Preface |
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xi | |
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1 A Civilization in Crisis |
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1 | (30) |
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A New "Paideuma" and the Birth of the Humanities |
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The Reform of Christian Culture |
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The Humanist Movement Takes Shape |
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31 | (32) |
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Classical Sources of Virtue Politics |
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How Not to Reform a Republic |
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Eloquence and the "Virtuous Environment" |
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A New Way of Thinking about Politics |
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3 What Was a Republic in the Renaissance? |
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63 | (40) |
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The Renaissance Concept of the State |
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What Is the Meaning of Respublica in the Italian Renaissance? |
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Respublica in Medieval Scholasticism |
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Leonardo Bruni and Respublica in the Fifteenth Century |
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Respublica: An Idealization of Ancient Government |
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Is Civic Humanism Found Only in Non-monarchical Republics? |
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103 | (50) |
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Tyranny in Greek Philosophy |
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Cicero's Understanding of Caesar's Tyranny as Violation of Ius |
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Bartolus of Sassoferrato and Baldo degli Ubaldi |
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Petrarch on Living with Tyrants |
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Was Caesar a Tyrant? Petrarch, Salutati, Guarino, Poggio |
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Poggio on Tyranny and the "Problem of Counsel" |
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Pier Candido Decembrio on the Virtues of a Tyrant |
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The Recovery of Ancient Greek Sources on Tyranny |
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5 The Triumph of Virtue: Petrarch's Political Thought |
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153 | (21) |
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Petrarch's Politics of Virtue |
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Cola di Rienzo: Populism and Its Limits |
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6 Should a Good Man Participate in a Corrupt Government? Petrarch on the Solitary Life |
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174 | (17) |
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The De Vita Solitaria: An Ideal of Private Life for Literary Men |
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The Defense of Private Life |
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Seneca versus Augustine: Political Obligation and Political Autonomy |
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7 Boccaccio on the Perils of Wealth and Status |
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191 | (27) |
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Boccaccio's Political Experience |
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The Need to Reform the Materia Prima of Politics: Human Nature |
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Virtue, Education, and Tyranny |
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Boccaccio and the Humanist Debate about Private Wealth and Economic Injustice |
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Boccaccio and Virtue Politics |
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8 Leonardo Bruni and the Virtuous Hegemon |
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218 | (20) |
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Why Florence Deserves to Be the Heir of Rome: The Panegyric of the City of Florence |
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Political Liberty as a Source of Virtue |
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The Etruscan Model: Leadership in a Federal Republic |
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Dante and Bruni on the Legitimation of Empire |
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9 War and Military Service in the Virtuous Republic |
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238 | (33) |
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Late Medieval Civic Knighthood and the Context of Leonardo Bruni's DeMilitia |
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Excursus: The Humanists and Partisan Politics |
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Bruni's De Militia: A New Interpretation |
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Excursus on the "Virtuous Environment": Donatello and the Representation of Classical Military Virtue |
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Do Humanist Teachings on Warfare Anticipate Machiavelli? |
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Roberto Valturio on the Education of Soldiers |
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10 A Mirror for Statesmen: Leonardo Bruni's History of the Florentine People |
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271 | (18) |
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History as Political Theory |
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Virtue in the Service of the Republic's Glory |
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The Primacy of the Popolo and the Suppression of Factions |
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Moderation in Politics as the Key to Social Concord |
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11 Biondo Flavio: What Made the Romans Great |
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289 | (16) |
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The Roma Triumphans and the Revival of Roman Civilization |
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What Was the Respublica Romana for Biondo? |
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Biondo's Virtue Politics, Republicanism, and the Greatness of Rome |
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12 Cyriac of Ancona on Democracy and Empire |
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305 | (13) |
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A Short History of the Term Democratia |
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Cyriac of Ancona's Attempted Rehabilitation of the Term Democratia |
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13 Leon Battista Alberti on Corrupt Princes and Virtuous Oligarchs |
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318 | (17) |
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Why Virtue Is Incompatible with Court Life |
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Who Should Constitute the Political Elite? |
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The De Iciarchia and the Regime of Virtuous "House-Princes" |
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14 George of Trebizond on Cosmopolitanism and Liberty |
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335 | (16) |
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George's Attack on Nativism and Defense of Cosmopolitanism |
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A Renaissance Libertarian? |
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15 Francesco Filelfo and the Spartan Republic |
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351 | (13) |
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Filelfo and the Recovery of the Spartan Tradition |
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Filelfo and Humanist Adaptations of the Myth of Sparta |
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16 Greek Constitutional Theory in the Quattrocento |
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364 | (22) |
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The "Second Wave" of Greek Constitutional Theory |
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Legitimation and the Republican Regime |
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Francesco Patrizi on Republican Constitutions |
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Delegitimation: Bruni and the Chivalric Ideal |
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Substitution: Platonizing Venice's Constitution |
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Mario Salamonio Compares Florence to Athens |
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17 Francesco Patrizi and Humanist Absolutism |
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386 | (37) |
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The Recovery of Ancient Greek Monarchical Theory |
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Patrizi and His Project in the De Regno |
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Virtuous Royal Legitimacy and Humanist Absolutism |
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The Argument for Monarchy |
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Can Monarchical Power Be Virtuous? |
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How the King May Become Virtuous |
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18 Machiavelli: Reviving the Military Republic |
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423 | (26) |
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Machiavelli and Humanist Literary Culture |
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Machiavelli's Political Education and The Art of War |
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Why Princes and Republics Should Follow the Ancient Way of Warfare |
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19 Machiavelli: From Virtue to Virtu |
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449 | (27) |
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Machiavelli's Prince and Renaissance Conceptions of Tyranny |
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The Machiavellian Revolution in Political Thought |
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10 Two Cures for Hyperpartisanship: Bruni versus Machiavelli |
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476 | (19) |
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Two Competing Narratives of Florentine History |
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The Ordinances of Justice |
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Walter of Brienne and the Instability of Tyranny |
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The Restoration of Popular Institutions in 1343 |
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Two Cures for Hyperpartisanship |
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21 Conclusion: Ex OrienteLux |
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495 | (22) |
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517 | (134) |
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A Petrarch on Political Obligations: De vita solitaria 2.9.19--22 (Chapter 6) |
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517 | (4) |
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B Speech of Rinaldo Gianfigliazzi before the Florentine Priors, 1399, from Leonardo Bruni's History of the Florentine People, 11.75--78 (Chapter 10) |
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521 | (4) |
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C Renaissance Editions, Translations, and Compendia of Francesco Patrizi of Siena's Political Works (Chapter 16) |
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525 | (4) |
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529 | (122) |
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Note on Sources and Translations |
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Abbreviations Bibliography |
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651 | (48) |
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Secondary Literature Acknowledgments |
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699 | (6) |
Index of Manuscripts and Archival Documents |
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705 | (2) |
General Index |
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707 | |