Book
1 Pre| other institutions of a City and of a Republic every
2 1 | rest several days in that City in order to visit His Excellency
3 1 | numbered among the Princes of a City. I will never forego my
4 1 | punished. A well ordered City, therefore, ought to desire
5 1 | exercises is not good, and any City which governs itself otherwise,
6 1 | a fort adjacent to that City. And as they now begun freely
7 1 | in the garrisons of the city and of the fortresses. So
8 1 | while the fortresses and the city are garrisoned in times
9 1 | better to draw them, from the City or the Countryside?~FABRIZIO:
10 1 | those on horseback from the City.~COSIMO: Of what age would
11 1 | usefulness, and preserve the City uncorrupted for a longer
12 1 | In addition to this, a City ought to fear two enemies
13 1 | been made a Tyrant in a City situated in the sea, so
14 1 | are those which cause a City to be tyrannized; and, as
15 1 | for the defense of that City. But turning to our Deletto,
16 1 | the army, but within the City: and as the military exercises
17 1 | were trained were in the City, there resulted that those
18 1 | an army established in a City bring; for without them,
19 4 | mountains or in a powerful city; for, in this manner, he
20 6 | appears to be a movable City, which, wherever it goes,
21 6 | destruction of the walls of their City, or the sending of many
22 7 | sought on which to build (a city) to make it strong by industry.
23 7 | ditch is thrown toward the city, and is sustained by a wall
24 7 | artillery which defends the city, are placed behind the wall
25 7 | difficulty: so that I know a city so organized is completely
26 7 | ice over, the capture of a city is made easy, as happened
27 7 | to anyone who defends a city. This is, that they do not
28 7 | on the hills outside the City, which, as soon as they
29 7 | quickly, also caused the city to be lost. As to the second
30 7 | Those who want to build a City, therefore, ought to have
31 7 | principal places of the City, in order to remedy those
32 7 | When one assaults such a City, he should make all his
33 7 | the middle of the besieged City, as were the Romans, when
34 7 | to take refuge in it (the City), and thus by adding a great
35 7 | called it attacking the city by its crown: as did Scipio
36 7 | enemy had entered inside the city by having forced the walls,
37 7 | who have entered in the City, have endeavored to win
38 7 | to open the gates of the City and make a way for the townspeople
39 7 | circle the walls of the City every day with a good part
40 7 | ambassadors, and filled their City with promises of safety
41 7 | geese have also saved a City, as happened to the Romans
42 7 | are being fought in your City, which is not arranged with
43 7 | stronger than the rest of the City, for such a repair comes
44 7 | the ditches inside your City and throughout all its circuit,
45 7 | which the Romans took the City of the Veienti: or, by tunnelling
46 7 | the ditch which girds your City so deep, that the enemy
47 7 | that what makes defending a City or an encampment difficult,
48 7 | if he be a Citizen, his City. And I complain of nature,
|