Book, Chapter
1 Int | though not wealthy Tuscan family, his father, who was a jurist,
2 Int | June 22, 1527, leaving his family in the greatest poverty,
3 I, III | Nor did the Carlovingian family lose the empire only; their
4 I, IV | St. Clement, of a Roman family, separated from Alexander,
5 I, V | Nicholas III., of the Orsini family, became pontiff. He was
6 I, V | creating two kings out of his family, the one in Lombardy, the
7 I, V | and emolument upon his own family. Previous to his time no
8 I, V | cardinals of the Colonnesi family of their office; and Sciarra,
9 I, V | cardinals of the Colonnesi family, and reblessed Philip, king
10 I, VI | Maffeo Visconti against the family of de la Torre—Giovanni
11 I, VI | the Florentines. As the family of Visconti gave rise to
12 I, VI | wars which followed, the family of La Torre became very
13 I, VI | occasioned by the La Torre family, who, not content to remain
14 I, VI | heir, Milan passed from the family of Visconti to that of Sforza,
15 I, VI | the Gonzaga; Modena to the family of Este, and Lucca to the
16 I, VII | elected Oddo, of the Colonnesi family, pope, by the title of Martin
17 II, I | the Donati. Of the Donati family there was a rich widow who
18 II, I | head of the Buondelmonti family, as her husband; but either
19 II, I | to a maiden of the Amidei family. This grieved the Donati
20 II, II | Nicholas III. of the Orsini family. It has to be remarked that
21 II, III | account of a member of that family having slain one of the
22 II, III | della Bella, of a very noble family, and a lover of liberty,
23 II, IV | of Bertacca, both of this family, playing together, and coming
24 II, IV | defense, and not only that family, but the whole city of Pistoia,
25 II, IV | Corso, the head of that family; and on this account the
26 II, IV | Some youths of the Donati family, with their friends, upon
27 II, V | anciently belonging to the family. And as those who were taken
28 II, VII | beheaded, and many of his family banished. Those who governed,
29 II, VIII| gave information that the family of the Medici and some others
30 III, I | to enmities between the family of the Albizzi and that
31 III, I | Uguccione, the head of the family of the Ricci, contrived
32 III, I | ascendant. There was in the family of the Buondelmonti a gentleman
33 III, I | however, deprived three of the family of the Albizzi, and three
34 III, V | was the greatness of his family, or his former reputation
35 III, VI | the envy with which the family was regarded, and being
36 III, VI | admonished all the rest of his family except Antonio. Before his
37 III, VI | calumny and injustice.~The family of the Alberti was not the
38 III, VII | on the remainder of that family. He seized the opportunity
39 III, VII | Salvestro, was head of the family. The Signory, in order to
40 III, VII | banished, and all those of that family, who were descended from
41 III, VII | They declared six of the family of the Ricci rebels; also,
42 III, VII | They admonished all the family of the Alberti, the Ricci,
43 III, VII | jeopardy, every member of the family was banished whose age exceeded
44 IV, I | re-establishes the authority of his family— Filippo Visconti, duke
45 IV, I | gave an opportunity to the family of the Medici to recover
46 IV, IV | Contugi, a man of noble family, and his colleague in office,
47 V, I | Bologna slew some of the family of the Grifoni, and expelled
48 V, I | account of their wealth, their family connections or private animosities,
49 V, I | condition to serve them, and the family of the Alberti, with all
50 V, VII | security for himself and family, with leave to take whatever
51 VI, II | so that the arms of the family became almost annihilated,
52 VI, II | confidence, had contracted family alliances; but among men
53 VI, II | which are proper to your family and worthy of your father;
54 VI, V | had always evinced for the family of France; and the Venetians
55 VI, VI | difficulty, leaving his wife, family, and all his property, in
56 VI, VII | Siennese origin, of the family of the Piccolomini, and
57 VI, VII | John in proportion to his family’s merits; for it was by
58 VII, I | large a house for so small a family.” His great mind also felt
59 VII, II | the natural enemies of his family, who, under Jacopo Piccinino,
60 VII, III | in 1458, it was not his family, but themselves, who had
61 VII, III | declared rebels, and all the family of the Neroni were dispersed.
62 VII, III | to honor and support your family; neither have I since his
63 VII, III | Venetians, that it was the family of the Medici who had robbed
64 VII, IV | pontiff. Among others of his family were Piero and Girolamo,
65 VII, IV | particularly among the Palandra, a family which, though rustic, was
66 VII, V | placed Cesare with all his family in the custody of some of
67 VII, VI | priest, an old friend of the family, who, disguising him in
68 VIII, I | CHAPTER I~State of the family of the Medici at Florence—
69 VIII, I | Differences between the family of the Pazzi and that of
70 VIII, I | order to obtain for that family undivided authority, and
71 VIII, I | Rome, many favors upon the family of the Pazzi, and opposed
72 VIII, I | France. The head of this family was Jacopo, whom the people,
73 VIII, I | riches and rank of this family, had given his granddaughter,
74 VIII, I | great obligations to the family of the Pazzi. Besides those
75 VIII, II | good fortune which this family had acquired by their liberality
76 VIII, II | for which the rest of his family were notorious. As if to
77 VIII, II | fortune has reduced our family, when among friends, amidst
78 VIII, II | matters, will find that our family has always been exalted
79 VIII, II | And you all know that our family never attained any rank
80 VIII, II | is directed against my family and myself. And would to
81 VIII, II | qualities of himself and his family; and encouraged them to
82 VIII, III | To relieve his surviving family and pay a deserved tribute
83 VIII, V | assistance of the Colonna family (the Orsini had joined the
84 VIII, VI | seemed hereditary in his family, but also by violent pains
85 VIII, VII | eulogy—Establishment of his family—Estates bought by Lorenzo—
86 VIII, VII | the medium by which his family attained to the highest
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