Book, Chapter
1 I, II | who, being on terms of friendship with Zeno the eastern emperor,
2 I, II | with whom he had been in friendship during the war with the
3 I, III| pope, promising him his friendship. The pope acceding to his
4 I, IV | came to Rome pretending friendship for the pontiff but afterward
5 I, V | others, who under pretense of friendship, were ensnared by the emperors.
6 II, IV | and in order to secure his friendship, they gave him authority
7 II, V | good esteemed than private friendship), and being joined by the
8 II, VI | preferred her obedience to her friendship. But Charles, being engaged
9 II, I | faith; reminding him of his friendship for the duke, to prove the
10 III, I | citizens either unity or friendship, except with those whose
11 III, V | the king’s mind than the friendship which his house had long
12 III, V | and the Guelphs, and his friendship for the plebeians, were
13 III, VII| upon terms of most intimate friendship, endeavored to persuade
14 IV, III| The Florentines obtain the friendship of the lord of Faenza—League
15 IV, IV | with the duke and by his friendship for Filippo, not only refused
16 IV, VII| which was to regain the friendship of the grandees, restoring
17 IV, VII| excite a war, and gain the friendship of Neri di Gino; for he
18 V, I | the Venetians, valuing the friendship of Cosmo de’ Medici more
19 V, II | duke of Milan, obtains his friendship—The Genoese disgusted with
20 V, III| wished to preserve his friendship, they must pay him themselves.
21 V, IV | he trusted that their new friendship, and the hope of his alliance
22 V, IV | consented, from their ancient friendship to the French dynasty, but
23 V, IV | help for them but in the friendship of the Florentines and the
24 V, IV | not prevail against the friendship and stipend of the duke;
25 V, V | open to them, through the friendship of Rinaldo and the Count
26 VI, I | Filippo, for the sake of the friendship which subsisted between
27 VI, II | but difficult to establish friendship. The Bolognese were in a
28 VI, II | Cremona, they lost the count’s friendship, who, now being free from
29 VI, III| endeavored to secure the friendship of Francesco Piccinino,
30 VI, IV | our own were added, the friendship we sought to establish would
31 VI, IV | to be the result of thy friendship; but we bore with the injury,
32 VI, IV | always maintained a steady friendship, and by whom he had constantly
33 VI, V | Naples were jealous of the friendship which the Florentines had
34 VI, V | and inconsistent with the friendship hitherto subsisting between
35 VI, V | reminded him that, although the friendship had originated with the
36 VI, V | that if he desired the friendship of the marquis of Mantua,
37 VI, V | the same proportion as the friendship of the Florentines was beneficial
38 VII, II | influence afforded by the king’s friendship, and the assistance of the
39 VII, II | not hope either by feigned friendship or open war to injure the
40 VII, IV | all sought to obtain his friendship. The duke of Milan gave
41 VII, V | could he confide in the friendship either of the duke or the
42 VII, VI | the sake of gaining their friendship as to be able the more easily
43 VIII, IV | sides, they preferred the friendship of the king as more suitable
44 VIII, IV | decided that the king’s friendship would be of the greatest
45 VIII, VII| great advantage, if to the friendship of the king he could add
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