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| Alphabetical [« »] rower 1 royal 18 royalties 5 royalty 19 royalty-a 1 rudder 2 ruin 8 | Frequency [« »] 19 merit 19 name 19 opinion 19 royalty 19 set 19 so-called 19 suppose | Aristotle Politics IntraText - Concordances royalty |
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1 III, VII | common interests, kingship or royalty; that in which more than 2 III, VII | perversions are as follows: of royalty, tyranny; of aristocracy, 3 III, XIV | to the consideration of royalty, which we admit to be one 4 III, XIV | there is one species of royalty or many. It is easy to see 5 III, XIV | then, are the four kinds of royalty. First the monarchy of the 6 III, XV | Lacedaemonian and the absolute royalty; for most of the others 7 III, XV | present. The other kind of royalty is a sort of constitution; 8 III, XV | best laws.~The advocates of royalty maintain that the laws speak 9 III, XV | and the rule of one man royalty, then aristocracy will be 10 III, XV | be better for states than royalty, whether the government 11 III, XV | But, says the lover of royalty, the king, though he might, 12 III, XVII| which we arrive respecting royalty and its various forms, and 13 IV, X | this treatise discussed royalty or kingship according to 14 IV, X | states, and what kind of royalty should be established, and 15 IV, X | and how.~When speaking of royalty we also spoke of two forms 16 IV, X | therefore easily pass into royalty. Among barbarians there 17 V, X | And so, as I was saying, royalty ranks with aristocracy, 18 V, X | democracy is tyranny; and royalty and aristocracy are both 19 V, XI | consider them separately, (1) royalty is preserved by the limitation