVI | interest, for as long as Athens was at peace he knew there
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