Book, Chapter
1 Int | city where the body of the people is not corrupt; and where
2 I, I | I~Irruption of Northern people upon the Roman territories—
3 I, I | takes Rome—The Lombards.~The people who inhabit the northern
4 I, I | number of nobles and of people, of rich and of poor. The
5 I, I | stipend allowed to this people should be withheld; and
6 I, I | Vandals, and Alans (a northern people in search of new habitations),
7 I, I | fortune of these brought fresh people to the destruction of the
8 I, I | Gaul, called the Angli, a people of Germany, to their aid;
9 I, I | Lombards, also a northern people, entered, led by Godogo
10 I, II | superior in valor to the people thereabout, should be inferior
11 I, II | Theodoric permission to lead his people against him, and take possession
12 I, II | benefits upon the cities and people under him. He distributed
13 I, II | various jealousies of his people, such as the death of Symmachus
14 I, II | native idiom of the new people and of the old Roman, formed
15 I, II | or natural cruelty of the people themselves. Living amid
16 I, II | of Belisarius, he led his people into Calabria, to attack
17 I, II | Sclavi, another northern people, having crossed the Danube
18 I, II | own Lombards, that these people, sickened of royal power,
19 I, III | BY MEN. The pope and the people of Rome made him emperor;
20 I, III | that having excluded the people of Rome from the election
21 I, III | dispensed justice among the people; and there was a council
22 I, IV | time governed partly by the people, some districts by their
23 I, IV | The ambition of the Roman people caused many wars between
24 I, IV | with their censures, the people of Rome were in open rebellion
25 I, IV | the kingdom. Some of the people of Italy took the part of
26 I, IV | excommunicated, was compelled by his people to come into Italy, and
27 I, IV | given to another northern people, called Normans, to assail
28 I, IV | Normandy. A part of these people came into Italy at the time
29 I, IV | proceeding to Romagna he led his people towards Puglia, and took
30 I, IV | the insolence of the Roman people, which indeed shortly followed,
31 I, IV | from Rome, and subdued the people. Robert was succeeded by
32 I, IV | together a vast multitude of people, delivered an oration against
33 I, IV | called crusades, because the people who joined in them bore
34 I, IV | sagacity. Many kings and people joined them, and contributed
35 I, IV | many difficulties from the people of Rome and the emperors;
36 I, IV | subject to them. And as the people of Tusculum refused to submit
37 I, V | suddenly abandoned by his people, as Frederick Barbarossa
38 I, V | an appointed moment the people should assail the forces
39 I, V | prisoner. And although the people of Anagnia set him at liberty
40 I, VI | from the remarks which the people made of the uncivil behavior
41 I, VI | a tumult, upon which the people took arms against the Germans.
42 I, VI | whom being slain by the people of Milan, the state fell
43 I, VI | property they possessed. The people of Padua, finding themselves
44 I, VI | defense. Besides these, the people of Monselice, with the inhabitants
45 I, VI | Vicenza, and Verona, the people of Padua and others who
46 I, VI | in like manner, all the people of the province anciently
47 I, VI | consequence of a great number of people being drawn together into
48 I, VII | between the pope and the people of Rome—Council of Pisa—
49 I, VII | enterprise Louis died, and his people being routed returned to
50 I, VII | These things occasioned the people of Vicenza, who had lived
51 I, VII | succeeded by Innocent VII. The people of Rome supplicated him
52 I, VII | Becoming reconciled to the people, the pope returned to Rome,
53 II, I | easily be done, by sending people to reside in recently acquired
54 II, I | the higher ranks of the people, so that the whole city
55 II, I | greatest authority with the people, considered that it would
56 II, II | one called captain of the people, the other podesta, or provost,—
57 II, II | which occurred among the people. And as order cannot be
58 II, II | whether by the captain of the people or the Anziani. They had
59 II, II | pomp to the heads of the people. To give solemnity to their
60 II, II | time they compelled the people of Pistoria, Arezzo, and
61 II, II | latter were hated by the people as well on account of their
62 II, II | themselves in their houses. The people, enraged at this, armed
63 II, II | ardent animosity of the people, and their enmity against
64 II, II | with some concession, the people whom they had previously
65 II, II | from the higher rank of the people, to whom, with two cavaliers,
66 II, II | classed the whole of the people according to their arts
67 II, II | determined to wrest from the people those powers which they
68 II, II | being informed where the people were assembled, proceeded
69 II, II | that direction; nor did the people shun the fight, for, meeting
70 II, II | rectors, went with all his people to Prato. But, on finding
71 II, II | appeared, he returned with his people to Florence, to enter the
72 II, II | did not succeed; for the people, who had had difficulty
73 II, II | withdrew to their villas.~The people being victorious, by the
74 II, II | cordially hated, both by the people and the Guelphs, for the
75 II, II | citizens, elected from the people and the nobility, to which
76 II, III | Dissensions between the people and the nobility—The tumults
77 II, III | nobility. The leaders of the people, in order to restrain this
78 II, III | and chosen from either the people or the nobility. After the
79 II, III | of the nobility; for the people by various causes excluded
80 II, III | the higher classes and the people; for the latter, wishing
81 II, III | themselves the rulers of the people, it was not possible for
82 II, III | Justice, chosen from the people, and place a thousand armed
83 II, III | slain one of the Florentine people in France. The violent animosities
84 II, III | tyranny exercised against the people was as great as ever; for
85 II, III | this unhappy state, the people not knowing what to do,
86 II, III | ordinations of justice, the people acquired great influence,
87 II, III | while the opulent among the people envied him, for they thought
88 II, III | man from the class of the people was killed in a riot, in
89 II, III | taken by the captain of the people, and whether he was really
90 II, III | acquittal displeased the people so much, that, seizing their
91 II, III | into consideration. The people, full of wrath, thinking
92 II, III | case was being tried, the people took arms, and, proceeding
93 II, III | known, the minds of the people were much excited; for they
94 II, III | and the jealousy of the people, arms were resorted to.
95 II, III | Mozzi, and Geri Spini. The people assembled in immense numbers,
96 II, III | individuals, as well of the people as of the nobility, accompanied
97 II, III | should bear in mind that the people, both in riches, numbers,
98 II, III | hand, they reminded the people that it is not prudent to
99 II, III | opinion was found among the people; many wished to decide the
100 II, III | places of strength. The people reorganized the government,
101 II, III | between the nobility and the people, they did not produce any
102 II, IV | Gulielmo that he ordered his people to take arms for his revenge.
103 II, IV | city became divided, the people as well as the nobility,
104 II, IV | joined many families of the people, and all the Ghibellines
105 II, IV | and prudence, caused the people to rise for the preservation
106 II, IV | followers, which step gave the people so strong a suspicion that
107 II, IV | saying that he wished the people of Florence, against whom
108 II, IV | great number of friends and people desirous of change, he set
109 II, IV | elected a new one from the people of the Neri party, and for
110 II, IV | being in the hands of the people, he saw the offices of the
111 II, IV | nobility and some of the people; on the other side were
112 II, IV | the greater part of the people; so that skirmishes took
113 II, IV | Lucchese, and presently all the people of Lucca were in Florence.
114 II, IV | for the moment, and the people retained the government
115 II, IV | acquired so much of the people’s confidence, that authority
116 II, IV | ancient companies of the people, which increased the popular
117 II, IV | first the enmity between the people and the nobility, then that
118 II, IV | mischief, who, seeing the people occupied with the combat,
119 II, V | so—The companies of the people restored—Restless conduct
120 II, V | of their authority, the people took from them the Stinche,
121 II, V | re-established the companies of the people, and gave them the ensigns
122 II, V | and whatever he saw the people inclined to do, he exercised
123 II, V | for the same reason the people ceased to defend him, and
124 II, V | the greater part of the people, assembled before the palace
125 II, V | Piero Branca, captain of the people, against Corso, of intending,
126 II, V | with the companies of the people under their ensigns, went
127 II, V | death on all sides. But the people, finding they could not
128 II, V | had been overcome by the people, and finding that he could
129 II, V | disturbances were appeased, and the people lived quietly till it was
130 II, V | might defend them as his own people. The emperor entered Italy
131 II, V | and proceeded with his people accordingly; but while filled
132 II, V | and certain others of the people who had attained greater
133 II, V | families or the highest of the people, and all Guelphs; but their
134 II, VI | between the nobility and the people, the latter of whom wished
135 II, VI | throughout the city, the people drew together, and used
136 II, VI | unfortunate circumstance made the people so indignant against the
137 II, VI | for the companies of the people; they, therefore, determined
138 II, VI | one year, drew from the people 400,000 florins, although
139 II, VI | Florentines. At length the people of Pistoia were compelled
140 II, VI | citizens from the class of the people, the other of 250 from the
141 II, VI | from the nobility and the people.~The first was called the
142 II, VI | called the Council of the People, the other the Council of
143 II, VII | it had been bought, the people of Florence were seized
144 II, VII | families, and some of the people, who were offended with
145 II, VII | be rung, and called the people together in arms. Taldo
146 II, VII | unwilling to summon the people with the bell, alleging
147 II, VII | the alarm, upon which the people presently assembled in arms.
148 II, VII | design was frustrated by the people who, in common with themselves,
149 II, VII | Upon their departure the people being again disarmed, the
150 II, VII | Florentines, being the richer people, were about to obtain it,
151 II, VII | by force, and Mastino’s people delivered the city to them.
152 II, VII | happens, exasperated the people of Florence against the
153 II, VII | seeing the anger of the people, thought to inspire them
154 II, VII | of some families of the people; these were the Peruzzi,
155 II, VIII| they had suffered from the people. When the duke passed along
156 II, VIII| proclaimed that all the people should, on the following
157 II, VIII| given for a meeting of the people; for it appears to us very
158 II, VIII| impossible to find a violent people associated with a good prince,
159 II, VIII| the following morning the people should be assembled in their
160 II, VIII| to him for one year, the people shouted, “FOR LIFE.” Upon
161 II, VIII| with the consent of the people the duke was elected, not
162 II, VIII| duke, the Gonfalon of the people torn to pieces, and the
163 II, VIII| of the companies of the people; abolished the ordinances
164 II, VIII| greatest citizens and noblest people were, either by fines, death,
165 II, VIII| plebeians and very lowest of the people, and to these, dignified
166 II, VIII| that which disgusted the people most completely was the
167 II, VIII| committed upon the women.~The people were filled with indignation,
168 II, VIII| existing strongly in the people’s minds, nor was he without
169 II, VIII| the taxes with which the people were loaded, had his tongue
170 II, VIII| shocking act increased the people’s rage, and their hatred
171 II, VIII| slavery, but the most servile people on earth would have been
172 II, VIII| the great; another of the people, and the third of the working
173 II, VIII| participation in the government; the people had lost the power they
174 II, VIII| the higher class of the people. But when he found him lord
175 II, VIII| themselves and call the people to freedom.~The next morning
176 II, VIII| and with the arms of the people, which had been secretly
177 II, VIII| of the nobility as of the people, met together, and swore
178 II, VIII| those four families of the people which had taken so conspicuous
179 II, VIII| and ordered those of his people who were lodged in different
180 II, VIII| this, those families of the people who had declared for the
181 II, VIII| exaggerated the number of his people and threatened all with
182 II, VIII| in the piazza between the people and the forces of the duke
183 II, VIII| Donati, with a part of the people, broke open the stinche,
184 II, VIII| recover the favor of the people. Having caused those whom
185 II, VIII| taken down, and those of the people to be replaced over the
186 II, VIII| nobility and half from the people, who, with the archbishop,
187 II, VIII| Florence in defense of the people; among whom were a party
188 II, VIII| endeavored to bring the people and the duke to terms; but
189 II, VIII| made that the duke and his people, with whatever belonged
190 II, I | between the nobility and the people—The bishop endeavors to
191 II, I | government reformed by the people—Riot of Andrea Strozzi—Serious
192 II, I | between the nobility and the people—They come to arms, and the
193 II, I | sent ambassadors to the people of Arezzo, to renounce all
194 II, I | between the nobility and the people, it was arranged that the
195 II, I | of the companies of the people; and instead of the twelve
196 II, I | were very grievous to the people, and they began to regret
197 II, I | degree, that the heads of the people complained to the bishop
198 II, I | they had become for the people; and begged he would endeavor
199 II, I | appeared to incline toward the people, moved by the reasons which
200 II, I | give up the Signory to the people, in order to secure the
201 II, I | what had been done. The people also expressed their thoughts
202 II, I | friends, seeing all the people in arms, did not dare to
203 II, I | house. The Signors of the people endeavored to abate the
204 II, I | conferred upon twelve of the people. To the eight signors who
205 II, I | of the companies of the people; and the council was so
206 II, I | others did, a great many people flocked to his house; emboldened
207 II, I | considerable number, called the people to arms, and in a short
208 II, I | nobility of overcoming the people, seeing that the lowest
209 II, I | Lombardy for assistance. The people and the Signory made preparation
210 II, I | and the Old Bridge. The people were drawn together under
211 II, I | in order of battle, the people thought it imprudent to
212 II, I | hours; but the forces of the people continuing to increase,
213 II, I | submitted themselves to the people, who saved their houses
214 II, I | now in the hands of the people, and only one in possession
215 II, I | resolute men; so that the people were repulsed with great
216 II, I | not resist the fury of the people; for this bridge, having
217 II, I | and many families of the people who lived in that vicinity.
218 II, I | barricades and gave way to the people, who then overcame the Rossi
219 II, I | friends, the union of the people against them, and the little
220 II, I | George. By this way the people sent six Gonfalons, with
221 II, I | the day in favor of the people; for when those who defended
222 II, I | Panzanesi, and Mozzi. The people, especially the lower classes,
223 II, I | being thus overcome, the people reformed the government;
224 II, I | reduced to the grade of the people. The ruin of the nobility
225 III, I | only beginning with the people and nobility of Rome contended,
226 III, I | banishment of many of her best people. Those of Rome increased
227 III, I | different purposes which the two people had in view. While the people
228 III, I | people had in view. While the people of Rome endeavored to associate
229 III, I | the desire of the Roman people was more reasonable, no
230 III, I | while it satisfied the people, preserved the nobility
231 III, I | hand, the demands of the people of Florence being insolent
232 III, I | acquisition of power, made by the people of Rome, their minds were
233 III, I | attainable as well by the people as the nobility, the peculiar
234 III, I | greatness.~But in Florence, the people being conquerors, the nobility
235 III, I | not only to seem like the people, but to be like them in
236 III, I | might seem to be of the people; military virtue and generosity
237 III, I | extinguished in them; the people not possessing these qualities,
238 III, I | of the nobility and the people ceased with the tyranny
239 III, I | fortune, plundered such people as were least prepared to
240 III, I | cases, a great number of people were drawn together. The
241 III, I | been admitted among the people, and thus became eligible
242 III, I | between the nobility and the people, we were still constantly
243 III, I | left at the disposal of the people. It was generally supposed
244 III, I | transferred from them to the people who at this moment, according
245 III, I | for the malignity of the people will be overcome by restraining
246 III, I | delay which will compel the people to effect them by force
247 III, II | the Florentines paid them. People may go to war when they
248 III, II | entire satisfaction to the people, that at the end of each
249 III, II | could not endure that the people should be oppressed by a
250 III, II | many of the highest of the people on his side, he communicated
251 III, II | of the republic or of the people generally, he could not
252 III, II | retire to his house, that the people might appoint another in
253 III, II | palace, loudly called the people to arms; and presently the
254 III, II | to give the Arts and the people hope of redress, and free
255 III, II | the Guelphs, and saw the people in arms, having no other
256 III, III | to endeavor to pacify the people—Serious riot caused by the
257 III, III | by the very lowest of the people; and those who had been
258 III, III | followed by the lowest of the people and the plebeians, were
259 III, III | plebeians and lowest of the people.~The lower classes, then,
260 III, III | the Gonfaloniers of the people and their companies, meet
261 III, IV | for the lowest class of people. They required that the
262 III, IV | Colleagues, and Council of the people. But in order to give it
263 III, IV | Signory and the rage of the people, so that the Gonfalonier,
264 III, IV | occupy the minds of the people, and give himself time to
265 III, IV | the higher ranks of the people, and that themselves had
266 III, V | increased in the minds of the people to be freed from the ignominy
267 III, V | none of the lowest of the people should hold office among
268 III, V | influential than the nobles of the people, who, however, were obliged
269 III, V | between the nobles of the people, and the minor artificers,
270 III, V | citizens, ennobled many of the people, and degraded many nobles
271 III, V | alienated the great body of the people from him. They judged it
272 III, V | against the nobles of the people and the Guelphs, and his
273 III, V | in the presence of that people who only a short time before
274 III, V | having confided too much in a people who may be excited and inflamed
275 III, VI | Parte. The nobles of the people and the major trades were
276 III, VI | trades and lowest of the people possessed in the government;
277 III, VI | influence, and the lowest people were apprehensive of losing
278 III, VI | Sometimes the nobles of the people took arms; sometimes the
279 III, VI | trades and the lowest of the people; and it often happened that,
280 III, VI | after two assemblies of the people, and many Balias appointed
281 III, VI | Thus the nobles of the people and the Guelphs repossessed
282 III, VI | many of the nobles of the people, who had distinguished themselves
283 III, VI | and private wealth of the people, many families endeavoring
284 III, VI | measures, that fear induced the people to lay aside the weapons
285 III, VII | excites the anger of the people— They have recourse to Veri
286 III, VII | prince, and appeases the people— Discourse of Veri to the
287 III, VII | which so greatly excited the people, that the Signory, having
288 III, VII | trades and the lowest of the people rose in arms, considering
289 III, VII | of the Guelphs and of the people in their hands, Rinaldo
290 III, VII | to the piazza, where the people who had followed him were
291 III, VII | views, showing that the people would not be satisfied,
292 III, VII | degli Albizzi, and call the people to arms, who, full of discontent,
293 III, VII | with his death to raise the people. Maso was observed to leave
294 III, VII | and with loud cries of “people, arms, liberty, and death
295 III, VII | it is to attempt to set a people free who are resolved to
296 IV, I | with the nobility or the people, the ministers respectively
297 IV, I | unquenched. Those nobles of the people, or new nobility, who peaceably
298 IV, I | hatred of a mass of the people by their sinister proceedings,
299 IV, I | gratification to the mass of the people (the multitude thinking
300 IV, I | themselves and oppress the people, they would go to war without
301 IV, I | she was compelled by the people of Furli to obey the will
302 IV, I | all sides. That the duke’s people might not relieve it, they
303 IV, I | disadvantage. Thus the duke’s people compelled Alberigo to sue
304 IV, I | degli Obizi and two of his people, who having fallen from
305 IV, II | friends, and opposed by the people, who at the corners of streets
306 IV, II | God, that the Florentine people should be overcome, their
307 IV, II | nothing so injurious to the people as such a change; for many
308 IV, II | wrested the power from the people, will, with the people’s
309 IV, II | the people, will, with the people’s assistance, who will have
310 IV, III | acquires the favor of the people—Bravery of Biaggio del Melano—
311 IV, III | them, becoming known to the people, contributed greatly to
312 IV, III | check the audacity of the people; for while these events
313 IV, III | makes them desire more, the people, not content with the equality
314 IV, III | movable property, which people possess to-day and lose
315 IV, III | extremely offensive to the people of Volterra, who sent to
316 IV, IV | in office, to induce the people, by the authority of the
317 IV, IV | with the consent of the people, became lord of Volterra.
318 IV, IV | being encamped with his people at Fucecchio, the commissaries
319 IV, IV | for the same citizens and people that, during the ten years
320 IV, IV | or at best, remote. The people of Florence were inspired
321 IV, IV | surrendered to them by the people in order to expel the tyrant,
322 IV, IV | the tyrant for fear of the people. He recalled the remembrance
323 IV, IV | was ever undertaken by the people of Florence with such perfect
324 IV, IV | friendly to the Florentine people, and had frequently, at
325 IV, IV | without detriment to the people, he should have less scruple,
326 IV, IV | sufficiently great to alarm even a people that had long been in repose,
327 IV, IV | prisoners, and then caused his people to plunder and destroy the
328 IV, V | injury to the Florentine people we merited such treatment,
329 IV, V | plundered and burned, and his people betrayed in his bosom.”
330 IV, V | advantage of the Florentine people, but his own private emolument;
331 IV, V | it was to serve an unruly people and a divided city, for
332 IV, V | of the ditch made by our people to conduct the waters of
333 IV, V | engaged, on the part of the people, to deliver their governor
334 IV, V | of the great body of the people, they did not know whom
335 IV, V | that the captain of the people, induced by the public voice,
336 IV, VI | compelled the captain of the people to require the appearance
337 IV, VI | equally believed by the people, who were almost universally
338 IV, VI | calamity, to assemble the people in the piazza, and restore
339 IV, VI | the Signory assembled the people, and created a Balia of
340 IV, VII | and the Capitano of the People. After his sentence, Cosmo
341 IV, VII | service of the city, the people, and the Signory. He was
342 IV, VII | Gonfalonier, to assemble the people in the piazza and create
343 IV, VII | less excitement among the people and less danger to themselves.
344 IV, VII | accompanied by two of his people on foot, and unarmed. Rinaldo,
345 IV, VII | accordingly went with his people to the palace, where he
346 IV, VII | driven from Rome by the people. These disturbances coming
347 IV, VII | city, they assembled the people in the piazza and created
348 IV, VII | by so vast a concourse of people, or such unqualified demonstrations
349 IV, VII | as the benefactor of the people, and the FATHER OF HIS COUNTRY.~
350 V, I | masses of high spirited people were kept in restraint by
351 V, I | another, when the duke’s people had quitted Romagna, unable
352 V, I | great as the union of her people.~The city being cleared
353 V, I | reduced to the ranks of the people, and the possessions of
354 V, II | with the consent of the people, whom they call the Doge;
355 V, II | eagerly the citizens and people assembled at the word; so
356 V, II | observed the power of that people and their pertinency in
357 V, II | be apprehended from the people whom so many and such recent
358 V, II | them. Besides this, the people feel more deeply the avarice
359 V, III | utmost enthusiasm by the people, who promised one and all
360 V, IV | affection for the senate and people of Venice, and we have resolved
361 V, V | engagement, was routed, his people dispersed, and many of them
362 V, V | an alarm, and called the people to arms. The citizens awaking
363 V, V | were ascertained by the people to be the duke’s forces,
364 V, V | to approach Florence, the people oppressed with taxes, and
365 V, VI | favorable moment, informed his people what they were to do, and
366 V, VI | was the good will of the people toward Cosmo; and besides
367 V, VI | raised entirely from the people, he recovered Remole from
368 V, VI | that he might divide his people between Chiusi, Caprese,
369 V, VI | received, but found that the people of Citta di Castello, who
370 V, VI | tamper with the legate and people of Perugia, he took eight
371 V, VII | was manifest; for when his people crossed the bridge, they
372 V, VII | cavalry reached the town. The people of the Borgo, who had followed
373 V, VII | themselves at the Borgo, the people of which were willing to
374 V, VII | Florence, the government and people were transported with joy.
375 VI, I | compelled to oppress his people by an increased burden of
376 VI, I | distribute gratuities to the people, reduce taxation, and by
377 VI, I | and then impoverished the people, without giving the victorious
378 VI, I | victory experienced by the people, except that it diminished
379 VI, I | papal forces so alarmed the people of Ravenna with the fear
380 VI, I | more distressed than the people of Martinengo whom they
381 VI, II | Canneschi, and the latter by the people—Santi, supposed to be the
382 VI, II | exposed to the gaze of the people. Baldaccio was married,
383 VI, II | doors; but finding that the people, instead of favoring the
384 VI, III | his army, upon which the people of Pavia, conscious of their
385 VI, III | accept the proposal of the people of Pavia, trusting he would
386 VI, IV | of the city mourned, the people complained, women and children
387 VI, IV | thou hast received from the people of Milan, and to prove with
388 VI, V | reduced to extremity—The people rise against the magistrates—
389 VI, V | plan was open, since the people of Milan required a certain
390 VI, V | signify their desire. By the people’s command he conveyed the
391 VI, V | alarm and injury of the people, who at this time, having
392 VI, VI | of the Roman barons and people, encouraged him to look
393 VI, VI | the other should call the people of Rome to arms. The affair
394 VI, VI | fortresses and towns, the people of which, being attached
395 VI, VII | country, to exhort princes and people to arm in defense of their
396 VI, VII | upon the return of day, his people were all either slain or
397 VI, VII | scattered remnants of his people followed him; and by soliciting
398 VII, I | they obtained from the people whatever they required;
399 VII, I | by lot, the mass of the people began to think they had
400 VII, I | proposed in favor of the people he was the first to support
401 VII, I | manner, by consent of the people, and not by force, of which
402 VII, I | begged he would assemble the people in a general council or
403 VII, I | several times proposed to the people the appointment of a new
404 VII, I | materials, but the mass of people, of every grade, also contributed.
405 VII, I | given to change, and among a people of such extreme inconstancy,
406 VII, II | soon such a concourse of people, that in a few days all
407 VII, II | considered himself one of the people, and was preparing to make
408 VII, III | been previously made, the people were called to the piazza,
409 VII, III | just indignation of the people of Venice, and their desire
410 VII, IV | was also aware that the people of Prato considered themselves
411 VII, V | Prato for the Florentine people, at this period. It is customary
412 VII, V | the governor with all his people made prisoners, they were
413 VII, V | clear the place of his people, and, as quickly as possible,
414 VII, V | fear could influence the people of Prato, since entreaties
415 VII, V | death, thinking that the people of Prato will follow you;
416 VII, V | rectors which the Florentine people send here is so great, that
417 VII, V | the piazza, to order the people of Prato to obey him, and
418 VII, V | connected with the Florentine people. Upon this occasion the
419 VII, V | little attention from the people of Volterra; but in time,
420 VII, V | declared the aim of the people of Volterra to be unjust
421 VII, V | throughout the city; the people demanding the restitution
422 VII, V | accept the submission of the people of Volterra, upon any conditions
423 VII, V | punish the arrogance of the people of Volterra with arms; declaring
424 VII, V | they committed upon the people of the place. Thus these
425 VII, VI | related, was slain by the people of Val di Lamona; but Carlo,
426 VII, VI | the want of courage in the people and the ineffectual provision
427 VII, VI | the nobility and all the people would rise in their defense.
428 VII, VI | state, and they thought the people, on account of the famine
429 VIII, I | family was Jacopo, whom the people, on account of his distinguished
430 VIII, II | this time in Florence some people of Perugia, whom party feuds
431 VIII, II | arrived, he left part of his people below, with orders that
432 VIII, II | through the city and call the people to arms and liberty; but
433 VIII, II | assemble adherents by cries of “people,” and “liberty”; but the
434 VIII, II | him to go home, for the people and liberty were as dear
435 VIII, II | relentless cruelty. The people took possession of their
436 VIII, II | times, if God spare us. The people who had assembled in favor
437 VIII, III | viceregent, and allow his injured people who were not admitted to
438 VIII, IV | hands every instant, the people preferred defending their
439 VIII, IV | insufficient to relieve the people of Colle; for, having consumed
440 VIII, IV | particular animosity against the people of Colle.~It was now the
441 VIII, IV | ambassador from the Florentine people, and endowed him with full
442 VIII, IV | disposition of her princes and people, his hopes from peace, his
443 VIII, IV | great body of the Florentine people, who were subtle interpreters
444 VIII, VI | in Lombardy, annoyed the people of Serezana by inroads and
445 VIII, VI | besiege it, unless the people of Pietra Santa, or its
446 VIII, VI | very weak escort; that the people of Pietra Santa might have
447 VIII, VII | apartment with a few of his people, was also slain. After this
448 VIII, VII | liberty,” they roused the people (who hated the avarice and
449 VIII, VII | fled into the fortress, the people took up arms, Giovanni Bentivogli,
450 VIII, VII | universal desire of the people, took the city and Astorre
451 VIII, VII | frequently entertained the people with feasts, and exhibitions
452 VIII, VII | abundantly supplied, the people united, and the nobility
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