Renaissance in Italy, Volume 1 (of 7) by John Addington Symonds
part 2, p. 318.
[2] For the avarice of Guicciardini, see Varchi, vol. i. p.
Chapters
- Chapter 1 Ch.1
- CHAPTER I. Ch.2
- CHAPTER II. Ch.3
- CHAPTER III. Ch.4
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.5
- CHAPTER V. Ch.6
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.7
- CHAPTER VII. Ch.8
- CHAPTER VIII. Ch.9
- CHAPTER IX. Ch.10
- CHAPTER X. Ch.11
- CHAPTER I. Ch.12
- CHAPTER II. Ch.13
- 1494. Up to that date the more recent wars of Italy had been principally Ch.14
- CHAPTER III. Ch.15
- 1465. In the disorganization caused by Charles VIII., Vidovero of Ch.16
- 316. Yet Giovio calls him a just and firm ruler, stained only with Ch.17
- CHAPTER IV. Ch.18
- 1536. Cosimo succeeded in the same year, and won the title of Grand Ch.19
- book iii. sections 20-22, and Nardi, book i. cap. 4, which give Ch.20
- CHAPTER V. Ch.21
- 4. _Die Chronik des Dino Compagni, Kritik der Hegelschen Schrift_, Ch.22
- 1251. See the discussion of this question, as also of the authorship Ch.23
- 1455. Their histories are composed in Latin, and savor much of the Ch.24
- 83. Compare p. 134): 'Esemplo a' dì nostri ne è grandissimo questa Ch.25
- part 2, p. 318. Ch.26
- 318. His _Ricordi Politici_ amply justify the second, though Ch.27
- 202. Guicciardini is discussing the appointment of Cosimo de' Ch.28
- introduction to Macaulay's Essay on Machiavelli, I need hardly enter in Ch.29
- CHAPTER VI. Ch.30
- CHAPTER VII. Ch.31
- chapter 17. Ch.32
- 1487. This led to Giovanni de' Medici receiving a Cardinal's hat at the Ch.33
- 1540. Giulio was released in 1559 and died, aged eighty-three, in 1561. Ch.34
- 1521. During the heyday of his splendor he spent 8,000 ducats monthly Ch.35
- CHAPTER VIII. Ch.36
- CHAPTER IX. Ch.37
- book ii., and the _Memoirs_ of De Comines. Ch.38
- 1573. Of the rest we hear only of prolonged torture before stupid and Ch.39
- CHAPTER X. Ch.40
- 1483. He was then aged only thirteen, and was still governed by his Ch.41
- 229. Read also the short account of the massacre of the Barons Ch.42
- 1527. The events of the Siege must have surprised Marco Ch.43
- 431. It is here worth noticing that Siena, the city of civil Ch.44
- 1536. Even when he seemed to favor a republican policy, he continued in Ch.45