Book, Chapter
1 I, IV | enterprise; for the whole of Asia Minor, Syria, and part of Egypt,
2 I, VII | be enumerated among the minor powers.~None of the principal
3 I, VII | possessed no state; for the minor princes did not adopt the
4 II, II | twelve, seven major and five minor. The minor arts were afterward
5 II, II | major and five minor. The minor arts were afterward increased
6 II, VIII| residence the convent of the Minor Canons of St. Croce, and
7 III, I | chosen from the companies of minor artificers, and that before
8 III, III | were divided into MAJOR and MINOR; seven were called “major,”
9 III, III | major,” and fourteen, the “minor arts.” From this division,
10 III, III | major and persecuted the minor arts and their patrons;
11 III, IV | two Signors; the fourteen minor arts, three; and that the
12 III, IV | major, and two from the minor trades. Besides this, he
13 III, IV | new trades, another of the minor, and the third of the major
14 III, V | nobles of the people, and the minor artificers, by the ambition
15 III, VI | discontented at the share the minor trades and lowest of the
16 III, VI | the government; while the minor trades were desirous of
17 III, VI | major and sometimes the minor trades and the lowest of
18 III, VI | their former companies. The minor trades were not allowed
19 III, VI | them many members of the minor trades. Of the admonished
20 IV, II | diminish the authority of the minor trades by reducing the companies
21 VI, VI | them the Siennese and other minor powers, acceded to it within
22 VIII, V | Genoese, Siennese, and other minor powers; on the other, the
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