Book, Chapter
1 II, III | The evil, however, which external powers could not effect,
2 II, VII | their undivided attention to external affairs, while many wars
3 II, VIII| which, guards, castles, and external aid have oft been found
4 II, VIII| that having glutted the external senses, the one within might
5 II, I | pursuit.~Having settled external affairs, they now turned
6 III, II | and the city freed from external war; there still prevailed
7 III, III | this city, that as soon as external wars have ceased the internal
8 III, V | strengthen themselves against external foes, they took into their
9 III, VI | During this state of things, external affairs were not of serious
10 III, VII | and being without enemies external or internal, undertook the
11 IV, I | nothing either internal or external to occasion uneasiness.
12 IV, VII | that he thought the fear of external wars (the duke’s forces
13 V, I | Not to be destitute of external assistance, and to deprive
14 VI, II | turned their attention to external affairs. As observed above,
15 VI, VI | while he refrained from external wars he incurred the danger
16 VI, VII | city.~Thus with regard to external affairs, the Florentines
17 VII, I | Having, in speaking of external affairs, come down to the
18 VII, I | Florence were not harassed by external wars, she was ruined by
19 VII, IV | Excesses in Florence—Various external events from 1468 to 1471—
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