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The Prince

The Prince (Italian: Il Principe [il ˈprintʃipe]; Latin: De Principatibus) is a 16th-century political treatise written by Italian diplomat and political theorist Niccolò Machiavelli as an instruction guide for new princes and royals. The general theme of The Prince is of accepting that the aims of princes – such as glory and survival – can justify the use of immoral means to achieve those ends.[1]

The Prince
Title page of a 1550 edition
AuthorNiccolò Machiavelli
Original titleDe Principatibus / Il Principe
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian
SubjectPolitical science
PublisherAntonio Blado d'Asola
Publication date
1532
Followed byDiscourses on Livy 
TextThe Prince at Wikisource

From Machiavelli's correspondence, a version appears to have been distributed in 1513, using a Latin title, De Principatibus (Of Principalities).[2] However, the printed version was not published until 1532, five years after Machiavelli's death. This was carried out with the permission of the Medici pope Clement VII, but "long before then, in fact since the first appearance of The Prince in manuscript, controversy had swirled about his writings".[3]

Although The Prince was written as if it were a traditional work in the mirrors for princes style, it was generally agreed as being especially innovative. This is partly because it was written in the vernacular Italian rather than Latin, a practice that had become increasingly popular since the publication of Dante's Divine Comedy and other works of Renaissance literature.[4][5]

The Prince is sometimes claimed to be one of the first works of modern philosophy, especially modern political philosophy, in which the "effectual" truth is taken to be more important than any abstract ideal. It is also notable for being in direct conflict with the dominant Catholic and scholastic doctrines of the time, particularly those concerning politics and ethics.[6][7]

Although it is relatively short, the treatise is the most remembered of Machiavelli's works, and the one most responsible for bringing the word "Machiavellian" into usage as a pejorative. It even contributed to the modern negative connotations of the words "politics" and "politician" in Western countries.[8] In subject matter, it overlaps with the much longer Discourses on Livy, which was written a few years later. In its use of near-contemporary Italians as examples of people who perpetrated criminal deeds for politics, another lesser-known work by Machiavelli to which The Prince has been compared is the Life of Castruccio Castracani.

Summary Edit

Each part of The Prince has been extensively commented on over centuries. The work has a recognizable structure, for the most part indicated by the author himself. It can be summarized as:[9]

Letter to Lorenzo de' Medici, Duke of Urbino Edit

Machiavelli prefaces his work with an introductory letter to Lorenzo de' Medici, Duke of Urbino, the recipient of his work.

The subject matter: New Princedoms (Chapters 1 and 2) Edit

The Prince starts by describing the subject matter it will handle. In the first sentence, Machiavelli uses the word "state" (Italian stato, which could also mean "status") to cover, in neutral terms, "all forms of organization of supreme political power, whether republican or princely." The way in which the word "state" came to acquire this modern type of meaning during the Renaissance has been the subject of much academic debate, with this sentence and similar ones in the works of Machiavelli being considered particularly important.[10]

Machiavelli says that The Prince would be about princedoms, mentioning that he has written about republics elsewhere (a reference to the Discourses on Livy), but in fact, he mixes discussion of republics into this work in many places, effectively treating republics as a type of princedom, also, and one with many strengths. More importantly, and less traditionally, he distinguishes new princedoms from hereditary established princedoms.[11] He deals with hereditary princedoms quickly in Chapter 2, saying that they are much easier to rule. For such a prince, "unless extraordinary vices cause him to be hated, it is reasonable to expect that his subjects will be naturally well disposed towards him".[12] Gilbert (1938:19–23), comparing this claim to traditional presentations of advice for princes, wrote that the novelty in chapters 1 and 2 is the "deliberate purpose of dealing with a new ruler who will need to establish himself in defiance of custom". Normally, these types of works were addressed only to hereditary princes. He thinks Machiavelli may have been influenced by Tacitus as well as his own experience.

This categorization of regime types is also "un-Aristotelian"[13] and apparently simpler than the traditional one found for example in Aristotle's Politics, which divides regimes into those ruled by a single monarch, an oligarchy, or by the people, in a democracy.[14] Machiavelli also ignores the classical distinctions between the good and corrupt forms, for example between monarchy and tyranny.[15]

Xenophon, though, made exactly the same distinction between types of rulers in the beginning of his Education of Cyrus, where he says that, concerning the knowledge of how to rule human beings, Cyrus the Great, his exemplary prince, was very different "from all other kings, both those who have inherited their thrones from their fathers and those who have gained their crowns by their own efforts".[16]

Machiavelli divides the subject of new states into two types, "mixed" cases and purely new states.

"Mixed" princedoms (Chapters 3–5) Edit

New princedoms are either totally new, or they are "mixed", meaning that they are new parts of an older state, already belonging to that prince.[17]

New conquests added to older states (Chapter 3) Edit

Machiavelli generalizes that there were several virtuous Roman ways to hold a newly acquired province, using a republic as an example of how new princes can act:

  • to install one's princedom in the new acquisition, or to install colonies of one's people there, which is better.
  • to indulge the lesser powers of the area without increasing their power.
  • to put down the powerful people.
  • not to allow a foreign power to gain reputation.

More generally, Machiavelli emphasizes that one should have regard not only for present problems, but also for the future ones. One should not "enjoy the benefit of time", but rather the benefit of one's virtue and prudence, because time can bring evil, as well as good.

Machiavelli notes in this chapter on the "natural and ordinary desire to acquire" and as such, those who act on this desire can be "praised or blamed" depending on the success of their acquisitions. He then goes into detail about how the King of France failed in his conquest of Italy, even saying how he could have succeeded. Machiavelli views doing harm to enemies as a necessity, stating, "if an injury is to be done to a man, it should be so severe that the prince is not in fear of revenge".[18]

Conquered kingdoms (Chapter 4) Edit

 
A 16th-century Italian impression of the family of Darius III, emperor of Persia, before their conqueror, Alexander the Great: Machiavelli explained that in his time the Near East was again ruled by an empire, the Ottoman Empire, with similar characteristics to that of Darius – seen from the viewpoint of a potential conqueror.

In some cases, the old king of the conquered kingdom depended on his lords; 16th-century France, or in other words France as it was at the time of writing of The Prince, is given by Machiavelli as an example of such a kingdom. These are easy to enter, but difficult to hold.

When the kingdom revolves around the king, with everyone else his servant, then it is difficult to enter, but easy to hold. The solution is to eliminate the old bloodline of the prince. Machiavelli used the Persian empire of Darius III, conquered by Alexander the Great, to illustrate this point, and then noted that the Medici, if they think about it, will find this historical example similar to the "kingdom of the Turk" (Ottoman Empire) in their time – making this a potentially easier conquest to hold than France would be.

Conquered free states, with their own laws and orders (Chapter 5) Edit

Gilbert (1938:34) notes that this chapter is quite atypical of any previous books for princes. Gilbert supposed the need to discuss conquering free republics is linked to Machiavelli's project to unite Italy, which contained some free republics. As he also notes, the chapter in any case makes it clear that holding such a state is highly difficult for a prince. Machiavelli gives three options:

  • Ruin them, as Rome destroyed Carthage, and also as Machiavelli says the Romans eventually had to do in Greece.[19]
  • Go to live there and rule it personally.
  • Keep the state intact, but install an oligarchy.

Machiavelli advises the ruler to go the first route, stating that if a prince does not destroy a city, he can expect "to be destroyed by it".[20]

Totally new states (Chapters 6–9) Edit

Conquests by virtue (Chapter 6) Edit

 
Machiavelli described Moses as a conquering prince, who founded new modes and orders by force of arms, which he used willingly to kill many of his own people. Other sources describe the reasons behind his success differently.

Princes who rise to power through their own skill and resources (their "virtue") rather than luck tend to have a hard time rising to the top, but once they reach the top they are very secure in their position. This is because they effectively crush their opponents and earn great respect from everyone else. Because they are strong and more self-sufficient, they have to make fewer compromises with their allies.

Machiavelli writes that reforming an existing order is one of the most dangerous and difficult things a prince can do. Part of the reason is that people are naturally resistant to change and reform. Those who benefited from the old order will resist change very fiercely, and those who may stand to benefit from the new order will be less enthusiastic in their support, because the new order is unfamiliar and they are not certain it will live up to its promises. Moreover, it is impossible for the prince to satisfy everybody's expectations. Inevitably, he will disappoint some of his followers. Therefore, a prince must have the means to force his supporters to keep supporting him even when they start having second thoughts, otherwise he will lose his power. Only armed prophets, like Moses, succeed in bringing lasting change. Machiavelli claims that Moses killed uncountable numbers of his own people in order to enforce his will.

Machiavelli was not the first thinker to notice this pattern. Allan Gilbert wrote: "In wishing new laws and yet seeing danger in them Machiavelli was not himself an innovator,"[21] because this idea was traditional and could be found in Aristotle's writings. But Machiavelli went much further than any other author in his emphasis on this aim, and Gilbert associates Machiavelli's emphasis upon such drastic aims with the level of corruption to be found in Italy.

Conquest by fortune, meaning by someone else's virtue (Chapter 7) Edit

According to Machiavelli, when a prince comes to power through luck or the blessings of powerful figures within the regime, he typically has an easy time gaining power but a hard time keeping it thereafter, because his power is dependent on his benefactors' goodwill. He does not command the loyalty of the armies and officials that maintain his authority, and these can be withdrawn from him at a whim. Having risen the easy way, it is not even certain such a prince has the skill and strength to stand on his own feet.

This is not necessarily true in every case. Machiavelli cites Cesare Borgia as an example of a lucky prince who escaped this pattern. Through cunning political maneuvers, he managed to secure his power base. Cesare was made commander of the papal armies by his father, Pope Alexander VI, but was also heavily dependent on mercenary armies loyal to the Orsini brothers and the support of the French king. Borgia won over the allegiance of the Orsini brothers' followers with better pay and prestigious government posts. To pacify the Romagna, he sent in his henchman, Remirro de Orco, to commit acts of violence. When Remirro started to become hated for his actions, Borgia responded by ordering him to be "cut in two" to show the people that the cruelty was not from him, although it was.[22] When some of his mercenary captains started to plot against him, he had them captured and executed. When it looked as though the king of France would abandon him, Borgia sought new alliances.

Finally, Machiavelli makes a point that bringing new benefits to a conquered people will not be enough to cancel the memory of old injuries, an idea Allan Gilbert said can be found in Tacitus and Seneca the Younger.[23]

Of Those Who Have Obtained a Principality Through Crimes (Chapter 8) Edit

Conquests by "criminal virtue" are ones in which the new prince secures his power through cruel, immoral deeds, such as the elimination of political rivals.

Machiavelli's offers two rulers to imitate, Agathocles of Syracuse and Oliverotto Euffreducci. After Agathocles became Praetor of Syracuse, he called a meeting of the city's elite. At his signal, his soldiers killed all the senators and the wealthiest citizens, completely destroying the old oligarchy. He declared himself ruler with no opposition. So secure was his power that he could afford to absent himself to go off on military campaigns in Africa.

Machiavelli then states that the behavior of Agathocles is not simply virtue, as he says, "Yet one cannot call it virtue to kill one's citizens, betray one's friends, to be without faith, without mercy, without religion; these modes can enable one to acquire empire, but not glory. [...] Nonetheless, his savage cruelty and inhumanity, together with his infinite crimes, do not permit him to be celebrated among the most excellent men. Thus, one cannot attribute to fortune or virtue what he achieved without either."

Machiavelli then goes to his next example, Oliverotto de Fermo, an Italian condottiero who recently came to power by killing all his enemies, including his uncle Giovanni Fogliani, at a banquet. After he laid siege to the governing council and terrified the citizenry, he had then set up a government with himself as absolute ruler. However, in an ironic twist, Oliverotto was killed the same way his opponents were, as Cesare Borgia had him strangled after he invited Oliverotto and Vitellozzo Vitelli to a friendly setting.

Machiavelli advises that a prince should carefully calculate all the wicked deeds he needs to do to secure his power, and then execute them all in one stroke. In this way, his subjects will slowly forget his cruel deeds and the prince can better align himself with his subjects. Princes who fail to do this, who hesitate in their ruthlessness, will have to "keep a knife by his side" and protect himself at all costs, as he can never trust himself amongst his subjects.

Gilbert (1938:51–55) remarks that this chapter is even less traditional than those it follows, not only in its treatment of criminal behavior, but also in the advice to take power from people at a stroke, noting that precisely the opposite had been advised by Aristotle in his Politics (5.11.1315a13). On the other hand, Gilbert shows that another piece of advice in this chapter, to give benefits when it will not appear forced, was traditional.

Becoming a prince by the selection of one's fellow citizens (Chapter 9) Edit

A "civil principality" is one in which a citizen comes to power "not through crime or other intolerable violence", but by the support of his fellow citizens. This, he says, does not require extreme virtue or fortune, only "fortunate astuteness".

Machiavelli makes an important distinction between two groups that are present in every city, and have very different appetites driving them: the "great" and the "people". The "great" wish to oppress and rule the "people", while the "people" wish not to be ruled or oppressed. A principality is not the only outcome possible from these appetites, because it can also lead to either "liberty" or "license".

A principality is put into place either by the "great" or the "people" when they have the opportunity to take power, but find resistance from the other side. They assign a leader who can be popular to the people while the great benefit, or a strong authority defending the people against the great.

Machiavelli goes on to say that a prince who obtains power through the support of the nobles has a harder time staying in power than someone who is chosen by the common people; since the former finds himself surrounded by people who consider themselves his equals. He has to resort to malevolent measures to satisfy the nobles.

One cannot by fair dealing, and without injury to others, satisfy the nobles, but you can satisfy the people, for their object is more righteous than that of the nobles, the latter wishing to oppress, while the former only desire not to be oppressed.

Also a prince cannot afford to keep the common people hostile as they are larger in number while the nobles smaller.

Therefore, the great should be made and unmade every day. Two types of great people might be encountered:

  1. Those who are bound to the prince: Concerning these it is important to distinguish between two types of obligated great people, those who are rapacious and those who are not. It is the latter who can and should be honoured.
  2. Those who are not bound to the new prince: Once again, these need to be divided into two types – those with a weak spirit (a prince can make use of them if they are of good counsel) and those who shun being bound because of their own ambition (these should be watched and feared as enemies).

How to win over people depends on circumstances: Machiavelli advises:

  • Do not get frightened in adversity.
  • One should avoid ruling via magistrates, if one wishes to be able to "ascend" to absolute rule quickly and safely.
  • One should make sure that the people need the prince, especially if a time of need should come.

How to judge the strength of principalities (Chapter 10) Edit

The way to judge the strength of a princedom is to see whether it can defend itself, or whether it needs to depend on allies. This does not just mean that the cities should be prepared and the people trained; a prince who is hated is also exposed.

Ecclesiastical principates (Chapter 11) Edit

 
Leo X: a pope, but also a member of the Medici family. Machiavelli suggested they should treat the church as a princedom, as the Borgia family had, in order to conquer Italy, and found new modes and orders.

This type of "princedom" refers for example explicitly to the Catholic church, which is of course not traditionally thought of as a princedom. According to Machiavelli, these are relatively easy to maintain, once founded. They do not need to defend themselves militarily, nor to govern their subjects.

Machiavelli discusses the recent history of the Church as if it were a princedom that was in competition to conquer Italy against other princes. He points to factionalism as a historical weak point in the Church, and points to the recent example of the Borgia family as a better strategy which almost worked. He then explicitly proposes that the Medici are now in a position to try the same thing.

Defense and military (Chapter 12–14) Edit

Having discussed the various types of principalities, Machiavelli turns to the ways a state can attack other territories or defend itself. The two most essential foundations for any state, whether old or new, are sound laws and strong military forces.[24] A self-sufficient prince is one who can meet any enemy on the battlefield. He should be "armed" with his own arms. However, a prince that relies solely on fortifications or on the help of others and stands on the defensive is not self-sufficient. If he cannot raise a formidable army, but must rely on defense, he must fortify his city. A well-fortified city is unlikely to be attacked, and if it is, most armies cannot endure an extended siege. However, during a siege a virtuous prince will keep the morale of his subjects high while removing all dissenters. Thus, as long as the city is properly defended and has enough supplies, a wise prince can withstand any siege.

Machiavelli stands strongly against the use of mercenaries, and in this he was innovative, and he also had personal experience in Florence. He believes they are useless to a ruler because they are undisciplined, cowardly, and without any loyalty, being motivated only by money. Machiavelli attributes the Italian city states' weakness to their reliance on mercenary armies.

Machiavelli also warns against using auxiliary forces, troops borrowed from an ally, because if they win, the employer is under their favor and if they lose, he is ruined. Auxiliary forces are more dangerous than mercenary forces because they are united and controlled by capable leaders who may turn against the employer.

The main concern for a prince should be war, or the preparation thereof, not books. Through war a hereditary prince maintains his power or a private citizen rises to power. Machiavelli advises that a prince must frequently hunt in order to keep his body fit and learn the landscape surrounding his kingdom. Through this, he can best learn how to protect his territory and advance upon others. For intellectual strength, he is advised to study great military men so he may imitate their successes and avoid their mistakes. A prince who is diligent in times of peace will be ready in times of adversity. Machiavelli writes, "thus, when fortune turns against him he will be prepared to resist it."

The Qualities of a Prince (Chapters 14–19) Edit

Each of the following chapters presents a discussion about a particular virtue or vice that a prince might have, and is therefore structured in a way which appears like traditional advice for a prince. However, the advice is far from traditional.

A Prince's Duty Concerning Military Matters (Chapter 14) Edit

Machiavelli believes that a prince's main focus should be on perfecting the art of war. He believes that by taking this profession an aspiring prince will be able to acquire a state, and will be able to maintain what he has gained. He claims that "being disarmed makes you despised." He believes that the only way to ensure loyalty from one's soldiers is to understand military matters. The two activities Machiavelli recommends practicing to prepare for war are physical and mental. Physically, he believes rulers should learn the landscape of their territories. Mentally, he encouraged the study of past military events. He also warns against idleness.

Reputation of a prince (Chapter 15) Edit

Because, says Machiavelli, he wants to write something useful to those who understand, he thought it more fitting "to go directly to the effectual truth ("verità effettuale") of the thing than to the imagination of it". This section is one where Machiavelli's pragmatic ideal can be seen most clearly. Machiavelli reasons that since princes come across men who are evil, he should learn how to be equally evil himself, and use this ability or not according to necessity. Concerning the behavior of a prince toward his subjects, Machiavelli announces that he will depart from what other writers say, and writes:

Men have imagined republics and principalities that never really existed at all. Yet the way men live is so far removed from the way they ought to live that anyone who abandons what is for what should be pursues his downfall rather than his preservation; for a man who strives after goodness in all his acts is sure to come to ruin, since there are so many men who are not good.

Since there are many possible qualities that a prince can be said to possess, he must not be overly concerned about having all the good ones. Also, a prince may be perceived to be merciful, faithful, humane, frank, and religious, but most important is only to seem to have these qualities. A prince cannot truly have these qualities because at times it is necessary to act against them. Although a bad reputation should be avoided, it is sometimes necessary to have one. In fact, he must sometimes deliberately choose evil:

He who neglects what is done for what ought to be done, sooner effects his ruin than his preservation.[25]

Generosity vs. parsimony (Chapter 16) Edit

If a prince is overly generous to his subjects, Machiavelli asserts he will not be appreciated, and will only cause greed for more. Additionally, being overly generous is not economical, because eventually all resources will be exhausted. This results in higher taxes, and will bring grief upon the prince. Then, if he decides to discontinue or limit his generosity, he will be labeled as a miser. Thus, Machiavelli summarizes that guarding against the people's hatred is more important than building up a reputation for generosity. A wise prince should be willing to be more reputed a miser than be hated for trying to be too generous.

On the other hand: "of what is not yours or your subjects' one can be a bigger giver, as were Cyrus, Caesar, and Alexander, because spending what is someone else's does not take reputation from you but adds it to you; only spending your own hurts you".

Cruelty vs. Mercy (Chapter 17) Edit

 
Hannibal meeting Scipio Africanus. Machiavelli describes Hannibal as having the "virtue" of "inhuman cruelty". But he lost to someone, Scipio Africanus, who showed the weakness of "excessive mercy" and who could therefore only have held power in a republic.

Machiavelli begins this chapter by addressing how mercy can be misused which will harm the prince and his dominion. He ends by stating that a prince should not shrink from being cruel if it means that it will keep his subjects in line. After all, it will help him maintain his rule. He gives the example of Cesare Borgia, whose cruelty protected him from rebellions.[26] He does not contrast this example with the leaders of Florence, who, through too much mercy, allowed disorders to plague their city.

In addressing the question of whether it is better to be loved or feared, Machiavelli writes, "The answer is that one would like to be both the one and the other; but because it is difficult to combine them, it is far safer to be feared than loved if you cannot be both." As Machiavelli asserts, commitments made in peace are not always kept in adversity; however, commitments made in fear are kept out of fear. Yet, a prince must ensure that he is not feared to the point of hatred, which is very possible.

This chapter is possibly the most well-known of the work, and it is important because of the reasoning behind Machiavelli's famous idea that it is better to be feared than loved.[27] His justification is purely pragmatic; as he notes, "Men worry less about doing an injury to one who makes himself loved than to one who makes himself feared." Fear is used as a means to ensure obedience from his subjects, and security for the prince. Above all, Machiavelli argues, a prince should not interfere with the property of their subjects or their women, and if they should try to kill someone, they should do it with a convenient justification.

Regarding the troops of the prince, fear is absolutely necessary to keep a large garrison united and a prince should not mind the thought of cruelty in that regard. For a prince who leads his own army, it is imperative for him to observe cruelty because that is the only way he can command his soldiers' absolute respect. Machiavelli compares two great military leaders: Hannibal and Scipio Africanus. Although Hannibal's army consisted of men of various races, they were never rebellious because they feared their leader. Machiavelli says this required "inhuman cruelty" which he refers to as a virtue. Scipio's men, on the other hand, were known for their mutiny and dissension, due to Scipio's "excessive mercy" – which was, however, a source of glory because he lived in a republic.

In what way princes should keep their word (Chapter 18) Edit

Machiavelli notes that a prince is praised for keeping his word. However, he also notes that in reality, the most cunning princes succeed politically. A prince, therefore, should only keep his word when it suits his purposes, but do his utmost to maintain the illusion that he does keep his word and that he is reliable in that regard. Machiavelli advises the ruler to become a "great liar and deceiver", and that men are so easy to deceive, that the ruler won't have an issue with lying to others. He justifies this by saying that men are wicked, and never keep their words, therefore the ruler doesn't have to keep his.

As Machiavelli notes, "He should appear to be compassionate, faithful to his word, guileless, and devout. And indeed he should be so. But his disposition should be such that, if he needs to be the opposite, he knows how." As noted in chapter 15, the prince must appear to be virtuous in order to hide his actions, and he should be able to be otherwise when the time calls for it; that includes being able to lie, though however much he lies he should always keep the appearance of being truthful.

In this chapter, Machiavelli uses "beasts" as a metaphor for unscrupulous behavior. He states that while lawful conduct is part of the nature of men, a prince should learn how to use the nature of both men and beasts wisely to ensure the stability of his regime. In this chapter however, his focus is solely on the "beastly" natures.[28] In particular, he compares the use of force to the "lion", and the use of deception to the "fox", and advises the prince to study them both. In employing this metaphor, Machiavelli apparently references De Officiis by the Roman orator and statesman Cicero, and subverts its conclusion, arguing instead that dishonorable behavior is sometimes politically necessary.[29]

Avoiding contempt and hatred (Chapter 19) Edit

Machiavelli divides the fears which monarchs should have into internal (domestic) and external (foreign) fears. Internal fears exist inside his kingdom and focus on his subjects, Machiavelli warns to be suspicious of everyone when hostile attitudes emerge. Machiavelli observes that the majority of men are content as long as they are not deprived of their property and women, and only a minority of men are ambitious enough to be a concern. A prince should command respect through his conduct, because a prince who raises no contempt of the nobles and maintains the satisfaction of the people, Machiavelli assures, should have no fear of conspirators working with external powers. Conspiracy is very difficult and risky in such a situation.

Machiavelli apparently seems to go back on his rule that a prince can evade hate, as he says that he will eventually be hated by someone, so he should seek to avoid being hated by the commonfolk.

Roman emperors, on the other hand, had not only the majority and ambitious minority, but also a cruel and greedy military, who created extra problems as they demanded iniquity. While a prince should avoid being hated, he will eventually be hated by someone, so he must at least avoid the hatred of the most powerful, and for the Roman emperors this included the military who demanded iniquity against the people out of their own greed. He uses Septimius Severus as a model for new rulers to emulate, as he "embodied both the fox and the lion". Severus outwitted and killed his military rivals, and although he oppressed the people, Machiavelli says that he kept the common people "satisfied and stupified".

Machiavelli notes that in his time only the Turkish empire had the problem of the Romans, because in other lands the people had become more powerful than the military.

The Prudence of the Prince (Chapters 20–25) Edit

Whether ruling conquests with fortresses works (Chapter 20) Edit

Machiavelli mentions that placing fortresses in conquered territories, although it sometimes works, often fails. Using fortresses can be a good plan, but Machiavelli says he shall "blame anyone who, trusting in fortresses, thinks little of being hated by the people". He cited Caterina Sforza, who used a fortress to defend herself but was eventually betrayed by her people.

Gaining honours (Chapter 21) Edit

A prince truly earns honour by completing great feats. King Ferdinand of Spain is cited by Machiavelli as an example of a monarch who gained esteem by showing his ability through great feats and who, in the name of religion, conquered many territories and kept his subjects occupied so that they had no chance to rebel. Regarding two warring states, Machiavelli asserts it is always wiser to choose a side, rather than to be neutral. Machiavelli then provides the following reasons why:

  • If your allies win, you benefit whether or not you have more power than they have.
  • If you are more powerful, then your allies are under your command; if your allies are stronger, they will always feel a certain obligation to you for your help.
  • If your side loses, you still have an ally in the loser.

Machiavelli also notes that it is wise for a prince not to ally with a stronger force unless compelled to do so. In conclusion, the most important virtue is having the wisdom to discern what ventures will come with the most reward and then pursuing them courageously.

Nobles and staff (Chapter 22) Edit

The selection of good servants is reflected directly upon the prince's intelligence, so if they are loyal, the prince is considered wise; however, when they are otherwise, the prince is open to adverse criticism. Machiavelli asserts that there are three types of intelligence:

  • The kind that understands things for itself – which is excellent to have.
  • The kind that understands what others can understand – which is good to have.
  • The kind that does not understand for itself, nor through others – which is useless to have.

If the prince does not have the first type of intelligence, he should at the very least have the second type. For, as Machiavelli states, "A prince needs to have the discernment to recognize the good or bad in what another says or does even though he has no acumen himself".

Avoiding flatterers (Chapter 23) Edit

This chapter displays a low opinion of flatterers; Machiavelli notes that "Men are so happily absorbed in their own affairs and indulge in such self-deception that it is difficult for them not to fall victim to this plague; and some efforts to protect oneself from flatterers involve the risk of becoming despised." Flatterers were seen as a great danger to a prince, because their flattery could cause him to avoid wise counsel in favor of rash action, but avoiding all advice, flattery or otherwise, was equally bad; a middle road had to be taken. A prudent prince should have a select group of wise counselors to advise him truthfully on matters all the time. All their opinions should be taken into account. Ultimately, the decision should be made by the prince and carried out absolutely. If a prince is given to changing his mind, his reputation will suffer. A prince must have the wisdom to recognize good advice from bad. Machiavelli gives a negative example in Emperor Maximilian I; Maximilian, who was secretive, never consulted others, but once he ordered his plans and met dissent, he immediately changed them.

Prudence and chance Edit

Why the princes of Italy lost their states (Chapter 24) Edit

After first mentioning that a new prince can quickly become as respected as a hereditary one, Machiavelli says princes in Italy who had longstanding power and lost it cannot blame bad luck, but should blame their own indolence. One "should never fall in the belief that you can find someone to pick you up". They all showed a defect of arms (already discussed) and either had a hostile populace or did not know to secure themselves against the great.

How Much Fortune Can Do In Human Affairs, and in What Mode It May Be Opposed (Chapter 25) Edit

As pointed out by Gilbert (1938:206) it was traditional in the genre of Mirrors of Princes to mention fortune, but "Fortune pervades The Prince as she does no other similar work". Machiavelli argues that fortune is only the judge of half of our actions and that we have control over the other half with "sweat", prudence and virtue. Even more unusual, rather than simply suggesting caution as a prudent way to try to avoid the worst of bad luck, Machiavelli holds that the greatest princes in history tend to be ones who take more risks, and rise to power through their own labour, virtue, prudence, and particularly by their ability to adapt to changing circumstances.

Machiavelli even encourages risk taking as a reaction to risk. In a well-known metaphor, Machiavelli writes that "it is better to be impetuous than cautious, because fortune is a woman; and it is necessary, if one wants to hold her down, to beat her and strike her down."[30] Gilbert (p. 217) points out that Machiavelli's friend the historian and diplomat Francesco Guicciardini expressed similar ideas about fortune.

Machiavelli compares fortune to a torrential river that cannot be easily controlled during flooding season. In periods of calm, however, people can erect dams and levees in order to minimize its impact. Fortune, Machiavelli argues, seems to strike at the places where no resistance is offered, as had recently been the case in Italy. As de Alvarez (1999:125–30) points out that what Machiavelli actually says is that Italians in his time leave things not just to fortune, but to "fortune and God". Machiavelli is indicating in this passage, as in some others in his works, that Christianity itself was making Italians helpless and lazy concerning their own politics, as if they would leave dangerous rivers uncontrolled.[31]

Exhortation to Seize Italy and to Free Her from the Barbarians (Chapter 26) Edit

Pope Leo X was pope at the time the book was written and a member of the Medici family. This chapter directly appeals to the Medici to use what has been summarized in order to conquer Italy using Italian armies, following the advice in the book. Gilbert (1938:222–30) showed that including such exhortation was not unusual in the genre of books full of advice for princes. But it is unusual that the Medici family's position of Papal power is openly named as something that should be used as a personal power base, as a tool of secular politics. Indeed, one example is the Borgia family's "recent" and controversial attempts to use church power in secular politics, often brutally executed. This continues a controversial theme throughout the book.

Analysis Edit

 
Cesare Borgia, Duke of Valentinois. According to Machiavelli, a risk taker and example of a prince who acquired by "fortune". Failed in the end because of one mistake: he was naïve to trust a new Pope.

As shown by his letter of dedication, Machiavelli's work eventually came to be dedicated to Lorenzo di Piero de' Medici, grandson of "Lorenzo the Magnificent", and a member of the ruling Florentine Medici family, whose uncle Giovanni became Pope Leo X in 1513. It is known from his personal correspondence that it was written during 1513, the year after the Medici regained control of Florence, and a few months after Machiavelli's arrest, torture, and banishment by the in-coming Medici regime. It was discussed for a long time with Francesco Vettori – a friend of Machiavelli – whom he wanted to pass it and commend it to the Medici. The book had originally been intended for Giuliano di Lorenzo de' Medici, young Lorenzo's uncle, who however died in 1516.[32] It is not certain that the work was ever read by any of the Medici before it was printed.[33] Machiavelli describes the contents as being an un-embellished summary of his knowledge about the nature of princes and "the actions of great men", based not only on reading but also, unusually, on real experience.[34]

The types of political behavior which are discussed with apparent approval by Machiavelli in The Prince were regarded as shocking by contemporaries, and its immorality is still a subject of serious discussion.[35] Although the work advises princes how to tyrannize, Machiavelli is generally thought to have preferred some form of republican government.[36] Some commentators justify his acceptance of immoral and criminal actions by leaders by arguing that he lived during a time of continuous political conflict and instability in Italy, and that his influence has increased the "pleasures, equality and freedom" of many people, loosening the grip of medieval Catholicism's "classical teleology", which "disregarded not only the needs of individuals and the wants of the common man, but stifled innovation, enterprise, and enquiry into cause and effect relationships that now allow us to control nature".[37]

On the other hand, Strauss (1958:11) notes that "even if we were forced to grant that Machiavelli was essentially a patriot or a scientist, we would not be forced to deny that he was a teacher of evil".[38] Furthermore, Machiavelli "was too thoughtful not to know what he was doing and too generous not to admit it to his reasonable friends".[39]

Machiavelli emphasized the need for looking at the "effectual truth" (verita effetuale), as opposed to relying on "imagined republics and principalities". He states the difference between honorable behavior and criminal behavior by using the metaphor of animals, saying that "there are two ways of contending, one in accordance with the laws, the other by force; the first of which is proper to men, the second to beast".[40] In The Prince he does not explain what he thinks the best ethical or political goals are, except the control of one's own fortune, as opposed to waiting to see what chance brings. Machiavelli took it for granted that would-be leaders naturally aim at glory or honour. He associated these goals with a need for "virtue" and "prudence" in a leader, and saw such virtues as essential to good politics. That great men should develop and use their virtue and prudence was a traditional theme of advice to Christian princes.[41] And that more virtue meant less reliance on chance was a classically influenced "humanist commonplace" in Machiavelli's time, as Fischer (2000:75) says, even if it was somewhat controversial. However, Machiavelli went far beyond other authors in his time, who in his opinion left things to fortune, and therefore to bad rulers, because of their Christian beliefs. He used the words "virtue" and "prudence" to refer to glory-seeking and spirited excellence of character, in strong contrast to the traditional Christian uses of those terms, but more keeping with the original pre-Christian Greek and Roman concepts from which they derived.[42] He encouraged ambition and risk taking. So in another break with tradition, he treated not only stability, but also radical innovation, as possible aims of a prince in a political community. Managing major reforms can show off a Prince's virtue and give him glory. He clearly felt Italy needed major reform in his time, and this opinion of his time is widely shared.[43]

Machiavelli's descriptions encourage leaders to attempt to control their fortune gloriously, to the extreme extent that some situations may call for a fresh "founding" (or re-founding) of the "modes and orders" that define a community, despite the danger and necessary evil and lawlessness of such a project. Founding a wholly new state, or even a new religion, using injustice and immorality has even been called the chief theme of The Prince.[44] Machiavelli justifies this position by explaining how if "a prince did not win love he may escape hate" by personifying injustice and immorality; therefore, he will never loosen his grip since "fear is held by the apprehension of punishment" and never diminishes as time goes by.[45] For a political theorist to do this in public was one of Machiavelli's clearest breaks not just with medieval scholasticism, but with the classical tradition of political philosophy, especially the favorite philosopher of Catholicism at the time, Aristotle. This is one of Machiavelli's most lasting influences upon modernity.

Nevertheless, Machiavelli was heavily influenced by classical pre-Christian political philosophy. According to Strauss (1958:291) Machiavelli refers to Xenophon more than Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero put together. Xenophon wrote one of the classic mirrors of princes, the Education of Cyrus. Gilbert (1938:236) wrote: "The Cyrus of Xenophon was a hero to many a literary man of the sixteenth century, but for Machiavelli he lived". Xenophon also, as Strauss pointed out, wrote a dialogue, Hiero which showed a wise man dealing sympathetically with a tyrant, coming close to what Machiavelli would do in uprooting the ideal of "the imagined prince". Xenophon however, like Plato and Aristotle, was a follower of Socrates, and his works show approval of a "teleological argument", while Machiavelli rejected such arguments. On this matter, Strauss (1958:222–23) gives evidence that Machiavelli may have seen himself as having learned something from Democritus, Epicurus and classical materialism, which was however not associated with political realism, or even any interest in politics.

On the topic of rhetoric Machiavelli, in his introduction, stated that "I have not embellished or crammed this book with rounded periods or big, impressive words, or with any blandishment or superfluous decoration of the kind which many are in the habit of using to describe or adorn what they have produced". This has been interpreted as showing a distancing from traditional rhetoric styles, but there are echoes of classical rhetoric in several areas. In Chapter 18, for example, he uses a metaphor of a lion and a fox, examples of force and cunning; according to Zerba (2004:217), "the Roman author from whom Machiavelli in all likelihood drew the simile of the lion and the fox" was Cicero. The Rhetorica ad Herennium, a work which was believed during Machiavelli's time to have been written by Cicero, was used widely to teach rhetoric, and it is likely that Machiavelli was familiar with it. Unlike Cicero's more widely accepted works however, according to Cox (1997:1122), "Ad Herennium ... offers a model of an ethical system that not only condones the practice of force and deception but appears to regard them as habitual and indeed germane to political activity". This makes it an ideal text for Machiavelli to have used.

Influence Edit

To quote Bireley (1990:14):

...there were in circulation approximately fifteen editions of the Prince and nineteen of the Discourses and French translations of each before they were placed on the Index of Paul IV in 1559, a measure which nearly stopped publication in Catholic areas except in France. Three principal writers took the field against Machiavelli between the publication of his works and their condemnation in 1559 and again by the Tridentine Index in 1564. These were the English cardinal Reginald Pole and the Portuguese bishop Jerónimo Osório, both of whom lived for many years in Italy, and the Italian humanist and later bishop, Ambrogio Caterino Politi.

 
Emperor Charles V, or Charles I of Spain. A Catholic king in the first generation to read The Prince.
 
Henry VIII of England. A king who eventually split with the Catholic church, and supported some Protestant ideas in the first generation to read The Prince.

Machiavelli's ideas on how to accrue honour and power as a leader had a profound impact on political leaders throughout the modern west, helped by the new technology of the printing press. Pole reported that it was spoken of highly by his enemy Thomas Cromwell in England, and had influenced Henry VIII in his turn towards Protestantism, and in his tactics, for example during the Pilgrimage of Grace.[46] A copy was also possessed by the Catholic king and emperor Charles V.[47] In France, after an initially mixed reaction, Machiavelli came to be associated with Catherine de Medici and the St Bartholomew's Day Massacre. As Bireley (1990:17) reports, in the 16th century, Catholic writers "associated Machiavelli with the Protestants, whereas Protestant authors saw him as Italian and Catholic". In fact, he was apparently influencing both Catholic and Protestant kings.[48]

One of the most important early works dedicated to criticism of Machiavelli, especially The Prince, was that of the Huguenot, Innocent Gentillet, Discourse against Machiavelli, commonly also referred to as Anti Machiavel, published in Geneva in 1576.[49] He accused Machiavelli of being an atheist and accused politicians of his time by saying that they treated his works as the "Koran of the courtiers".[50] Another theme of Gentillet was more in the spirit of Machiavelli himself: he questioned the effectiveness of immoral strategies (just as Machiavelli had himself done, despite also explaining how they could sometimes work). This became the theme of much future political discourse in Europe during the 17th century. This includes the Catholic Counter Reformation writers summarised by Bireley: Giovanni Botero, Justus Lipsius, Carlo Scribani, Adam Contzen, Pedro de Ribadeneira, and Diego de Saavedra Fajardo.[51] These authors criticized Machiavelli, but also followed him in many ways. They accepted the need for a prince to be concerned with reputation, and even a need for cunning and deceit, but compared to Machiavelli, and like later modernist writers, they emphasized economic progress much more than the riskier ventures of war. These authors tended to cite Tacitus as their source for realist political advice, rather than Machiavelli, and this pretense came to be known as "Tacitism".[52]

Modern materialist philosophy developed in the 16th, 17th and 18th century, starting in the generations after Machiavelli. The importance of Machiavelli's realism was noted by many important figures in this endeavor, for example Jean Bodin,[53] Francis Bacon,[54] Harrington, John Milton,[55] Spinoza,[56] Rousseau, Hume,[57] Edward Gibbon, and Adam Smith. Although he was not always mentioned by name as an inspiration, due to his controversy, he is also thought to have been an influence for other major philosophers, such as Montaigne,[58] Descartes,[59] Hobbes, Locke[60] and Montesquieu.[61]

In literature:

Amongst later political leaders:

20th-century Italian-American mobsters were influenced by The Prince. John Gotti and Roy DeMeo would regularly quote The Prince and consider it to be the "Mafia Bible".[69][70]

Rapper Tupac Shakur studied in depth the teachings of The Prince [71] while in prison recovering from an attempt on his life. He learned a lot from reading Machiavelli's books. He was so inspired by it that once released from prison he changed his stage name to a pseudonym derived from Niccolo Machiavelli; "Makaveli", stating: "Like, Machiavelli. My name is not Machiavelli. My name is Makaveli. I took it, that's mine. He gave me that. And I don't feel no guilt."[72] "That's what got me here, My reading. It's not like I idolize this one guy Machiavelli. I idolize that type of thinking where you do whatever's gonna make you achieve your goal.".[73] Released only eight weeks after Tupac Shakur died from gunshot wounds, Death Row released The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory the posthumous album under the name of Makaveli, after having been influenced by Machiavelli's philophosy of using deception and fear on one's enemies.

Interpretation of The Prince as political satire or as deceit Edit

Satire Edit

This interpretation was famously put forth by scholar Garrett Mattingly (1958), who stated that "In some ways, Machiavelli's little treatise was just like all the other "Mirrors of Princes", in other ways it was a diabolical burlesque of all of them, like a political Black Mass."[74]

This position was taken up previously by some of the more prominent Enlightenment philosophes. Diderot speculated that it was a work designed not to mock, but to secretly expose corrupt princely rule. And in his The Social Contract, the French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau said:

Machiavelli was a proper man and a good citizen; but, being attached to the court of the Medici, he could not help veiling his love of liberty in the midst of his country's oppression. The choice of his detestable hero, Cesare Borgia, clearly enough shows his hidden aim; and the contradiction between the teaching of the Prince and that of the Discourses on Livy and the History of Florence shows that this profound political thinker has so far been studied only by superficial or corrupt readers. The Court of Rome sternly prohibited his book. I can well believe it; for it is that Court it most clearly portrays.

— Social Contract, Book 3, note to Chapter 6.

Whether or not the word "satire" is the best choice, the interpretation is very rare amongst those who study Machiavelli's works. For example Isaiah Berlin states that he cannot find anything other than Machiavelli's work that "reads less" like a satirical piece.[75]

Deceit Edit

Mary Dietz, in her essay Trapping The Prince, writes that Machiavelli's agenda was not to be satirical, as Rousseau had argued, but instead was "offering carefully crafted advice (such as arming the people) designed to undo the ruler if taken seriously and followed."[76] By this account, the aim was to reestablish the republic in Florence. She focuses on three categories in which Machiavelli gives paradoxical advice:

  • He discourages liberality and favors deceit to guarantee support from the people. Yet Machiavelli is keenly aware of the fact that an earlier pro-republican coup had been thwarted by the people's inaction that itself stemmed from the prince's liberality.
  • He supports arming the people despite the fact that he knows the Florentines are decidedly pro-democratic and would oppose the prince.
  • He encourages the prince to live in the city he conquers. This opposes the Medici's habitual policy of living outside the city. It also makes it easier for rebels or a civilian militia to attack and overthrow the prince.

According to Dietz, the trap never succeeded because Lorenzo – "a suspicious prince" – apparently never read the work of the "former republican."[77]

Other interpretations Edit

The Italian Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci argued that Machiavelli's audience for this work was not the classes who already rule (or have "hegemony") over the common people, but the common people themselves, trying to establish a new hegemony, and making Machiavelli the first "Italian Jacobin".[78]

Hans Baron is one of the few major commentators who argues that Machiavelli must have changed his mind dramatically in favour of free republics, after having written The Prince.[79]

Other works by Machiavelli Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Strauss (1987:297): "Machiavelli is the only political thinker whose name has come into common use for designating a kind of politics, which exists and will continue to exist independently of his influence, a politics guided exclusively by considerations of expediency, which uses all means, fair or foul, iron or poison, for achieving its ends – its end being the aggrandizement of one's country or fatherland – but also using the fatherland in the service of the self-aggrandizement of the politician or statesman or one's party."
  2. ^ He wrote about a short study he was making by this Latin name in his letter to Francesco Vettori, written 10 Dec 1513. This is letter 224 in the translated correspondence edition of James B. Atkinson and David Sices: Machiavelli (1996:264).
  3. ^ Bireley (1990) p. 14.
  4. ^ "Italian Vernacular Literature". Vlib.iue.it. Retrieved 2012-01-09.
  5. ^ Gilbert (1938) emphasizes similarities between The Prince and its forerunners, but still sees the same innovations as other commentators.
  6. ^ Bireley (1990)
  7. ^ Although Machiavelli makes many references to classical sources, these do not include the customary deference to Aristotle, which was to some extent approved by the church in his time. Strauss (1958:222) says, "Machiavelli indicates his fundamental disagreement with Aristotle's doctrine of the whole by substituting "chance" (caso) for "nature" in the only context in which he speaks of "the beginning of the world." Strauss gives evidence that Machiavelli was knowingly influenced by Democritus, whose philosophy of nature was, like that of modern science, materialist.
  8. ^ Bireley (1990:241)
  9. ^ See for example de Alvarez (1999) p. viii; and Strauss (1958:55)
  10. ^ Guarini (1999:30)
  11. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2015-09-08, retrieved 2010-01-01
  12. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2015-09-08, retrieved 2010-01-01
  13. ^ Gilbert (1938:19)
  14. ^ de Alvarez (1999) p. 9.
  15. ^ Strauss, Leo (2014-07-04). Thoughts on Machiavelli. University of Chicago Press. pp. 26–27. ISBN 9780226230979.
  16. ^ Xenophon, Cyropaedia, 1.1.4
  17. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2015-09-11, retrieved 2010-01-01
  18. ^ Machiavelli, Niccolò (2010-05-15). The Prince: Second Edition. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226500508.
  19. ^ "Machiavelli: The Prince: Chapter V". www.constitution.org. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  20. ^ Machiavelli, Niccolò (2010-05-15). The Prince: Second Edition. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226500508.
  21. ^ Gilbert. Machiavelli's Prince and Its Forerunners. pg 39
  22. ^ "Machiavelli: The Prince: Chapter VII". www.constitution.org. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
  23. ^ Gilbert. Machiavelli's Prince and Its Forerunners. pg 48
  24. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2016-11-12, retrieved 2010-01-01
  25. ^ Machiavelli. "Chapter 15". The Prince. Wikisource.
  26. ^ Machiavelli, Niccolò (2010-05-15). The Prince: Second Edition. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226500508.
  27. ^ Niccolò Machiavelli (1469—1527)
  28. ^ Strauss, Leo (2014-07-04). Thoughts on Machiavelli. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226230979.
  29. ^ Barlow, J.J. (Winter 1999). "The Fox and the Lion: Machiavelli Replies to Cicero". History of Political Thought. 20 (4): 627–645. JSTOR 26219664.
  30. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2009-10-08, retrieved 2010-01-01
  31. ^ As Francis Bacon wrote in his 13th essay, quoted at Strauss (1958:176), that "one of the doctors of Italy, Nicholas Machiavel, had the confidence to put in writing, almost in plain terms, That the Christian faith had given up good men in prey to those who are tyrannical and unjust".
  32. ^ Najemy (1993)
  33. ^ Dent (1995) p. xvii
  34. ^ Machiavelli, , The Prince, Constitution.org, archived from the original on 2016-01-15, retrieved 2010-01-01
  35. ^ Fischer (2000, p. 181) says that some people "might hold Machiavelli to some extent responsible for the crimes of a Lenin, Hitler, Mao, or Pol Pot, who had learned from him to excuse the murder of innocents by its supposed benefits for humanity." Strauss (1958, p. 12) writes that "We shall not hesitate to assert, as very many have asserted before us, and we shall later on try to prove, that Machiavelli's teaching is immoral and irreligious."
  36. ^ For example Strauss (1958, p. 182): "Machiavelli's book on principalities and his book on republics are both republican."
  37. ^ Fischer (2000, p. 181)
  38. ^ Concerning being a scientist, Strauss (1958:54–55) says that this description of Machiavelli as a scientist "is defensible and even helpful provided it is properly meant" because The Prince "conveys a general teaching" and only uses specific historical facts and experience as a basis for such generalizing. On the other hand Strauss (1958, p. 11): "Machiavelli's works abound with "value-judgments". Concerning patriotism Strauss (1958:10–11) writes that "Machiavelli understood it as collective selfishness." It is Machiavelli's indifferent "comprehensive reflection" about right and wrong, which is "the core of Machiavelli's thought," not love of the fatherland as such.
  39. ^ Much of Machiavelli's personal correspondence with other Florentines is preserved, including some of the most famous letters in Italian. Of particular interest for example, are some of his letters to Francesco Vettori and Francesco Guicciardini, two men who had managed to stay in public service under the Medici, unlike Machiavelli. To Guicciardini for example he wrote concerning the selection of a preacher for Florence, that he would like a hypocritical one, and "I believe that the following would be the true way to go to Paradise: learn the way to Hell in order to steer clear of it." (Letter 270 in Machiavelli (1996))
  40. ^ Machiavelli, Niccolò (2010-05-15). The Prince: Second Edition. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226500508.
  41. ^ Gilbert (1938)
  42. ^ While pride is a sin in the Bible, "Fortune favours the bold", used for example by Dent (1995) p. xxii to summarize Machiavelli's stance concerning fortune, was a classical saying. That the desire for glory of spirited young men can and should be allowed or even encouraged, because it is how the best rulers come to be, is a theory expressed most famously by Plato in his Republic. (See Strauss (1958:289).) But as Strauss points out, Plato asserts that there is a higher type of life, and Machiavelli does not seem to accept this.
  43. ^ See for example Guarini (1999).
  44. ^ Strauss (1987:302)
  45. ^ Mansfield, Harvey (2017-03-15). "Machiavelli on Necessity" in Machiavelli on Liberty and Conflict. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226429441.
  46. ^ Bireley (1990:15)
  47. ^ Haitsma Mulier (1999:248)
  48. ^ While Bireley focuses on writers in the Catholic countries, Haitsma Mulier (1999) makes the same observation, writing with more of a focus upon the Protestant Netherlands.
  49. ^ Gentillet, Anti-Machiavel: A Discourse Upon the Means of Well Governing
  50. ^ Bireley (1990:17)
  51. ^ Bireley (1990:18)
  52. ^ Bireley (1990:223–30)
  53. ^ Bireley (1990:17): "Jean Bodin's first comments, found in his Method for the Easy Comprehension of History, published in 1566, were positive."
  54. ^ Bacon wrote: "We are much beholden to Machiavelli and other writers of that class who openly and unfeignedly declare or describe what men do, and not what they ought to do." "II.21.9", Of the Advancement of Learning
  55. ^ Worden (1999)
  56. ^ "Spinoza's Political Philosophy". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2013. Retrieved 2011-03-19.
  57. ^ Danford "Getting Our Bearings: Machiavelli and Hume" in Rahe (2006).
  58. ^ Schaefer (1990)
  59. ^ Kennington (2004), chapter 11.
  60. ^ Barnes Smith "The Philosophy of Liberty: Locke's Machiavellian Teaching" in Rahe (2006).
  61. ^ Carrese "The Machiavellian Spirit of Montesquieu's Liberal Republic" in Rahe (2006). Shklar "Montesquieu and the new republicanism" in Bock (1999).
  62. ^ "Machiavelli and Renaissance Politics".
  63. ^ Worden (1999)
  64. ^ Rahe (2006)
  65. ^ Walling "Was Alexander Hamilton a Machiavellian Statesman?" in Rahe (2006).
  66. ^ Machiavelli (2006)
  67. ^ Mussolini, "Preludio al Principe", Gerarchia 3 (1924).
  68. ^ Stalin: A Biography By Robert Service
  69. ^ . Trutv.com. Archived from the original on 2011-12-31. Retrieved 2012-01-09.
  70. ^ . Trutv.com. Archived from the original on 2012-01-21. Retrieved 2012-01-09.
  71. ^ "Like Sun Tzu or Machiavelli, the secrets of war".
  72. ^ "Reason Why Tupac Changed His Name to Makaveli". 4 November 2022.
  73. ^ "Reason Why Tupac Changed His Name to Makaveli". 4 November 2022.
  74. ^ Machiavelli's Prince: Political Science or Political Satire?
  75. ^ Matravers, Derek; Pike, Jonathan; Warburton, Nigel (May 2014). Reading Political Philosophy: Machiavelli to Mill. ISBN 9781134692378.
  76. ^ Dietz, M., 1986, "Trapping the Prince: Machiavelli and the Politics of Deception," American Political Science Review, 80: 777–99.
  77. ^ Dietz, M., 1986, "Trapping the Prince: Machiavelli and the Politics of Deception," American Political Science Review, 80: 796.
  78. ^ See for example John McKay Cammett (1967), Antonio Gramsci and the Origins of Italian Communism, ISBN 9780804701419
  79. ^ Baron 1961.

Additional reading Edit

  • de Alvarez, Leo Paul S (1999), The Machiavellian Enterprise; A Commentary on The Prince
  • Baron, Hans (1961), , The English Historical Review, 76: 218, archived from the original on 2010-03-25
  • Bireley, Robert (1990), The Counter-Reformation Prince: Anti-Machiavellianism or Catholic Statecraft in Early Modern Europe, University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 978-0807819258
  • Dent, J (1995), "Introduction", The Prince and other writings, Everyman
  • Fischer, Markus (2000), Well-ordered License: On the Unity of Machiavelli's Thought, Lexington Book
  • Guarini, Elena (1999), "Machiavelli and the crisis of the Italian republics", in Bock, Gisela; Skinner, Quentin; Viroli, Maurizio (eds.), Machiavelli and Republicanism, Cambridge University Press
  • Cox, Virginia (1997), "Machiavelli and the Rhetorica ad Herennium: Deliberative Rhetoric in The Prince", The Sixteenth Century Journal, 28 (4): 1109–41, doi:10.2307/2543571, JSTOR 2543571
  • Zerba, Michelle (2004), "The Frauds of Humanism: Cicero, Machiavelli, and the Rhetoric of Imposture", Rhetorica, 22 (3): 215–40, doi:10.1525/rh.2004.22.3.215, S2CID 146374652
  • Gilbert, Allan (1938), Machiavelli's Prince and Its Forerunners, Duke University Press
  • Kennington, Richard (2004), On Modern Origins, Lexington Books
  • Machiavelli, Niccolò (1996), Machiavelli and His Friends: Their Personal Correspondence, Northern Illinois University Press. Translated and edited by James B. Atkinson and David Sices.
  • Machiavelli, Niccolò (2006), El Principe/The Prince: Comentado Por Napoleon Bonaparte / Commentaries by Napoleon Buonaparte, Mestas Ediciones. Translated into Spanish by Marina Massa-Carrara.
  • Najemy, John (1993), Between Friends: Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli-Vettori Letters of 1513–15, Princeton University Press
  • Haitsma Mulier, Eco (1999), "A controversial republican", in Bock, Gisela; Skinner, Quentin; Viroli, Maurizio (eds.), Machiavelli and Republicanism, Cambridge University Press
  • Rahe, Paul A. (2006), Machiavelli's Liberal Republican Legacy, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0521851879 Excerpt, reviews and Text search shows Machiavelli's Discourses had a major impact on shaping conservative thought.
  • Schaefer, David (1990), The Political Philosophy of Montaigne, Cornell University Press.
  • Strauss, Leo (1958), Thoughts on Machiavelli, University of Chicago Press
  • Strauss, Leo (1987), "Niccolo Machiavelli", in Strauss, Leo; Cropsey, Joseph (eds.), History of Political Philosophy (3rd ed.), University of Chicago Press
  • Worden, Blair (1999), "Milton's republicanism and the tyranny of heaven", in Bock, Gisela; Skinner, Quentin; Viroli, Maurizio (eds.), Machiavelli and Republicanism, Cambridge University Press
  • Bock, Gisela; Skinner, Quentin; Viroli, Maurizio (1990), Machiavelli and Republicanism, Cambridge University Press – excerpt and text search
  • Connell, William J. (2013). "Dating The Prince: Beginnings and Endings". Review of Politics. 75 (4): 497–514. doi:10.1017/S0034670513000557. S2CID 143996047.
  • Dietz, Mary (1986), "Trapping the Prince" (PDF), American Political Science Review, 80 (3): 777–99, doi:10.2307/1960538, JSTOR 1960538, S2CID 144027726
  • Garver, Eugene (1980), "Machiavelli's "The Prince": A Neglected Rhetorical Classic", Philosophy & Rhetoric, 13 (2): 99–120
  • Kahn, Victoria (1986), "Virtù and the Example of Agathocles in Machiavelli's Prince", Representations, 13 (13): 63–83, doi:10.2307/2928494, JSTOR 2928494
  • Mattingly, Garrett (1958), "Machiavelli's Prince: Political Science or Political Satire?", The American Scholar, 27: 482–91
  • Parsons, William B. (2016), Machiavelli's Gospel, University of Rochester Press, ISBN 9781580464918
  • Tinkler, John F. (1988), "Praise and Advice: Rhetorical Approaches in More's Utopia and Machiavelli's The Prince", The Sixteenth Century Journal, 19 (2): 187–207, doi:10.2307/2540406, JSTOR 2540406

External links Edit

Digital editions
  • The Prince at Standard Ebooks
  • The Prince at Project Gutenberg
  •   The Prince public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Il Principe at MetaLibri Digital Library (in Italian)
Commentary
  • Machiavelli, Niccolò, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Podcast of Nigel Warburton on Machiavelli's The Prince
  • A Monologue by Prof. Robert Harrison on The Prince
  • A Lecture by Ian Johnston on The Prince as satire
  • Interview with Quentin Skinner on The Prince

prince, this, article, about, book, niccolò, machiavelli, other, uses, prince, disambiguation, italian, principe, ˈprintʃipe, latin, principatibus, 16th, century, political, treatise, written, italian, diplomat, political, theorist, niccolò, machiavelli, instr. This article is about the book by Niccolo Machiavelli For other uses see Prince disambiguation The Prince Italian Il Principe il ˈprintʃipe Latin De Principatibus is a 16th century political treatise written by Italian diplomat and political theorist Niccolo Machiavelli as an instruction guide for new princes and royals The general theme of The Prince is of accepting that the aims of princes such as glory and survival can justify the use of immoral means to achieve those ends 1 The PrinceTitle page of a 1550 editionAuthorNiccolo MachiavelliOriginal titleDe Principatibus Il PrincipeCountryItalyLanguageItalianSubjectPolitical sciencePublisherAntonio Blado d AsolaPublication date1532Followed byDiscourses on Livy TextThe Prince at WikisourceFrom Machiavelli s correspondence a version appears to have been distributed in 1513 using a Latin title De Principatibus Of Principalities 2 However the printed version was not published until 1532 five years after Machiavelli s death This was carried out with the permission of the Medici pope Clement VII but long before then in fact since the first appearance of The Prince in manuscript controversy had swirled about his writings 3 Although The Prince was written as if it were a traditional work in the mirrors for princes style it was generally agreed as being especially innovative This is partly because it was written in the vernacular Italian rather than Latin a practice that had become increasingly popular since the publication of Dante s Divine Comedy and other works of Renaissance literature 4 5 The Prince is sometimes claimed to be one of the first works of modern philosophy especially modern political philosophy in which the effectual truth is taken to be more important than any abstract ideal It is also notable for being in direct conflict with the dominant Catholic and scholastic doctrines of the time particularly those concerning politics and ethics 6 7 Although it is relatively short the treatise is the most remembered of Machiavelli s works and the one most responsible for bringing the word Machiavellian into usage as a pejorative It even contributed to the modern negative connotations of the words politics and politician in Western countries 8 In subject matter it overlaps with the much longer Discourses on Livy which was written a few years later In its use of near contemporary Italians as examples of people who perpetrated criminal deeds for politics another lesser known work by Machiavelli to which The Prince has been compared is the Life of Castruccio Castracani Contents 1 Summary 1 1 Letter to Lorenzo de Medici Duke of Urbino 1 2 The subject matter New Princedoms Chapters 1 and 2 1 3 Mixed princedoms Chapters 3 5 1 3 1 New conquests added to older states Chapter 3 1 3 2 Conquered kingdoms Chapter 4 1 3 3 Conquered free states with their own laws and orders Chapter 5 1 4 Totally new states Chapters 6 9 1 4 1 Conquests by virtue Chapter 6 1 4 2 Conquest by fortune meaning by someone else s virtue Chapter 7 1 4 3 Of Those Who Have Obtained a Principality Through Crimes Chapter 8 1 4 4 Becoming a prince by the selection of one s fellow citizens Chapter 9 1 5 How to judge the strength of principalities Chapter 10 1 6 Ecclesiastical principates Chapter 11 1 7 Defense and military Chapter 12 14 1 8 The Qualities of a Prince Chapters 14 19 1 8 1 A Prince s Duty Concerning Military Matters Chapter 14 1 8 2 Reputation of a prince Chapter 15 1 8 3 Generosity vs parsimony Chapter 16 1 8 4 Cruelty vs Mercy Chapter 17 1 8 5 In what way princes should keep their word Chapter 18 1 8 6 Avoiding contempt and hatred Chapter 19 1 9 The Prudence of the Prince Chapters 20 25 1 9 1 Whether ruling conquests with fortresses works Chapter 20 1 9 2 Gaining honours Chapter 21 1 9 3 Nobles and staff Chapter 22 1 9 4 Avoiding flatterers Chapter 23 1 10 Prudence and chance 1 10 1 Why the princes of Italy lost their states Chapter 24 1 10 2 How Much Fortune Can Do In Human Affairs and in What Mode It May Be Opposed Chapter 25 1 10 3 Exhortation to Seize Italy and to Free Her from the Barbarians Chapter 26 2 Analysis 3 Influence 4 Interpretation of The Prince as political satire or as deceit 4 1 Satire 4 2 Deceit 5 Other interpretations 6 Other works by Machiavelli 7 See also 8 References 9 Additional reading 10 External linksSummary EditEach part of The Prince has been extensively commented on over centuries The work has a recognizable structure for the most part indicated by the author himself It can be summarized as 9 Letter to Lorenzo de Medici Duke of Urbino Edit Machiavelli prefaces his work with an introductory letter to Lorenzo de Medici Duke of Urbino the recipient of his work The subject matter New Princedoms Chapters 1 and 2 Edit The Prince starts by describing the subject matter it will handle In the first sentence Machiavelli uses the word state Italian stato which could also mean status to cover in neutral terms all forms of organization of supreme political power whether republican or princely The way in which the word state came to acquire this modern type of meaning during the Renaissance has been the subject of much academic debate with this sentence and similar ones in the works of Machiavelli being considered particularly important 10 Machiavelli says that The Prince would be about princedoms mentioning that he has written about republics elsewhere a reference to the Discourses on Livy but in fact he mixes discussion of republics into this work in many places effectively treating republics as a type of princedom also and one with many strengths More importantly and less traditionally he distinguishes new princedoms from hereditary established princedoms 11 He deals with hereditary princedoms quickly in Chapter 2 saying that they are much easier to rule For such a prince unless extraordinary vices cause him to be hated it is reasonable to expect that his subjects will be naturally well disposed towards him 12 Gilbert 1938 19 23 comparing this claim to traditional presentations of advice for princes wrote that the novelty in chapters 1 and 2 is the deliberate purpose of dealing with a new ruler who will need to establish himself in defiance of custom Normally these types of works were addressed only to hereditary princes He thinks Machiavelli may have been influenced by Tacitus as well as his own experience This categorization of regime types is also un Aristotelian 13 and apparently simpler than the traditional one found for example in Aristotle s Politics which divides regimes into those ruled by a single monarch an oligarchy or by the people in a democracy 14 Machiavelli also ignores the classical distinctions between the good and corrupt forms for example between monarchy and tyranny 15 Xenophon though made exactly the same distinction between types of rulers in the beginning of his Education of Cyrus where he says that concerning the knowledge of how to rule human beings Cyrus the Great his exemplary prince was very different from all other kings both those who have inherited their thrones from their fathers and those who have gained their crowns by their own efforts 16 Machiavelli divides the subject of new states into two types mixed cases and purely new states Mixed princedoms Chapters 3 5 Edit New princedoms are either totally new or they are mixed meaning that they are new parts of an older state already belonging to that prince 17 New conquests added to older states Chapter 3 Edit Machiavelli generalizes that there were several virtuous Roman ways to hold a newly acquired province using a republic as an example of how new princes can act to install one s princedom in the new acquisition or to install colonies of one s people there which is better to indulge the lesser powers of the area without increasing their power to put down the powerful people not to allow a foreign power to gain reputation More generally Machiavelli emphasizes that one should have regard not only for present problems but also for the future ones One should not enjoy the benefit of time but rather the benefit of one s virtue and prudence because time can bring evil as well as good Machiavelli notes in this chapter on the natural and ordinary desire to acquire and as such those who act on this desire can be praised or blamed depending on the success of their acquisitions He then goes into detail about how the King of France failed in his conquest of Italy even saying how he could have succeeded Machiavelli views doing harm to enemies as a necessity stating if an injury is to be done to a man it should be so severe that the prince is not in fear of revenge 18 Conquered kingdoms Chapter 4 Edit A 16th century Italian impression of the family of Darius III emperor of Persia before their conqueror Alexander the Great Machiavelli explained that in his time the Near East was again ruled by an empire the Ottoman Empire with similar characteristics to that of Darius seen from the viewpoint of a potential conqueror In some cases the old king of the conquered kingdom depended on his lords 16th century France or in other words France as it was at the time of writing of The Prince is given by Machiavelli as an example of such a kingdom These are easy to enter but difficult to hold When the kingdom revolves around the king with everyone else his servant then it is difficult to enter but easy to hold The solution is to eliminate the old bloodline of the prince Machiavelli used the Persian empire of Darius III conquered by Alexander the Great to illustrate this point and then noted that the Medici if they think about it will find this historical example similar to the kingdom of the Turk Ottoman Empire in their time making this a potentially easier conquest to hold than France would be Conquered free states with their own laws and orders Chapter 5 Edit Gilbert 1938 34 notes that this chapter is quite atypical of any previous books for princes Gilbert supposed the need to discuss conquering free republics is linked to Machiavelli s project to unite Italy which contained some free republics As he also notes the chapter in any case makes it clear that holding such a state is highly difficult for a prince Machiavelli gives three options Ruin them as Rome destroyed Carthage and also as Machiavelli says the Romans eventually had to do in Greece 19 Go to live there and rule it personally Keep the state intact but install an oligarchy Machiavelli advises the ruler to go the first route stating that if a prince does not destroy a city he can expect to be destroyed by it 20 Totally new states Chapters 6 9 Edit Conquests by virtue Chapter 6 Edit Machiavelli described Moses as a conquering prince who founded new modes and orders by force of arms which he used willingly to kill many of his own people Other sources describe the reasons behind his success differently Princes who rise to power through their own skill and resources their virtue rather than luck tend to have a hard time rising to the top but once they reach the top they are very secure in their position This is because they effectively crush their opponents and earn great respect from everyone else Because they are strong and more self sufficient they have to make fewer compromises with their allies Machiavelli writes that reforming an existing order is one of the most dangerous and difficult things a prince can do Part of the reason is that people are naturally resistant to change and reform Those who benefited from the old order will resist change very fiercely and those who may stand to benefit from the new order will be less enthusiastic in their support because the new order is unfamiliar and they are not certain it will live up to its promises Moreover it is impossible for the prince to satisfy everybody s expectations Inevitably he will disappoint some of his followers Therefore a prince must have the means to force his supporters to keep supporting him even when they start having second thoughts otherwise he will lose his power Only armed prophets like Moses succeed in bringing lasting change Machiavelli claims that Moses killed uncountable numbers of his own people in order to enforce his will Machiavelli was not the first thinker to notice this pattern Allan Gilbert wrote In wishing new laws and yet seeing danger in them Machiavelli was not himself an innovator 21 because this idea was traditional and could be found in Aristotle s writings But Machiavelli went much further than any other author in his emphasis on this aim and Gilbert associates Machiavelli s emphasis upon such drastic aims with the level of corruption to be found in Italy Conquest by fortune meaning by someone else s virtue Chapter 7 Edit According to Machiavelli when a prince comes to power through luck or the blessings of powerful figures within the regime he typically has an easy time gaining power but a hard time keeping it thereafter because his power is dependent on his benefactors goodwill He does not command the loyalty of the armies and officials that maintain his authority and these can be withdrawn from him at a whim Having risen the easy way it is not even certain such a prince has the skill and strength to stand on his own feet This is not necessarily true in every case Machiavelli cites Cesare Borgia as an example of a lucky prince who escaped this pattern Through cunning political maneuvers he managed to secure his power base Cesare was made commander of the papal armies by his father Pope Alexander VI but was also heavily dependent on mercenary armies loyal to the Orsini brothers and the support of the French king Borgia won over the allegiance of the Orsini brothers followers with better pay and prestigious government posts To pacify the Romagna he sent in his henchman Remirro de Orco to commit acts of violence When Remirro started to become hated for his actions Borgia responded by ordering him to be cut in two to show the people that the cruelty was not from him although it was 22 When some of his mercenary captains started to plot against him he had them captured and executed When it looked as though the king of France would abandon him Borgia sought new alliances Finally Machiavelli makes a point that bringing new benefits to a conquered people will not be enough to cancel the memory of old injuries an idea Allan Gilbert said can be found in Tacitus and Seneca the Younger 23 Of Those Who Have Obtained a Principality Through Crimes Chapter 8 Edit Conquests by criminal virtue are ones in which the new prince secures his power through cruel immoral deeds such as the elimination of political rivals Machiavelli s offers two rulers to imitate Agathocles of Syracuse and Oliverotto Euffreducci After Agathocles became Praetor of Syracuse he called a meeting of the city s elite At his signal his soldiers killed all the senators and the wealthiest citizens completely destroying the old oligarchy He declared himself ruler with no opposition So secure was his power that he could afford to absent himself to go off on military campaigns in Africa Machiavelli then states that the behavior of Agathocles is not simply virtue as he says Yet one cannot call it virtue to kill one s citizens betray one s friends to be without faith without mercy without religion these modes can enable one to acquire empire but not glory Nonetheless his savage cruelty and inhumanity together with his infinite crimes do not permit him to be celebrated among the most excellent men Thus one cannot attribute to fortune or virtue what he achieved without either Machiavelli then goes to his next example Oliverotto de Fermo an Italian condottiero who recently came to power by killing all his enemies including his uncle Giovanni Fogliani at a banquet After he laid siege to the governing council and terrified the citizenry he had then set up a government with himself as absolute ruler However in an ironic twist Oliverotto was killed the same way his opponents were as Cesare Borgia had him strangled after he invited Oliverotto and Vitellozzo Vitelli to a friendly setting Machiavelli advises that a prince should carefully calculate all the wicked deeds he needs to do to secure his power and then execute them all in one stroke In this way his subjects will slowly forget his cruel deeds and the prince can better align himself with his subjects Princes who fail to do this who hesitate in their ruthlessness will have to keep a knife by his side and protect himself at all costs as he can never trust himself amongst his subjects Gilbert 1938 51 55 remarks that this chapter is even less traditional than those it follows not only in its treatment of criminal behavior but also in the advice to take power from people at a stroke noting that precisely the opposite had been advised by Aristotle in his Politics 5 11 1315a13 On the other hand Gilbert shows that another piece of advice in this chapter to give benefits when it will not appear forced was traditional Becoming a prince by the selection of one s fellow citizens Chapter 9 Edit A civil principality is one in which a citizen comes to power not through crime or other intolerable violence but by the support of his fellow citizens This he says does not require extreme virtue or fortune only fortunate astuteness Machiavelli makes an important distinction between two groups that are present in every city and have very different appetites driving them the great and the people The great wish to oppress and rule the people while the people wish not to be ruled or oppressed A principality is not the only outcome possible from these appetites because it can also lead to either liberty or license A principality is put into place either by the great or the people when they have the opportunity to take power but find resistance from the other side They assign a leader who can be popular to the people while the great benefit or a strong authority defending the people against the great Machiavelli goes on to say that a prince who obtains power through the support of the nobles has a harder time staying in power than someone who is chosen by the common people since the former finds himself surrounded by people who consider themselves his equals He has to resort to malevolent measures to satisfy the nobles One cannot by fair dealing and without injury to others satisfy the nobles but you can satisfy the people for their object is more righteous than that of the nobles the latter wishing to oppress while the former only desire not to be oppressed Also a prince cannot afford to keep the common people hostile as they are larger in number while the nobles smaller Therefore the great should be made and unmade every day Two types of great people might be encountered Those who are bound to the prince Concerning these it is important to distinguish between two types of obligated great people those who are rapacious and those who are not It is the latter who can and should be honoured Those who are not bound to the new prince Once again these need to be divided into two types those with a weak spirit a prince can make use of them if they are of good counsel and those who shun being bound because of their own ambition these should be watched and feared as enemies How to win over people depends on circumstances Machiavelli advises Do not get frightened in adversity One should avoid ruling via magistrates if one wishes to be able to ascend to absolute rule quickly and safely One should make sure that the people need the prince especially if a time of need should come How to judge the strength of principalities Chapter 10 Edit The way to judge the strength of a princedom is to see whether it can defend itself or whether it needs to depend on allies This does not just mean that the cities should be prepared and the people trained a prince who is hated is also exposed Ecclesiastical principates Chapter 11 Edit Leo X a pope but also a member of the Medici family Machiavelli suggested they should treat the church as a princedom as the Borgia family had in order to conquer Italy and found new modes and orders This type of princedom refers for example explicitly to the Catholic church which is of course not traditionally thought of as a princedom According to Machiavelli these are relatively easy to maintain once founded They do not need to defend themselves militarily nor to govern their subjects Machiavelli discusses the recent history of the Church as if it were a princedom that was in competition to conquer Italy against other princes He points to factionalism as a historical weak point in the Church and points to the recent example of the Borgia family as a better strategy which almost worked He then explicitly proposes that the Medici are now in a position to try the same thing Defense and military Chapter 12 14 Edit Having discussed the various types of principalities Machiavelli turns to the ways a state can attack other territories or defend itself The two most essential foundations for any state whether old or new are sound laws and strong military forces 24 A self sufficient prince is one who can meet any enemy on the battlefield He should be armed with his own arms However a prince that relies solely on fortifications or on the help of others and stands on the defensive is not self sufficient If he cannot raise a formidable army but must rely on defense he must fortify his city A well fortified city is unlikely to be attacked and if it is most armies cannot endure an extended siege However during a siege a virtuous prince will keep the morale of his subjects high while removing all dissenters Thus as long as the city is properly defended and has enough supplies a wise prince can withstand any siege Machiavelli stands strongly against the use of mercenaries and in this he was innovative and he also had personal experience in Florence He believes they are useless to a ruler because they are undisciplined cowardly and without any loyalty being motivated only by money Machiavelli attributes the Italian city states weakness to their reliance on mercenary armies Machiavelli also warns against using auxiliary forces troops borrowed from an ally because if they win the employer is under their favor and if they lose he is ruined Auxiliary forces are more dangerous than mercenary forces because they are united and controlled by capable leaders who may turn against the employer The main concern for a prince should be war or the preparation thereof not books Through war a hereditary prince maintains his power or a private citizen rises to power Machiavelli advises that a prince must frequently hunt in order to keep his body fit and learn the landscape surrounding his kingdom Through this he can best learn how to protect his territory and advance upon others For intellectual strength he is advised to study great military men so he may imitate their successes and avoid their mistakes A prince who is diligent in times of peace will be ready in times of adversity Machiavelli writes thus when fortune turns against him he will be prepared to resist it The Qualities of a Prince Chapters 14 19 Edit Each of the following chapters presents a discussion about a particular virtue or vice that a prince might have and is therefore structured in a way which appears like traditional advice for a prince However the advice is far from traditional A Prince s Duty Concerning Military Matters Chapter 14 Edit Machiavelli believes that a prince s main focus should be on perfecting the art of war He believes that by taking this profession an aspiring prince will be able to acquire a state and will be able to maintain what he has gained He claims that being disarmed makes you despised He believes that the only way to ensure loyalty from one s soldiers is to understand military matters The two activities Machiavelli recommends practicing to prepare for war are physical and mental Physically he believes rulers should learn the landscape of their territories Mentally he encouraged the study of past military events He also warns against idleness Reputation of a prince Chapter 15 EditBecause says Machiavelli he wants to write something useful to those who understand he thought it more fitting to go directly to the effectual truth verita effettuale of the thing than to the imagination of it This section is one where Machiavelli s pragmatic ideal can be seen most clearly Machiavelli reasons that since princes come across men who are evil he should learn how to be equally evil himself and use this ability or not according to necessity Concerning the behavior of a prince toward his subjects Machiavelli announces that he will depart from what other writers say and writes Men have imagined republics and principalities that never really existed at all Yet the way men live is so far removed from the way they ought to live that anyone who abandons what is for what should be pursues his downfall rather than his preservation for a man who strives after goodness in all his acts is sure to come to ruin since there are so many men who are not good Since there are many possible qualities that a prince can be said to possess he must not be overly concerned about having all the good ones Also a prince may be perceived to be merciful faithful humane frank and religious but most important is only to seem to have these qualities A prince cannot truly have these qualities because at times it is necessary to act against them Although a bad reputation should be avoided it is sometimes necessary to have one In fact he must sometimes deliberately choose evil He who neglects what is done for what ought to be done sooner effects his ruin than his preservation 25 Generosity vs parsimony Chapter 16 Edit If a prince is overly generous to his subjects Machiavelli asserts he will not be appreciated and will only cause greed for more Additionally being overly generous is not economical because eventually all resources will be exhausted This results in higher taxes and will bring grief upon the prince Then if he decides to discontinue or limit his generosity he will be labeled as a miser Thus Machiavelli summarizes that guarding against the people s hatred is more important than building up a reputation for generosity A wise prince should be willing to be more reputed a miser than be hated for trying to be too generous On the other hand of what is not yours or your subjects one can be a bigger giver as were Cyrus Caesar and Alexander because spending what is someone else s does not take reputation from you but adds it to you only spending your own hurts you Cruelty vs Mercy Chapter 17 Edit Hannibal meeting Scipio Africanus Machiavelli describes Hannibal as having the virtue of inhuman cruelty But he lost to someone Scipio Africanus who showed the weakness of excessive mercy and who could therefore only have held power in a republic Machiavelli begins this chapter by addressing how mercy can be misused which will harm the prince and his dominion He ends by stating that a prince should not shrink from being cruel if it means that it will keep his subjects in line After all it will help him maintain his rule He gives the example of Cesare Borgia whose cruelty protected him from rebellions 26 He does not contrast this example with the leaders of Florence who through too much mercy allowed disorders to plague their city In addressing the question of whether it is better to be loved or feared Machiavelli writes The answer is that one would like to be both the one and the other but because it is difficult to combine them it is far safer to be feared than loved if you cannot be both As Machiavelli asserts commitments made in peace are not always kept in adversity however commitments made in fear are kept out of fear Yet a prince must ensure that he is not feared to the point of hatred which is very possible This chapter is possibly the most well known of the work and it is important because of the reasoning behind Machiavelli s famous idea that it is better to be feared than loved 27 His justification is purely pragmatic as he notes Men worry less about doing an injury to one who makes himself loved than to one who makes himself feared Fear is used as a means to ensure obedience from his subjects and security for the prince Above all Machiavelli argues a prince should not interfere with the property of their subjects or their women and if they should try to kill someone they should do it with a convenient justification Regarding the troops of the prince fear is absolutely necessary to keep a large garrison united and a prince should not mind the thought of cruelty in that regard For a prince who leads his own army it is imperative for him to observe cruelty because that is the only way he can command his soldiers absolute respect Machiavelli compares two great military leaders Hannibal and Scipio Africanus Although Hannibal s army consisted of men of various races they were never rebellious because they feared their leader Machiavelli says this required inhuman cruelty which he refers to as a virtue Scipio s men on the other hand were known for their mutiny and dissension due to Scipio s excessive mercy which was however a source of glory because he lived in a republic In what way princes should keep their word Chapter 18 Edit Machiavelli notes that a prince is praised for keeping his word However he also notes that in reality the most cunning princes succeed politically A prince therefore should only keep his word when it suits his purposes but do his utmost to maintain the illusion that he does keep his word and that he is reliable in that regard Machiavelli advises the ruler to become a great liar and deceiver and that men are so easy to deceive that the ruler won t have an issue with lying to others He justifies this by saying that men are wicked and never keep their words therefore the ruler doesn t have to keep his As Machiavelli notes He should appear to be compassionate faithful to his word guileless and devout And indeed he should be so But his disposition should be such that if he needs to be the opposite he knows how As noted in chapter 15 the prince must appear to be virtuous in order to hide his actions and he should be able to be otherwise when the time calls for it that includes being able to lie though however much he lies he should always keep the appearance of being truthful In this chapter Machiavelli uses beasts as a metaphor for unscrupulous behavior He states that while lawful conduct is part of the nature of men a prince should learn how to use the nature of both men and beasts wisely to ensure the stability of his regime In this chapter however his focus is solely on the beastly natures 28 In particular he compares the use of force to the lion and the use of deception to the fox and advises the prince to study them both In employing this metaphor Machiavelli apparently references De Officiis by the Roman orator and statesman Cicero and subverts its conclusion arguing instead that dishonorable behavior is sometimes politically necessary 29 Avoiding contempt and hatred Chapter 19 Edit Machiavelli divides the fears which monarchs should have into internal domestic and external foreign fears Internal fears exist inside his kingdom and focus on his subjects Machiavelli warns to be suspicious of everyone when hostile attitudes emerge Machiavelli observes that the majority of men are content as long as they are not deprived of their property and women and only a minority of men are ambitious enough to be a concern A prince should command respect through his conduct because a prince who raises no contempt of the nobles and maintains the satisfaction of the people Machiavelli assures should have no fear of conspirators working with external powers Conspiracy is very difficult and risky in such a situation Machiavelli apparently seems to go back on his rule that a prince can evade hate as he says that he will eventually be hated by someone so he should seek to avoid being hated by the commonfolk Roman emperors on the other hand had not only the majority and ambitious minority but also a cruel and greedy military who created extra problems as they demanded iniquity While a prince should avoid being hated he will eventually be hated by someone so he must at least avoid the hatred of the most powerful and for the Roman emperors this included the military who demanded iniquity against the people out of their own greed He uses Septimius Severus as a model for new rulers to emulate as he embodied both the fox and the lion Severus outwitted and killed his military rivals and although he oppressed the people Machiavelli says that he kept the common people satisfied and stupified Machiavelli notes that in his time only the Turkish empire had the problem of the Romans because in other lands the people had become more powerful than the military The Prudence of the Prince Chapters 20 25 Edit Whether ruling conquests with fortresses works Chapter 20 Edit Machiavelli mentions that placing fortresses in conquered territories although it sometimes works often fails Using fortresses can be a good plan but Machiavelli says he shall blame anyone who trusting in fortresses thinks little of being hated by the people He cited Caterina Sforza who used a fortress to defend herself but was eventually betrayed by her people Gaining honours Chapter 21 Edit A prince truly earns honour by completing great feats King Ferdinand of Spain is cited by Machiavelli as an example of a monarch who gained esteem by showing his ability through great feats and who in the name of religion conquered many territories and kept his subjects occupied so that they had no chance to rebel Regarding two warring states Machiavelli asserts it is always wiser to choose a side rather than to be neutral Machiavelli then provides the following reasons why If your allies win you benefit whether or not you have more power than they have If you are more powerful then your allies are under your command if your allies are stronger they will always feel a certain obligation to you for your help If your side loses you still have an ally in the loser Machiavelli also notes that it is wise for a prince not to ally with a stronger force unless compelled to do so In conclusion the most important virtue is having the wisdom to discern what ventures will come with the most reward and then pursuing them courageously Nobles and staff Chapter 22 Edit The selection of good servants is reflected directly upon the prince s intelligence so if they are loyal the prince is considered wise however when they are otherwise the prince is open to adverse criticism Machiavelli asserts that there are three types of intelligence The kind that understands things for itself which is excellent to have The kind that understands what others can understand which is good to have The kind that does not understand for itself nor through others which is useless to have If the prince does not have the first type of intelligence he should at the very least have the second type For as Machiavelli states A prince needs to have the discernment to recognize the good or bad in what another says or does even though he has no acumen himself Avoiding flatterers Chapter 23 Edit This chapter displays a low opinion of flatterers Machiavelli notes that Men are so happily absorbed in their own affairs and indulge in such self deception that it is difficult for them not to fall victim to this plague and some efforts to protect oneself from flatterers involve the risk of becoming despised Flatterers were seen as a great danger to a prince because their flattery could cause him to avoid wise counsel in favor of rash action but avoiding all advice flattery or otherwise was equally bad a middle road had to be taken A prudent prince should have a select group of wise counselors to advise him truthfully on matters all the time All their opinions should be taken into account Ultimately the decision should be made by the prince and carried out absolutely If a prince is given to changing his mind his reputation will suffer A prince must have the wisdom to recognize good advice from bad Machiavelli gives a negative example in Emperor Maximilian I Maximilian who was secretive never consulted others but once he ordered his plans and met dissent he immediately changed them Prudence and chance Edit Why the princes of Italy lost their states Chapter 24 Edit After first mentioning that a new prince can quickly become as respected as a hereditary one Machiavelli says princes in Italy who had longstanding power and lost it cannot blame bad luck but should blame their own indolence One should never fall in the belief that you can find someone to pick you up They all showed a defect of arms already discussed and either had a hostile populace or did not know to secure themselves against the great How Much Fortune Can Do In Human Affairs and in What Mode It May Be Opposed Chapter 25 Edit As pointed out by Gilbert 1938 206 it was traditional in the genre of Mirrors of Princes to mention fortune but Fortune pervades The Prince as she does no other similar work Machiavelli argues that fortune is only the judge of half of our actions and that we have control over the other half with sweat prudence and virtue Even more unusual rather than simply suggesting caution as a prudent way to try to avoid the worst of bad luck Machiavelli holds that the greatest princes in history tend to be ones who take more risks and rise to power through their own labour virtue prudence and particularly by their ability to adapt to changing circumstances Machiavelli even encourages risk taking as a reaction to risk In a well known metaphor Machiavelli writes that it is better to be impetuous than cautious because fortune is a woman and it is necessary if one wants to hold her down to beat her and strike her down 30 Gilbert p 217 points out that Machiavelli s friend the historian and diplomat Francesco Guicciardini expressed similar ideas about fortune Machiavelli compares fortune to a torrential river that cannot be easily controlled during flooding season In periods of calm however people can erect dams and levees in order to minimize its impact Fortune Machiavelli argues seems to strike at the places where no resistance is offered as had recently been the case in Italy As de Alvarez 1999 125 30 points out that what Machiavelli actually says is that Italians in his time leave things not just to fortune but to fortune and God Machiavelli is indicating in this passage as in some others in his works that Christianity itself was making Italians helpless and lazy concerning their own politics as if they would leave dangerous rivers uncontrolled 31 Exhortation to Seize Italy and to Free Her from the Barbarians Chapter 26 Edit Pope Leo X was pope at the time the book was written and a member of the Medici family This chapter directly appeals to the Medici to use what has been summarized in order to conquer Italy using Italian armies following the advice in the book Gilbert 1938 222 30 showed that including such exhortation was not unusual in the genre of books full of advice for princes But it is unusual that the Medici family s position of Papal power is openly named as something that should be used as a personal power base as a tool of secular politics Indeed one example is the Borgia family s recent and controversial attempts to use church power in secular politics often brutally executed This continues a controversial theme throughout the book Analysis Edit Cesare Borgia Duke of Valentinois According to Machiavelli a risk taker and example of a prince who acquired by fortune Failed in the end because of one mistake he was naive to trust a new Pope As shown by his letter of dedication Machiavelli s work eventually came to be dedicated to Lorenzo di Piero de Medici grandson of Lorenzo the Magnificent and a member of the ruling Florentine Medici family whose uncle Giovanni became Pope Leo X in 1513 It is known from his personal correspondence that it was written during 1513 the year after the Medici regained control of Florence and a few months after Machiavelli s arrest torture and banishment by the in coming Medici regime It was discussed for a long time with Francesco Vettori a friend of Machiavelli whom he wanted to pass it and commend it to the Medici The book had originally been intended for Giuliano di Lorenzo de Medici young Lorenzo s uncle who however died in 1516 32 It is not certain that the work was ever read by any of the Medici before it was printed 33 Machiavelli describes the contents as being an un embellished summary of his knowledge about the nature of princes and the actions of great men based not only on reading but also unusually on real experience 34 The types of political behavior which are discussed with apparent approval by Machiavelli in The Prince were regarded as shocking by contemporaries and its immorality is still a subject of serious discussion 35 Although the work advises princes how to tyrannize Machiavelli is generally thought to have preferred some form of republican government 36 Some commentators justify his acceptance of immoral and criminal actions by leaders by arguing that he lived during a time of continuous political conflict and instability in Italy and that his influence has increased the pleasures equality and freedom of many people loosening the grip of medieval Catholicism s classical teleology which disregarded not only the needs of individuals and the wants of the common man but stifled innovation enterprise and enquiry into cause and effect relationships that now allow us to control nature 37 On the other hand Strauss 1958 11 notes that even if we were forced to grant that Machiavelli was essentially a patriot or a scientist we would not be forced to deny that he was a teacher of evil 38 Furthermore Machiavelli was too thoughtful not to know what he was doing and too generous not to admit it to his reasonable friends 39 Machiavelli emphasized the need for looking at the effectual truth verita effetuale as opposed to relying on imagined republics and principalities He states the difference between honorable behavior and criminal behavior by using the metaphor of animals saying that there are two ways of contending one in accordance with the laws the other by force the first of which is proper to men the second to beast 40 In The Prince he does not explain what he thinks the best ethical or political goals are except the control of one s own fortune as opposed to waiting to see what chance brings Machiavelli took it for granted that would be leaders naturally aim at glory or honour He associated these goals with a need for virtue and prudence in a leader and saw such virtues as essential to good politics That great men should develop and use their virtue and prudence was a traditional theme of advice to Christian princes 41 And that more virtue meant less reliance on chance was a classically influenced humanist commonplace in Machiavelli s time as Fischer 2000 75 says even if it was somewhat controversial However Machiavelli went far beyond other authors in his time who in his opinion left things to fortune and therefore to bad rulers because of their Christian beliefs He used the words virtue and prudence to refer to glory seeking and spirited excellence of character in strong contrast to the traditional Christian uses of those terms but more keeping with the original pre Christian Greek and Roman concepts from which they derived 42 He encouraged ambition and risk taking So in another break with tradition he treated not only stability but also radical innovation as possible aims of a prince in a political community Managing major reforms can show off a Prince s virtue and give him glory He clearly felt Italy needed major reform in his time and this opinion of his time is widely shared 43 Machiavelli s descriptions encourage leaders to attempt to control their fortune gloriously to the extreme extent that some situations may call for a fresh founding or re founding of the modes and orders that define a community despite the danger and necessary evil and lawlessness of such a project Founding a wholly new state or even a new religion using injustice and immorality has even been called the chief theme of The Prince 44 Machiavelli justifies this position by explaining how if a prince did not win love he may escape hate by personifying injustice and immorality therefore he will never loosen his grip since fear is held by the apprehension of punishment and never diminishes as time goes by 45 For a political theorist to do this in public was one of Machiavelli s clearest breaks not just with medieval scholasticism but with the classical tradition of political philosophy especially the favorite philosopher of Catholicism at the time Aristotle This is one of Machiavelli s most lasting influences upon modernity Nevertheless Machiavelli was heavily influenced by classical pre Christian political philosophy According to Strauss 1958 291 Machiavelli refers to Xenophon more than Plato Aristotle and Cicero put together Xenophon wrote one of the classic mirrors of princes the Education of Cyrus Gilbert 1938 236 wrote The Cyrus of Xenophon was a hero to many a literary man of the sixteenth century but for Machiavelli he lived Xenophon also as Strauss pointed out wrote a dialogue Hiero which showed a wise man dealing sympathetically with a tyrant coming close to what Machiavelli would do in uprooting the ideal of the imagined prince Xenophon however like Plato and Aristotle was a follower of Socrates and his works show approval of a teleological argument while Machiavelli rejected such arguments On this matter Strauss 1958 222 23 gives evidence that Machiavelli may have seen himself as having learned something from Democritus Epicurus and classical materialism which was however not associated with political realism or even any interest in politics On the topic of rhetoric Machiavelli in his introduction stated that I have not embellished or crammed this book with rounded periods or big impressive words or with any blandishment or superfluous decoration of the kind which many are in the habit of using to describe or adorn what they have produced This has been interpreted as showing a distancing from traditional rhetoric styles but there are echoes of classical rhetoric in several areas In Chapter 18 for example he uses a metaphor of a lion and a fox examples of force and cunning according to Zerba 2004 217 the Roman author from whom Machiavelli in all likelihood drew the simile of the lion and the fox was Cicero The Rhetorica ad Herennium a work which was believed during Machiavelli s time to have been written by Cicero was used widely to teach rhetoric and it is likely that Machiavelli was familiar with it Unlike Cicero s more widely accepted works however according to Cox 1997 1122 Ad Herennium offers a model of an ethical system that not only condones the practice of force and deception but appears to regard them as habitual and indeed germane to political activity This makes it an ideal text for Machiavelli to have used Influence EditTo quote Bireley 1990 14 there were in circulation approximately fifteen editions of the Prince and nineteen of the Discourses and French translations of each before they were placed on the Index of Paul IV in 1559 a measure which nearly stopped publication in Catholic areas except in France Three principal writers took the field against Machiavelli between the publication of his works and their condemnation in 1559 and again by the Tridentine Index in 1564 These were the English cardinal Reginald Pole and the Portuguese bishop Jeronimo Osorio both of whom lived for many years in Italy and the Italian humanist and later bishop Ambrogio Caterino Politi Emperor Charles V or Charles I of Spain A Catholic king in the first generation to read The Prince Henry VIII of England A king who eventually split with the Catholic church and supported some Protestant ideas in the first generation to read The Prince Machiavelli s ideas on how to accrue honour and power as a leader had a profound impact on political leaders throughout the modern west helped by the new technology of the printing press Pole reported that it was spoken of highly by his enemy Thomas Cromwell in England and had influenced Henry VIII in his turn towards Protestantism and in his tactics for example during the Pilgrimage of Grace 46 A copy was also possessed by the Catholic king and emperor Charles V 47 In France after an initially mixed reaction Machiavelli came to be associated with Catherine de Medici and the St Bartholomew s Day Massacre As Bireley 1990 17 reports in the 16th century Catholic writers associated Machiavelli with the Protestants whereas Protestant authors saw him as Italian and Catholic In fact he was apparently influencing both Catholic and Protestant kings 48 One of the most important early works dedicated to criticism of Machiavelli especially The Prince was that of the Huguenot Innocent Gentillet Discourse against Machiavelli commonly also referred to as Anti Machiavel published in Geneva in 1576 49 He accused Machiavelli of being an atheist and accused politicians of his time by saying that they treated his works as the Koran of the courtiers 50 Another theme of Gentillet was more in the spirit of Machiavelli himself he questioned the effectiveness of immoral strategies just as Machiavelli had himself done despite also explaining how they could sometimes work This became the theme of much future political discourse in Europe during the 17th century This includes the Catholic Counter Reformation writers summarised by Bireley Giovanni Botero Justus Lipsius Carlo Scribani Adam Contzen Pedro de Ribadeneira and Diego de Saavedra Fajardo 51 These authors criticized Machiavelli but also followed him in many ways They accepted the need for a prince to be concerned with reputation and even a need for cunning and deceit but compared to Machiavelli and like later modernist writers they emphasized economic progress much more than the riskier ventures of war These authors tended to cite Tacitus as their source for realist political advice rather than Machiavelli and this pretense came to be known as Tacitism 52 Modern materialist philosophy developed in the 16th 17th and 18th century starting in the generations after Machiavelli The importance of Machiavelli s realism was noted by many important figures in this endeavor for example Jean Bodin 53 Francis Bacon 54 Harrington John Milton 55 Spinoza 56 Rousseau Hume 57 Edward Gibbon and Adam Smith Although he was not always mentioned by name as an inspiration due to his controversy he is also thought to have been an influence for other major philosophers such as Montaigne 58 Descartes 59 Hobbes Locke 60 and Montesquieu 61 In literature Machiavelli is featured as a character in the prologue of Christopher Marlowe s The Jew of Malta In William Shakespeare s tragedy Othello the antagonist Iago has been noted by some literary critics as being archetypal in adhering to Machiavelli s ideals by advancing himself through machination and duplicity with the consequence of causing the demise of both Othello and Desdemona 62 Amongst later political leaders The republicanism in seventeenth century England which led to the English Civil War the Glorious Revolution and subsequent development of the English Constitution was strongly influenced by Machiavelli s political thought 63 Most of the Founding Fathers of the American Revolution are known or often proposed to have been strongly influenced by Machiavelli s political works including Benjamin Franklin James Madison Thomas Jefferson Alexander Hamilton and John Adams 64 65 Under the guidance of Voltaire Frederick the Great of Prussia criticised Machiavelli s conclusions in his Anti Machiavel published in 1740 At different stages in his life Napoleon I of France wrote extensive comments to The Prince After his defeat at Waterloo these comments were found in the emperor s coach and taken by the Prussian military 66 Italian dictator Benito Mussolini wrote a discourse on The Prince 67 Soviet leader Joseph Stalin read The Prince and annotated his own copy 68 20th century Italian American mobsters were influenced by The Prince John Gotti and Roy DeMeo would regularly quote The Prince and consider it to be the Mafia Bible 69 70 Rapper Tupac Shakur studied in depth the teachings of The Prince 71 while in prison recovering from an attempt on his life He learned a lot from reading Machiavelli s books He was so inspired by it that once released from prison he changed his stage name to a pseudonym derived from Niccolo Machiavelli Makaveli stating Like Machiavelli My name is not Machiavelli My name is Makaveli I took it that s mine He gave me that And I don t feel no guilt 72 That s what got me here My reading It s not like I idolize this one guy Machiavelli I idolize that type of thinking where you do whatever s gonna make you achieve your goal 73 Released only eight weeks after Tupac Shakur died from gunshot wounds Death Row released The Don Killuminati The 7 Day Theory the posthumous album under the name of Makaveli after having been influenced by Machiavelli s philophosy of using deception and fear on one s enemies Interpretation of The Prince as political satire or as deceit EditSatire Edit This interpretation was famously put forth by scholar Garrett Mattingly 1958 who stated that In some ways Machiavelli s little treatise was just like all the other Mirrors of Princes in other ways it was a diabolical burlesque of all of them like a political Black Mass 74 This position was taken up previously by some of the more prominent Enlightenment philosophes Diderot speculated that it was a work designed not to mock but to secretly expose corrupt princely rule And in his The Social Contract the French philosopher Jean Jacques Rousseau said Machiavelli was a proper man and a good citizen but being attached to the court of the Medici he could not help veiling his love of liberty in the midst of his country s oppression The choice of his detestable hero Cesare Borgia clearly enough shows his hidden aim and the contradiction between the teaching of the Prince and that of the Discourses on Livy and the History of Florence shows that this profound political thinker has so far been studied only by superficial or corrupt readers The Court of Rome sternly prohibited his book I can well believe it for it is that Court it most clearly portrays Social Contract Book 3 note to Chapter 6 Whether or not the word satire is the best choice the interpretation is very rare amongst those who study Machiavelli s works For example Isaiah Berlin states that he cannot find anything other than Machiavelli s work that reads less like a satirical piece 75 Deceit Edit Mary Dietz in her essay Trapping The Prince writes that Machiavelli s agenda was not to be satirical as Rousseau had argued but instead was offering carefully crafted advice such as arming the people designed to undo the ruler if taken seriously and followed 76 By this account the aim was to reestablish the republic in Florence She focuses on three categories in which Machiavelli gives paradoxical advice He discourages liberality and favors deceit to guarantee support from the people Yet Machiavelli is keenly aware of the fact that an earlier pro republican coup had been thwarted by the people s inaction that itself stemmed from the prince s liberality He supports arming the people despite the fact that he knows the Florentines are decidedly pro democratic and would oppose the prince He encourages the prince to live in the city he conquers This opposes the Medici s habitual policy of living outside the city It also makes it easier for rebels or a civilian militia to attack and overthrow the prince According to Dietz the trap never succeeded because Lorenzo a suspicious prince apparently never read the work of the former republican 77 Other interpretations EditThe Italian Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci argued that Machiavelli s audience for this work was not the classes who already rule or have hegemony over the common people but the common people themselves trying to establish a new hegemony and making Machiavelli the first Italian Jacobin 78 Hans Baron is one of the few major commentators who argues that Machiavelli must have changed his mind dramatically in favour of free republics after having written The Prince 79 Other works by Machiavelli EditThe Girl from Andros Discourses on Livy The Art of War The MandrakeSee also EditMirrors for princes the genre Secretum Secretorum a medieval treatise also known as Book of the science of government on the good ordering of statecraft Leviathan a book on political realism by Thomas HobbesReferences Edit Strauss 1987 297 Machiavelli is the only political thinker whose name has come into common use for designating a kind of politics which exists and will continue to exist independently of his influence a politics guided exclusively by considerations of expediency which uses all means fair or foul iron or poison for achieving its ends its end being the aggrandizement of one s country or fatherland but also using the fatherland in the service of the self aggrandizement of the politician or statesman or one s party He wrote about a short study he was making by this Latin name in his letter to Francesco Vettori written 10 Dec 1513 This is letter 224 in the translated correspondence edition of James B Atkinson and David Sices Machiavelli 1996 264 Bireley 1990 p 14 Italian Vernacular Literature Vlib iue it Retrieved 2012 01 09 Gilbert 1938 emphasizes similarities between The Prince and its forerunners but still sees the same innovations as other commentators Bireley 1990 Although Machiavelli makes many references to classical sources these do not include the customary deference to Aristotle which was to some extent approved by the church in his time Strauss 1958 222 says Machiavelli indicates his fundamental disagreement with Aristotle s doctrine of the whole by substituting chance caso for nature in the only context in which he speaks of the beginning of the world Strauss gives evidence that Machiavelli was knowingly influenced by Democritus whose philosophy of nature was like that of modern science materialist Bireley 1990 241 See for example de Alvarez 1999 p viii and Strauss 1958 55 Guarini 1999 30 Machiavelli Chapter 1 The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2015 09 08 retrieved 2010 01 01 Machiavelli Chapter 2 The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2015 09 08 retrieved 2010 01 01 Gilbert 1938 19 de Alvarez 1999 p 9 Strauss Leo 2014 07 04 Thoughts on Machiavelli University of Chicago Press pp 26 27 ISBN 9780226230979 Xenophon Cyropaedia 1 1 4 Machiavelli Chapter 3 The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2015 09 11 retrieved 2010 01 01 Machiavelli Niccolo 2010 05 15 The Prince Second Edition University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226500508 Machiavelli The Prince Chapter V www constitution org Retrieved 2019 03 17 Machiavelli Niccolo 2010 05 15 The Prince Second Edition University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226500508 Gilbert Machiavelli s Prince and Its Forerunners pg 39 Machiavelli The Prince Chapter VII www constitution org Retrieved 2019 02 26 Gilbert Machiavelli s Prince and Its Forerunners pg 48 Machiavelli Chapter 12 The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2016 11 12 retrieved 2010 01 01 Machiavelli Chapter 15 The Prince Wikisource Machiavelli Niccolo 2010 05 15 The Prince Second Edition University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226500508 Niccolo Machiavelli 1469 1527 Strauss Leo 2014 07 04 Thoughts on Machiavelli University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226230979 Barlow J J Winter 1999 The Fox and the Lion Machiavelli Replies to Cicero History of Political Thought 20 4 627 645 JSTOR 26219664 Machiavelli Chapter 25 The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2009 10 08 retrieved 2010 01 01 As Francis Bacon wrote in his 13th essay quoted at Strauss 1958 176 that one of the doctors of Italy Nicholas Machiavel had the confidence to put in writing almost in plain terms That the Christian faith had given up good men in prey to those who are tyrannical and unjust Najemy 1993 Dent 1995 p xvii Machiavelli Dedication The Prince Constitution org archived from the original on 2016 01 15 retrieved 2010 01 01 Fischer 2000 p 181 says that some people might hold Machiavelli to some extent responsible for the crimes of a Lenin Hitler Mao or Pol Pot who had learned from him to excuse the murder of innocents by its supposed benefits for humanity Strauss 1958 p 12 writes that We shall not hesitate to assert as very many have asserted before us and we shall later on try to prove that Machiavelli s teaching is immoral and irreligious For example Strauss 1958 p 182 Machiavelli s book on principalities and his book on republics are both republican Fischer 2000 p 181 Concerning being a scientist Strauss 1958 54 55 says that this description of Machiavelli as a scientist is defensible and even helpful provided it is properly meant because The Prince conveys a general teaching and only uses specific historical facts and experience as a basis for such generalizing On the other hand Strauss 1958 p 11 Machiavelli s works abound with value judgments Concerning patriotism Strauss 1958 10 11 writes that Machiavelli understood it as collective selfishness It is Machiavelli s indifferent comprehensive reflection about right and wrong which is the core of Machiavelli s thought not love of the fatherland as such Much of Machiavelli s personal correspondence with other Florentines is preserved including some of the most famous letters in Italian Of particular interest for example are some of his letters to Francesco Vettori and Francesco Guicciardini two men who had managed to stay in public service under the Medici unlike Machiavelli To Guicciardini for example he wrote concerning the selection of a preacher for Florence that he would like a hypocritical one and I believe that the following would be the true way to go to Paradise learn the way to Hell in order to steer clear of it Letter 270 in Machiavelli 1996 Machiavelli Niccolo 2010 05 15 The Prince Second Edition University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226500508 Gilbert 1938 While pride is a sin in the Bible Fortune favours the bold used for example by Dent 1995 p xxii to summarize Machiavelli s stance concerning fortune was a classical saying That the desire for glory of spirited young men can and should be allowed or even encouraged because it is how the best rulers come to be is a theory expressed most famously by Plato in his Republic See Strauss 1958 289 But as Strauss points out Plato asserts that there is a higher type of life and Machiavelli does not seem to accept this See for example Guarini 1999 Strauss 1987 302 Mansfield Harvey 2017 03 15 Machiavelli on Necessity in Machiavelli on Liberty and Conflict University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226429441 Bireley 1990 15 Haitsma Mulier 1999 248 While Bireley focuses on writers in the Catholic countries Haitsma Mulier 1999 makes the same observation writing with more of a focus upon the Protestant Netherlands Gentillet Anti Machiavel A Discourse Upon the Means of Well Governing Bireley 1990 17 Bireley 1990 18 Bireley 1990 223 30 Bireley 1990 17 Jean Bodin s first comments found in his Method for the Easy Comprehension of History published in 1566 were positive Bacon wrote We are much beholden to Machiavelli and other writers of that class who openly and unfeignedly declare or describe what men do and not what they ought to do II 21 9 Of the Advancement of Learning Worden 1999 Spinoza s Political Philosophy Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2013 Retrieved 2011 03 19 Danford Getting Our Bearings Machiavelli and Hume in Rahe 2006 Schaefer 1990 Kennington 2004 chapter 11 Barnes Smith The Philosophy of Liberty Locke s Machiavellian Teaching in Rahe 2006 Carrese The Machiavellian Spirit of Montesquieu s Liberal Republic in Rahe 2006 Shklar Montesquieu and the new republicanism in Bock 1999 harvtxt error no target CITEREFBock1999 help Machiavelli and Renaissance Politics Worden 1999 Rahe 2006 Walling Was Alexander Hamilton a Machiavellian Statesman in Rahe 2006 Machiavelli 2006 Mussolini Preludio al Principe Gerarchia 3 1924 Stalin A Biography By Robert Service John Gotti The Last Mafia Icon Moving Up Crime Library on Trutv com Archived from the original on 2011 12 31 Retrieved 2012 01 09 Roy DeMeo Another Perspective Crime Library on Trutv com Archived from the original on 2012 01 21 Retrieved 2012 01 09 Like Sun Tzu or Machiavelli the secrets of war Reason Why Tupac Changed His Name to Makaveli 4 November 2022 Reason Why Tupac Changed His Name to Makaveli 4 November 2022 Machiavelli s Prince Political Science or Political Satire Matravers Derek Pike Jonathan Warburton Nigel May 2014 Reading Political Philosophy Machiavelli to Mill ISBN 9781134692378 Dietz M 1986 Trapping the Prince Machiavelli and the Politics of Deception American Political Science Review 80 777 99 Dietz M 1986 Trapping the Prince Machiavelli and the Politics of Deception American Political Science Review 80 796 See for example John McKay Cammett 1967 Antonio Gramsci and the Origins of Italian Communism ISBN 9780804701419 Baron 1961 Additional reading Editde Alvarez Leo Paul S 1999 The Machiavellian Enterprise A Commentary on The Prince Baron Hans 1961 Machiavelli the Republican Citizen and Author of The Prince The English Historical Review 76 218 archived from the original on 2010 03 25 Bireley Robert 1990 The Counter Reformation Prince Anti Machiavellianism or Catholic Statecraft in Early Modern Europe University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807819258 Dent J 1995 Introduction The Prince and other writings Everyman Fischer Markus 2000 Well ordered License On the Unity of Machiavelli s Thought Lexington Book Guarini Elena 1999 Machiavelli and the crisis of the Italian republics in Bock Gisela Skinner Quentin Viroli Maurizio eds Machiavelli and Republicanism Cambridge University Press Cox Virginia 1997 Machiavelli and the Rhetorica ad Herennium Deliberative Rhetoric in The Prince The Sixteenth Century Journal 28 4 1109 41 doi 10 2307 2543571 JSTOR 2543571 Zerba Michelle 2004 The Frauds of Humanism Cicero Machiavelli and the Rhetoric of Imposture Rhetorica 22 3 215 40 doi 10 1525 rh 2004 22 3 215 S2CID 146374652 Gilbert Allan 1938 Machiavelli sPrinceand Its Forerunners Duke University Press Kennington Richard 2004 On Modern Origins Lexington Books Machiavelli Niccolo 1996 Machiavelli and His Friends Their Personal Correspondence Northern Illinois University Press Translated and edited by James B Atkinson and David Sices Machiavelli Niccolo 2006 El Principe The Prince Comentado Por Napoleon Bonaparte Commentaries by Napoleon Buonaparte Mestas Ediciones Translated into Spanish by Marina Massa Carrara Najemy John 1993 Between Friends Discourses of Power and Desire in the Machiavelli Vettori Letters of 1513 15 Princeton University Press Haitsma Mulier Eco 1999 A controversial republican in Bock Gisela Skinner Quentin Viroli Maurizio eds Machiavelli and Republicanism Cambridge University Press Rahe Paul A 2006 Machiavelli s Liberal Republican Legacy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521851879 Excerpt reviews and Text search shows Machiavelli s Discourses had a major impact on shaping conservative thought Schaefer David 1990 The Political Philosophy of Montaigne Cornell University Press Strauss Leo 1958 Thoughts on Machiavelli University of Chicago Press Strauss Leo 1987 Niccolo Machiavelli in Strauss Leo Cropsey Joseph eds History of Political Philosophy 3rd ed University of Chicago Press Worden Blair 1999 Milton s republicanism and the tyranny of heaven in Bock Gisela Skinner Quentin Viroli Maurizio eds Machiavelli and Republicanism Cambridge University Press Bock Gisela Skinner Quentin Viroli Maurizio 1990 Machiavelli and Republicanism Cambridge University Press excerpt and text search Connell William J 2013 Dating The Prince Beginnings and Endings Review of Politics 75 4 497 514 doi 10 1017 S0034670513000557 S2CID 143996047 Dietz Mary 1986 Trapping the Prince PDF American Political Science Review 80 3 777 99 doi 10 2307 1960538 JSTOR 1960538 S2CID 144027726 Garver Eugene 1980 Machiavelli s The Prince A Neglected Rhetorical Classic Philosophy amp Rhetoric 13 2 99 120 Kahn Victoria 1986 Virtu and the Example of Agathocles in Machiavelli s Prince Representations 13 13 63 83 doi 10 2307 2928494 JSTOR 2928494 Mattingly Garrett 1958 Machiavelli s Prince Political Science or Political Satire The American Scholar 27 482 91 Parsons William B 2016 Machiavelli s Gospel University of Rochester Press ISBN 9781580464918 Tinkler John F 1988 Praise and Advice Rhetorical Approaches in More s Utopia and Machiavelli s The Prince The Sixteenth Century Journal 19 2 187 207 doi 10 2307 2540406 JSTOR 2540406External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article The Prince Wikiquote has quotations related to The Prince Digital editionsThe Prince at Standard Ebooks The Prince at Project Gutenberg The Prince public domain audiobook at LibriVox Il Principe at MetaLibri Digital Library in Italian CommentaryMachiavelli Niccolo The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Podcast of Nigel Warburton on Machiavelli s The Prince A Monologue by Prof Robert Harrison on The Prince A Lecture by Ian Johnston on The Prince as satire Interview with Quentin Skinner on The Prince Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w 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