Book, Chapter
1 Int | subsequent embassies to this prince, shows his undisguised admiration
2 Int | manner by Machiavelli in his Prince.~The limits of this introduction
3 Int | that Machiavelli wrote The Prince, the most famous of all
4 Int | The Discourses and The Prince, written at the same time,
5 Int | expressed in the Discorsi. The Prince, a short work, divided into
6 Int | with the government of a Prince, so the Discorsi treat principally
7 Int | the tide has turned. The Prince has been termed a manual
8 Int | a hero, but merely as a prince who was capable of attaining
9 Int | forth by Machiavelli in his Prince or his Discourses have entirely
10 Int | eighteenth chapter of The Prince: “In what Manner Princes
11 Int | was willing to accept a prince, if one could be found courageous
12 I, II | a kingdom by a change of prince or of government; not by
13 I, III | for, Rome being without a prince, the Romans found it necessary,
14 I, IV | cardinals— First example of a prince deprived of his dominions
15 I, V | soon as they had made a prince powerful, they viewed him
16 I, VI | Maffeo Visconti became a prince of Milan. Of him remained
17 I, VI | his uncle, Bernabo, became prince of Milan, and was the first
18 I, VI | few remained without a prince; for she did not recover
19 I, VI | married another cousin, Louis, prince of Tarento. But Louis, king
20 I, VI | himself with the title of prince of Tarento, should not be
21 I, VII | refused to make his nephew prince of Capua; and pretending
22 I, VII | Anjou with the kingdom; this prince, with the Florentines, Genoese,
23 I, VII | be content to be called Prince of Tarento, and leave to
24 II, I | the attention of a great prince, or of a well-regulated
25 II, I | because the colony which a prince establishes in a newly acquired
26 II, I | with less respect for the prince; so that, in the time of
27 II, V | intended to make himself prince of the city; and to the
28 II, V | slain; but the body of the Prince was never found. Neither
29 II, VI | they would make him their prince. Nor did he fail frequently
30 II, VII | nobility determine to make him prince of the city.~The emperor,
31 II, VII | submitting to the authority of a prince who, being acquainted with
32 II, VIII| Athens requires to be made prince of Florence—The Signory
33 II, VIII| The plebeians proclaim him prince of Florence for life—Tyrannical
34 II, VIII| needed to be absolutely prince. Thinking himself upon such
35 II, VIII| any degree of merit in a prince countervail the loss of
36 II, VIII| people associated with a good prince, for of necessity they must
37 II, I | by the archbishop, then prince of Milan; and when this
38 III, I | be carried on without a prince. Florence had now come to
39 III, II | makes its possessor almost prince of the city), he called
40 III, V | continually, by means of some prince or republic, spreading reports
41 III, VI | suitable for a sovereign prince than for any private individuals.
42 III, VII | to assume the dignity of prince, and appeases the people—
43 III, VII | any impediment have become prince of the city; for the unfeeling
44 IV, I | undertaken against so great a prince, would bring certain ruin
45 IV, II | individual who might make himself prince. For these reasons he was
46 IV, IV | Florentines, and make himself prince. Prompted by these motives,
47 IV, VI | designs to make himself prince of the city. And although
48 IV, VI | hindered, he would soon become prince, and that it was the part
49 V, II | possessing Capua, which the prince of Taranto held in his name)
50 V, II | case he would be a free prince, in the other, placed between
51 V, II | that he is absolutely a prince, or that he alone has the
52 V, IV | went to Venice; nor was any prince ever received with so much
53 V, IV | of Florence, most serene prince, has always perceived in
54 V, IV | restrain themselves, till the prince had replied, as strict decorum
55 V, VI | come into Lombardy as a prince, he did not intend to return
56 V, VII | however, he could live as a prince in Germany, the citizens
57 VI, I | are made. A republic or a prince is enriched by the victories
58 VI, I | He sent Niccolo da Esti, prince of Ferrara, to the count
59 VI, III | others wished to choose a prince, and of these, one part
60 VI, IV | captain became her foe and her prince, could not avail us.~“The
61 VI, V | they ought to submit to a prince who could defend them. Some
62 VI, V | satisfaction, and entered Milan as prince on the twenty-sixth of February,
63 VI, VI | been governed by its own prince, now became a vicariate.
64 VI, VI | Malatesti, and Astorre, prince of Faenza. This being conceded,
65 VI, VII | where he was received as prince, and the fortresses, both
66 VI, VII | one of the pope’s nephews, prince of Malfi, gave him an illegitimate
67 VI, VII | means the latter had become prince of the city. This impression
68 VI, VII | favorably received. The prince of Taranto, the Aquilani,
69 VII, I | contributed to make him prince in his own country, was
70 VII, I | character, and he alone was prince in Florence, still everything
71 VII, II | latter, duke of Lombardy and prince of Genoa, and the former,
72 VII, II | succeeded him.~The death of this prince infused redoubled energy
73 VII, II | preparing to make himself prince; for he who refuses his
74 VII, II | friends would make him a prince, and their own ruin would
75 VII, III | from Giovanni Bentivogli, prince of Bologna, which informed
76 VII, V | respect due to so great a prince, and one so intimately connected
77 VII, VI | and Niccolo Vitelli its prince, being on intimate terms
78 VII, VI | closely united. Federigo, prince of Urbino, was at this time
79 VII, VI | and formed one with the prince of Faenza. The pope and
80 VII, VI | those who live under a bad prince; calling those glorious
81 VII, VI | them the faults of their prince, and the wretched condition
82 VII, VI | not considering himself prince while she was present, he
83 VII, VI | wished to take leave of the prince. They also assembled, under
84 VII, VI | to clear the way for the prince, came close to him, and
85 VIII, I | they are directed. Thus the prince of a city attacked by a
86 VIII, III | Castelletto, and make him prince of Genoa, on condition that
87 VIII, IV | impossible for a secular prince to trust a pontiff, or safely
88 VIII, V | placing Niccolo in it as prince.~The pope now found himself
89 VIII, VII | of Giovanni Bentivogli, prince of Bologna. She, either
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