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History of Florence and of the Affairs of Italy

Part 1 Chapter 7

Word Count: 2548    |    Released on: 18/11/2017

e practice of Annates - Disturbance in Lombardy - The Venetians acquire dominion on terra firma - Differences between the pope and the people of

cardinals into prison for having taken the part of France and the anti-pope. He then became offended with the king, for having refused to make his nephew prince of Capua; and pretending not to care about it, requested he would grant him Nocera for his habitation, but, having fortified it, he prepared to deprive the king of his dominions. upon this the king pitched his camp before the place, and the pope fled to Naples, where he put to death the cardinals whom he had imprisoned. From thence he proceeded to Rome, and, to acquire influence, created twenty-nine cardinals. At this time Charles, king of Naples,

Italian soldiery, called the Company of St. George, whose valor and discipline soon caused the foreign troops to fall into disrepute, and gave reputation to the native forces of the country, of which the princes afterward availed themselves in their wars with each other. The pope, Boniface IX., being at enmity with the Romans, went to Scesi, where he remained till the j

stellan, he escaped. Among others who occupied cities possessed by his father, was Guglielmo della Scala, who, being banished, fell into the hands of Francesco de Carrera, lord of Padua, by whose means he recovered the state of Verona, in which he only remained a short time, for he was poisoned, by order of

many endeavors, but effected nothing. Upon this, the cardinals of both the popes abandoned them, Benedict going to Spain, and Gregory to Rimini. On the other hand, the cardinals, with the favor of Balthazar Cossa, cardinal and legate of Bologna, appointed a council at Pisa, where they created Alexander V., who immediately excommunicated King Ladislaus, and invested Louis of Anjou with the kingdom; this prince, with the Florentines, Genoese, and Venetians, attacked Ladislaus and drove him from Rome. In the head of the war Alexander died, and Balthazar Cossa succeeded him, with the title of John XXIII. Leaving Bologna, where he was elected, he went to Rome, and found there Louis

ope to call the council, still, having promised to attend, he could not refuse to go there. In a few months after his arrival at Constance he discovered his error, but it was too late; endeavoring to escape, he was taken, put into prison, and compelled to renounce the papacy. Gregory, one of the anti-popes, sent h

t his wife Beatrice heiress of his estates, and arranged with his friends that a marriage should be effected between her and Filippo. By this union Filippo became powerful, and reacquired Milan and the whole of Lombardy. By way of being grateful for these num

t giving her any pervious notice of his intention to do so. She thus found herself at once unarmed, and not having any other source, sought the assistance of Alfonzo, king of Aragon and Sicily, adopted him as her son, and engaged Braccio of Montone as her captain, who was of equal reputation in arms with Sforza, and inimical to the pope, on account of his having taken possession of Perugia and some other places belonging to the church. After this, peace was made between the queen and the pontiff; but King Alfonzo, expecting she would treat him as she had her husband, endeavored secretly to make himself master of the strongholds; but, possessing acute observation, she was beforehand with him, and fortified herself in the castle of Naples. Suspicions increasing between them, they had recourse to arms, and the queen, with the assistance of Sforza, who again resumed her service, drove Alfonzo out of Naples, deprived him of his succession, and adopted Louis of Anjou in his stead. Henc

od to which we have now come. Joan II. held Naples, La Marca, the Patrimony and Romagna; some of these places obeyed the church, while others were held by vicars or tyrants, as Ferrara, Modena, and Reggio, by those of the House of Este; Faenza by the Manfredi; Imola by the Alidossi; Furli by the Ordelaffi; Rimini and Psaro by the Malatesti; and Camerino by those of Varano. Part of Lombardy was subject to the Duke Filippo, part to the V

arms which had made them terrible upon the seas, and falling into the customs of Italy, submitted their forces to the direction of others. The practice of arms being unsuitable to priests or women, the pope and Queen Joan of Naples were compelled by necessity to submit to the same sy

ng the latter were Carmignola, Francesco Sforza, Niccolo Piccinino the pupil of Braccio, Agnolo della Pergola, Lorenzo di Micheletto Attenduli, il Tartaglia, Giacopaccio, Cecolini da Perugia, Niccolo da Tolentino, Guido Torello, Antonia dal Ponte ad Era, and many others. With these, were those lords of whom I have before spoken, to which may be added the barons of Rome, the Colonnesi and the Orsini, with other lords and gentlemen of the king

will be necessary, as was at first proposed, to speak of the origin of Florence, that it may be clearly understood what wa

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History of Florence and of the Affairs of Italy
History of Florence and of the Affairs of Italy
“Niccolo Machiavelli, the first great Italian historian, and one of the most eminent political writers of any age or country, was born at Florence, May 3, 1469. He was of an old though not wealthy Tuscan family, his father, who was a jurist, dying when Niccolo was sixteen years old. We know nothing of Machiavelli’s youth and little about his studies. He does not seem to have received the usual humanistic education of his time, as he knew no Greek.1 The first notice of Machiavelli is in 1498 when we find him holding the office of Secretary in the second Chancery of the Signoria, which office he retained till the downfall of the Florentine Republic in 1512. His unusual ability was soon recognized, and in 1500 he was sent on a mission to Louis XII. of France, and afterward on an embassy to C?sar Borgia, the lord of Romagna, at Urbino. Machiavelli’s report and description of this and subsequent embassies to this prince, shows his undisguised admiration for the courage and cunning of C?sar, who was a master in the application of the principles afterwards exposed in such a skillful and uncompromising manner by Machiavelli in his Prince.”
1 Introduction2 Part 1 Chapter 13 Part 1 Chapter 24 Part 1 Chapter 35 Part 1 Chapter 46 Part 1 Chapter 57 Part 1 Chapter 68 Part 1 Chapter 79 Part 2 Chapter 110 Part 2 Chapter 211 Part 2 Chapter 312 Part 2 Chapter 413 Part 2 Chapter 514 Part 2 Chapter 615 Part 2 Chapter 716 Part 2 Chapter 817 Part 2 Chapter 918 Part 3 Chapter 119 Part 3 Chapter 220 Part 3 Chapter 321 Part 3 Chapter 422 Part 3 Chapter 123 Part 3 Chapter 624 Part 3 Chapter 725 Part 4 Chapter 126 Part 4 Chapter 227 Part 4 Chapter 328 Part 4 Chapter 429 Part 4 Chapter 530 Part 4 Chapter 631 Part 4 Chapter 732 Part 5 Chapter 133 Part 5 Chapter 234 Part 5 Chapter 335 Part 5 Chapter 436 Part 5 Chapter 537 Part 5 Chapter 638 Part 5 Chapter 739 Part 6 Chapter 140 Part 6 Chapter 241 Part 6 Chapter 342 Part 6 Chapter 443 Part 6 Chapter 544 Part 6 Chapter 645 Part 6 Chapter 746 Part 7 Chapter 147 Part 7 Chapter 248 Part 7 Chapter 349 Part 7 Chapter 450 Part 7 Chapter 551 Part 7 Chapter 652 Part 8 Chapter 153 Part 8 Chapter 254 Part 8 Chapter 355 Part 8 Chapter 456 Part 8 Chapter 557 Part 8 Chapter 658 Part 8 Chapter 7