Book, Chapter
1 1 | accomplished by ancient Kingdoms and Republics, by Kings,
2 1 | States, in the governing of Kingdoms, in organizing an army and
3 1, I | numbered among the chief Kingdoms. Such was the building of
4 1, IX | Solon, and other founders of Kingdoms and Republics, who were
5 1, X | FOUNDERS OF REPUBLICS AND KINGDOMS ARE LAUDABLE, SO MUCH ARE
6 1, X | have founded Republics or Kingdoms. After these are celebrated
7 1, X | Religion, dissipators of Kingdoms and Republics, enemies of
8 1, XI | Whence it results that Kingdoms which depend solely on the
9 1, XXXVI| other modern Republics and Kingdoms, where he who had at one
10 1, XLII | Legislators of Republics or Kingdoms will more promptly restrain
11 1, LV | the institutions of those Kingdoms which are yet unspoiled.~
12 1, LVIII| is knowledge. And these Kingdoms which arise under such constitutions
13 2 | historian of those ancient Kingdoms which varied from one another
14 2, IV | their armies to reduce other Kingdoms to Provinces, and to make
15 2, XII | in nearby ones. But when Kingdoms are armed as Rome was armed
16 2, XXI | and commenced to reduce Kingdoms and States into Provinces.
17 2, XXIV | those people, or to those Kingdoms that have good armies, and
18 3, I | Sects and Republics and of Kingdoms must have within themselves
19 3, I | maintains this Religion. Kingdoms also have need to renew
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