Book, Chapter
1 I, I | that the accustomed stipend allowed to this people should be
2 I, III| that the church of Rome was allowed to take precedence of that
3 I, V | sought his ruin; and never allowed another to rule the country,
4 I, VII| his appointing, and also allowed him to fortify the castle
5 II, I | the Chiane might not be allowed to overflow their country;
6 II, V | re-enter Florence, but are not allowed to do so—The companies of
7 II, V | his victorious enemies, he allowed himself to fall from horseback,
8 II, VI | The emigrants not being allowed to return, endeavor to enter
9 II, VI | this, he wasted time, and allowed Castruccio to obtain the
10 II, VII| when there is any time allowed between the determining
11 II, VII| and without impediment be allowed to retire to their castles.
12 II, VII| that no citizen should be allowed to possess a castle or fortified
13 III, I | popular class should be allowed to assume that office. This
14 III, IV | woolen trade should not be allowed to have a foreign judge;
15 III, IV | But his goodness never allowed a thought to enter his mind
16 III, VI | The minor trades were not allowed to elect the Gonfalonier
17 III, VI | decency, although the time allowed might not have expired.
18 IV, I | exceedingly difficult after having allowed it to gather strength; and
19 IV, II | be still greater if they allowed themselves to be dejected;
20 IV, II | censure public actions, and allowed those to interfere in affairs
21 IV, II | by their negligence, were allowed to be made; for thus the
22 IV, III| greatness of one who, if allowed to aggrandize himself, would
23 IV, VII| approaching ruin for having allowed themselves to be overcome
24 IV, VII| provide for their defense, and allowed many others to join them,
25 V, I | no philosopher should be allowed to enter Rome. Provinces
26 V, I | complete, should not be allowed to return, unless from the
27 V, II | the country they are not allowed to rule they subject to
28 V, II | enemy into their city, and allowed him to attack them, would
29 V, VI | armament entire, usually allowed the war to break out again
30 VI, V | that the Florentines had allowed Alessandro, the duke’s brother,
31 VI, V | the Venetian envoy was not allowed to enter the Florentine
32 VI, VI | governor within the limit allowed for his appearance. Having
33 VI, VI | they could no longer have allowed their whole force to act
34 VI, VI | the king of France, were allowed a passage through Savoy.
35 VI, VI | the war, the duke being allowed to recover from the princes
36 VI, VI | Italian powers a month was allowed to ratify the treaty. The
37 VI, VI | embassies from other powers, he allowed himself to be persuaded,
38 VII, II | themselves; for if they allowed matters to take their ordinary
39 VII, III| the leading conspirators, allowed him to do from motives of
40 VII, IV | where, upon a small pension allowed by the Venetians, he grew
41 VII, V | or exit, they are usually allowed to be taken. Bernardo was
42 VII, V | to some Florentines, and allowed them to share in the profits.
43 VII, VI | to fear Sixtus if he were allowed to avail himself of the
44 VII, VI | renewed their league, and allowed the pope and the king to
45 VII, VI | put a stop to them, and allowed the ambassadors to use whatever
46 VIII, III| of the services of both, allowed the marquis of Ferrara and
47 VIII, IV | to the Florentines, and allowed them ten days to consider
48 VIII, IV | go quietly on, Ferrando allowed him to depart on the sixth
49 VIII, IV | in the war, they were not allowed to participate in the peace.
50 VIII, V | restored; that they were allowed to keep Rovigo and the Polesine,
51 VIII, VI | Serezana; and as it was allowed by the conditions of peace,
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