Book, Chapter
1 I, III| for their safety, to yield obedience to the pope; his authority,
2 I, IV | jurisdictions, to render obedience to him; and some of them
3 I, IV | clergy of Lombardy refused obedience to Alexander II., created
4 I, IV | proceeded to recover the obedience of those places which had
5 I, IV | princes, he could not compel obedience from the Romans themselves,
6 I, VI | Venetians did not render obedience to either the one or the
7 II, I | inhabitants in fidelity and obedience. Neither can a province
8 II, I | the year 1215, rendering obedience to the ruling power, and
9 II, III| subjects or friends, owed obedience to Florence. And although
10 II, VI | he could not enforce the obedience requisite to a leader. As
11 II, VI | Florence, preferred her obedience to her friendship. But Charles,
12 II, VI | Pistoia, withdrew her from obedience to him. Castruccio then
13 II, I | returned to their former obedience. Thus it frequently occurs
14 III, III| good citizen, offered their obedience in whatever might be committed
15 III, IV | come to their assistance in obedience to orders; and of the sixteen
16 VI, III| cities of the Duchy refused obedience; for they, too, desired
17 VII, V | of it—Volterra reduced to obedience by force, in accordance
18 VII, VI | territories of the church in obedience, had caused Spoleto to be
19 VIII, III| and withdrawing it from obedience to the pope. At the beginning
20 VIII, IV | of the enterprise, or in obedience to his sovereign’s commands,
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