Book, Chapter
1 I, II | frequent influx of barbarians, acquired new vigor, and began to
2 I, III | Lombards, the popes never acquired any greater authority than
3 I, III | powers, while the church acquired them; and, by these means,
4 I, IV | Venetians, Pisans, and Genoese, acquired great reputation, till the
5 I, IV | which they had at first acquired; and, after ninety years,
6 I, VI | commercial enterprises, and thus acquired many ports in Greece and
7 II, I | people to reside in recently acquired or uninhabited countries.
8 II, I | prince establishes in a newly acquired country, is like a fortress
9 II, I | liberty. But then the pontiffs acquired greater influence, and the
10 II, II | Florence in a short time acquired. She became not only the
11 II, III | colors given to them, had acquired so great influence, that
12 II, III | ordinations of justice, the people acquired great influence, and Giano
13 II, III | delay till the enemy had acquired greater strength; and that
14 II, IV | the Bianchi faction had acquired universal hatred by having,
15 II, IV | infamy which their party had acquired by the death of Niccolo.
16 II, IV | mode of life, presently acquired so much of the people’s
17 II, VI | the influence which they acquired without the city was lost
18 II, VII | than themselves, having acquired Trevigi and Vicenza, made
19 II, VII | derive from him when he had acquired the principality by their
20 II, VIII| parties.~The duke, having acquired the sovereignty of the city,
21 II, I | that the honors they had acquired at their own peril, they
22 II, I | unjustly deprived. Their minds acquired such an assurance of success,
23 III, I | party, and that it thus acquired great authority over the
24 III, III | preserving what is dishonestly acquired, and thus poverty and destitution
25 III, III | fraud; and what they have acquired either by deceit or violence,
26 III, III | arms as soon as they had acquired a sufficient number of associates,
27 III, IV | justice the government he had acquired by favor, he commanded that
28 III, VI | were restored. They who had acquired distinctions or emoluments
29 III, VII | glory so many enterprises; acquired Arezzo, Pisa, Cortona, Leghorn,
30 IV, I | the Doge of Genoa, he had acquired Serezana and other places
31 IV, IV | with Florentine money, acquired such an extent of dominion.
32 IV, VI | alone, by the popularity acquired with his enormous wealth,
33 V, I | that although none ever acquired dominion over the rest,
34 V, V | Naples, or in Rome. Hence he acquired so much power over the pontiff,
35 VI, V | extent of dominion they had acquired by the money, forces, and
36 VI, VI | for his appearance. Having acquired a sufficient number of partisans,
37 VI, VI | his coming into Tuscany acquired no dominion and lost a great
38 VII, I | other private. Influence is acquired publicly by winning a battle,
39 VII, I | proportion as influence thus acquired is injurious, so is the
40 VII, I | Medici and Neri Capponi. Neri acquired his influence by public
41 VII, I | peace, the power he had acquired by war, and would not again
42 VII, II | with the citizens he had acquired many friends and universal
43 VII, II | the prosperity and newly acquired power of the Sforzeschi
44 VII, II | management of his fortune. Piero acquired Diotisalvi with the opinion
45 VII, V | what they had originally acquired, and what had been subsequently
46 VII, V | the advice of Lorenzo, he acquired great reputation. Upon which
47 VII, VI | inculcating his principles, acquired such an ascendancy over
48 VIII, I | in the Medici, and they acquired so much authority, that
49 VIII, I | of the enterprise. Having acquired these ideas, they communicated
50 VIII, II | fortune which this family had acquired by their liberality and
51 VIII, V | progress of which they had acquired honor, and which was concluded
52 VIII, VII | on his arrival the troops acquired fresh courage, while that
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