Book, Chapter
1 II, III| the Arts to establish this law with facility; and the former
2 II, V | expelled, excepting such as the law had expressly forbidden
3 II, VII| of Vernia; and enacted a law which provided that no citizen
4 III, I | contentions of our citizens. A new law settled the disputes of
5 III, I | agreed to the enactment of a law which, while it satisfied
6 III, I | Ricci, contrived that the law against the Ghibellines
7 III, I | the penalties which this law provided. The design of
8 III, I | Ghibelline; and thus the law which was renewed by the
9 III, I | for a republic to enact a law more pernicious than one
10 III, I | Piero having favored this law, which had been contrived
11 III, I | and from 1356, when this law was made, to 1366, there
12 III, I | originated, and with a new law provided that to the six
13 III, I | take his seat with them, a law was made that no nobleman
14 III, II | de Medici Gonfalonier—His law against the nobility, and
15 III, II | Collegi disapprove of the law—Salvestro addresses the
16 III, II | council in its favor—The law is passed— Disturbances
17 III, II | therefore, secretly draw up a law which had for its object
18 III, II | being apart, he proposed the law prepared by himself and
19 III, II | Salvestro intended to enact his law, and compose the city; but
20 III, IV | families put to death.~The law had now been passed; the
21 III, IV | by them before it became law. They took from Salvestro
22 III, VII| requested they would propose a law to the councils, which would
23 IV, II | Therefore, to render the law as offensive as possible,
24 IV, III| prevent it from becoming law. Giovanni de’ Medici alone
25 IV, III| of taxation which the new law produced, demanded that
26 IV, III| the rest; and that if this law had then been in force they
27 IV, III| to levy the tax, that the law required them to extend
28 IV, VI | by all. Now tell me, what law is there which forbids,
29 V, II | to the authority of the law. Of these, the most powerful
30 VII, I | and being subject to no law, fell to pieces. The party
31 VII, I | for its regulation.~This law being re-established, and
32 VII, I | request, but wished the law to be obtained in the regular
33 VII, IV | sell justice; you evade the law; you oppress the timid and
34 VII, V | improprieties, and made a law to put a stop to extravagance
35 VIII, I | question being litigated, a law was passed, by virtue of
36 VIII, I | of Pisa, to study canon law, and while there, had advanced
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