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Alphabetical    [«  »]
citta 12
city 539
civic 1
civil 27
civilized 1
claim 7
claiming 1
Frequency    [«  »]
27 assured
27 best
27 captain
27 civil
27 destruction
27 disturbance
27 dominions
Niccolò Machiavelli
History of Florence

IntraText - Concordances

civil

   Book,  Chapter
1 I, II | foreign interference, but by civil discord (in which we may 2 II, I | After this occurred the civil wars between Marius and 3 II, II | decide in cases, whether civil or criminal, which occurred 4 II, II | With these ordinations, civil and military, the Florentines 5 II, IV | such a height, that, after civil means, they had recourse 6 II, V | living quite exceeded all civil bounds; and the opinion 7 II, VII| punish the delinquents by the civil authority, than to attempt, 8 II, I | in that moderation which civil society requires. But they 9 III, I | suppression of this disorder with civil authority alone.~We have 10 III, I | her laws, statutes, and civil ordinances are not, nor 11 III, I | in such high esteem, that civil force was insufficient to 12 III, I | improved by good laws and civil regulations, if you, the 13 III, I | are conformable to true civil liberty. And be assured, 14 III, III| art, should be judged in civil matters by their own superiors. 15 III, III| them were subdued by the civil power.~While they were arranging 16 IV, VII| they had not sufficient civil authority to expel them. 17 IV, VII| restraining a party, or opposing civil strife. He said that bold 18 V, II | and the impotence of her civil regulations; for the possession 19 VI, IV | opposed to every kind of civil government, so that it was 20 VII, I | the decent moderation of civil life; in his conversation, 21 VII, I | vanquished domestic and civil ambition, but humbled the 22 VII, I | to his enemies; so that civil discord strengthened his 23 VII, II | the city, some, to whom civil discord was extremely offensive, 24 VII, II | purposes, it was contrary to civil rule, and inconsistent with 25 VII, IV | survived being spent in civil discord and constant debility. 26 VIII, II | in conjunction with the civil authority. Thus being free 27 VIII, IV | Sforzeschi, and to put a stop to civil contentions by admitting


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