Book, Chapter
1 IV, IV | learning the arrival of the commissary, presented themselves before
2 IV, V | escaped the hands of the commissary, came to Florence and acquainted
3 IV, V | party, wished to punish the commissary, they went to the Council
4 IV, V | when you learn how your commissary has taken possession of
5 IV, V | we hastened to meet your commissary, not as an enemy, but as
6 IV, V | compelled to speak. Your commissary has nothing of the man but
7 IV, V | soon as he was appointed commissary, he lost all desire to take
8 IV, V | soldiery, so that instead of a commissary he became a merchant. These
9 IV, V | been re-elected, sent as commissary, Giovanni Guicciardini,
10 IV, V | which they were routed, the commissary with a few of his men escaping
11 IV, VI | want of capacity in the commissary. This disposition aggravated
12 V, I | successful, admitted his commissary into the city. Among the
13 V, V | Medici, who was there as commissary for the Florentines, and
14 V, VI | appointments, and made him commissary over all the places in his
15 VI, II | s dominions. They sent a commissary to Cremona, attacked the
16 VI, III| observation, was found a Venetian commissary, who, in the course of the
17 VIII, III| side, Jacopo Guicciardini, commissary to the army, by the advice
18 VIII, VI | Jacopo Guicciardini was commissary of the army; and while the
19 VIII, VI | killed Antonio Cencinello, commissary for the king, and with him
20 VIII, VII| Boscoli, the Florentine commissary, was also there. These leaders
21 VIII, VII| offered the city to the commissary. These events being known
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