Book, Chapter
1 I, III | and relieve him from the tyranny of the Berengarii.~The States
2 II, II | too well remembered their tyranny when they were in power;
3 II, III | disorders as before, and the tyranny exercised against the people
4 II, V | Novello—Lando d’Agobbio—His tyranny—His departure.~The legate
5 II, V | themselves from such disgraceful tyranny, they secretly wrote to
6 II, V | of the city, and of the tyranny of Lando and his partisans;
7 II, VII | who were offended with the tyranny of those in power. Their
8 II, VIII| be able to preserve the tyranny. The month of May, during
9 II, VIII| themselves from this odious tyranny or die in the attempt. Three
10 III, I | the people ceased with the tyranny of the duke of Athens, and
11 III, IV | have fallen under greater tyranny than that of the duke of
12 III, VII | and free them from the tyranny of those citizens who were
13 IV, I | which frequently change from tyranny to license, or the reverse;
14 IV, I | possess any stability; for tyranny cannot please the good,
15 IV, II | grandfather, put to death by its tyranny. He assured them they were
16 IV, III | a powerful check to the tyranny of the great, who could
17 IV, VII | again under such inevitable tyranny for the sake of avoiding
18 V, I | pope and the duke of Milan— Tyranny practiced by the party favorable
19 VI, III | Venetians, whose pride and tyranny they naturally dreaded.
20 VII, I | the imborsations by force—Tyranny and pride of Luca Pitti
21 VII, I | restrained them and made their tyranny supportable, were afraid,
22 VII, VI | protecting the oppressed, that tyranny is offensive to thee.” To
23 VIII, III | of a pontiff to suppress tyranny, depress the wicked, and
24 VIII, VI | Giorgio, on account of the tyranny of the former, and the excellent
25 VIII, VI | same citizens, liberty and tyranny, integrity and corruption,
26 VIII, VI | own subjects against the tyranny of the king. The pontiff
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