Book, Chapter
1 1, I | that so much virtu had been maintained for so many centuries in
2 1, I | many centuries, and they maintained her full of so much virtu
3 1, II | reverence, this Popular State maintained itself for a short time,
4 1, II | yet in order that it be maintained many conventions were made
5 1, XII | Princes of the Republic had maintained this Christian religion
6 1, XVIII| CITY A FREE STATE CAN BE MAINTAINED, IF THERE IS ONE THERE,
7 1, XVIII| whether a free State can be maintained in a City that is corrupted,
8 1, XVIII| should have to be created or maintained, it would be necessary to
9 1, XIX | EXCELLENT PRINCE CAN BE MAINTAINED, BUT ANY KINGDOM CANNOT
10 1, XIX | BUT ANY KINGDOM CANNOT BE MAINTAINED IF A WEAK ONE IS SUCCEEDED
11 1, XIX | that of France, which is maintained by its ancient institutions:
12 1, XXX | guarding another. And thus they maintained themselves wholesome and
13 1, XLVII| ones who with their arms maintained Rome free and made it powerful:
14 1, LII | tributes. If the Nobility had maintained themselves in this order
15 1, LV | whose political existence is maintained uncorrupted, does not permit
16 2, V | resulted from their having maintained the Latin language, which
17 2, VI | Rome, who, without expense, maintained that guard. Nor could this
18 2, XVI | did not make straight, but maintained its order open [thin] and
19 2, XVIII| cavalry paid by a Condottiere maintained his reputation, and the
20 2, XIX | which they could not have maintained such a manner of living.
21 2, XXIV | of men and not fortresses maintained Princes in their States,
22 2, XXIV | means by which they had maintained it up to that time would
23 3, I | Saint Dominic] therefore has maintained and still maintains this
24 3, I | decisions. And up to now it has maintained itself because it has been
25 3, V | that liberty which she had maintained under the other previous
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