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Virtue Politics: Soulcraft and Statecraft in Renaissance Italy [Minkštas viršelis]

4.29/5 (56 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 768 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x162x41 mm, weight: 953 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674278739
  • ISBN-13: 9780674278738
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 768 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 235x162x41 mm, weight: 953 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 10-Jan-2023
  • Leidėjas: Harvard University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0674278739
  • ISBN-13: 9780674278738
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Winner of the Helen and Howard Marraro Prize
A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year


“Perhaps the greatest study ever written of Renaissance political thought.”
—Jeffrey Collins, Times Literary Supplement

“Magisterial…Hankins shows that the humanists’ obsession with character explains their surprising indifference to particular forms of government. If rulers lacked authentic virtue, they believed, it did not matter what institutions framed their power.”
—Wall Street Journal

“Puts the politics back into humanism in an extraordinarily deep and far-reaching way…For generations to come, all who write about the political thought of Italian humanism will have to refer to it; its influence will be…nothing less than transformative.”
—Noel Malcolm, American Affairs

“[ A] masterpiece…It is only Hankins’s tireless exploration of forgotten documents…and extraordinary endeavors of editing, translation, and exposition that allow us to reconstruct—almost for the first time in 550 years—[ the humanists’] three compelling arguments for why a strong moral character and habits of truth are vital for governing well. Yet they are as relevant to contemporary democracy in Britain, and in the United States, as to Machiavelli.”
—Rory Stewart, Times Literary Supplement

“The lessons for today are clear and profound.”
—Robert D. Kaplan

Convulsed by a civilizational crisis, the great thinkers of the Renaissance set out to reconceive the nature of society. Everywhere they saw problems. Corrupt and reckless tyrants sowing discord and ruling through fear; elites who prized wealth and status over the common good; religious leaders preoccupied with self-advancement while feuding armies waged endless wars. Their solution was at once simple and radical. “Men, not walls, make a city,” as Thucydides so memorably said. They would rebuild the fabric of society by transforming the moral character of its citizens. Soulcraft, they believed, was a precondition of successful statecraft.

A landmark reappraisal of Renaissance political thought, Virtue Politics challenges the traditional narrative that looks to the Renaissance as the seedbed of modern republicanism and sees Machiavelli as its exemplary thinker. James Hankins reveals that what most concerned the humanists was not reforming institutions so much as shaping citizens. If character mattered more than laws, it would have to be nurtured through a new program of education they called the studia humanitatis: the precursor to our embattled humanities.



James Hankins challenges the view that the Renaissance was the seedbed of modern republicanism, with Machiavelli as exemplary thinker. What most concerned Renaissance political theorists, Hankins contends, was not reforming laws but shaping citizens. To secure the social good, they fostered virtue through a new program of education: the humanities.

Recenzijos

MagisterialHumanist scholars in the Italian Renaissance were concerned with many of the same puzzles that obsess us todayHankins shows that the humanists obsession with character explains their surprising indifference to particular forms of government. If rulers lacked authentic virtue, they believed, it did not matter what institutions framed their power. * Wall Street Journal * Puts the politics back into humanism in an extraordinarily deep and far-reaching wayThis is certainly a landmark publicationFor generations to come, all who write about the political thought of Italian humanism will have to refer to it; its influence will belike that of virtue itself in the theories of the authors it studiesnothing less than transformative. -- Noel Malcolm * American Affairs * Perhaps the greatest study ever written of Renaissance political thought. The breadth of James Hankinss book surpasses that of the reigning incumbents, Hans Barons Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance and the first volume of Quentin Skinners classic Foundations of Modern Political Thought. It is also a book of bold argument and relevance. Hankins concentrates on the classic Italian RenaissancePetrarch to MachiavelliHowever, he escapes the conventional fixation on Florence and its chancellors. Leonardo Bruni and Machiavelli are here, but so too are the Roman jurist Mario Salamonio, the Greek translator George of Trebizond, the travelling merchant scholar Cyriac of Ancona. Nor does Hankins limit himself to the familiar canon, but mines a deep vein of histories, biographies, letters, orations and treatises, both printed and scribally published. His mastery of the archive is astonishing. -- Jeffrey Collins * Times Literary Supplement * ExtraordinaryThe central themeis that Renaissance humanism was neither a superficial aesthetic movement nor a purely political one. At its core, it was a movement of moral reformHankinss grasp of the Italian Renaissance is deeply learned and insightfulVirtue Politics demonstrates why Hankins has earned his place as one of the worlds best intellectual historians of that period. -- Khalil M. Habib * New Criterion * A magisterial work by one of the worlds leading experts on the intellectual history of the RenaissanceOne of the many strengths of Hankins volume is the great erudition with which he persuasively presents a different paradigm for understanding the Italian Renaissance. -- Carl OBrien * Bryn Mawr Classical Review * A work to celebrateA major book which not only synthesizes much of his previous work, but develops it further in ways both pathbreaking and panoramicAs Hankins shows, the central project of humanism was political, to instill virtue in rulers; there was broad agreement on this one point, but fascinating disagreement on many others. Deeply scholarly but marvelously lucid and reader-friendly, this book will be the indispensable study of this whole topic. -- Noel Malcolm * Times Literary Supplement * So timelyA book that is not only the fruit of a long and accomplished career but that also offers a rich and deep perspective on two time periods simultaneously: the Italian Renaissance and our own. Which is another way of saying that Virtue Politics gives readers a clear-eyed account of how the most creative minds of the Italian Renaissance addressed the permanent problems of human nature, virtue, tyranny, and political decay. * Washington Examiner * Magisterial Hankins has piled up evidence more than sufficient to make his case. He has, moreover, opened up a new field of studyWhatever the course of future scholarship, it will have been Virtue Politics that opened up the field and set the agenda for those who came after. -- Paul A. Rahe * Claremont Review of Books * [ A] magnum opusA history of the political thought of the Italian Renaissance: from Petrarch in the middle of the 14th century to Machiavelli in the early 16thHankins is a stylish and sensitive guide to these men and their works, acutely aware that the political questions with which they grappledwhat made a tyrant? Could a good man serve him?were, for them, far from purely theoreticalReaders of Virtue Politics will close the book not only with a richer understanding of the Renaissance, but with a sense of how very differently we might think about politics today. * Standpoint * A bold new argument about the nature and significance of Renaissance political thought and a sweeping new vision of humanism itselfAn exceptional scholarly accomplishmenta tour-de-force defense of the aspiration to improve character, a survey of Italian humanism with a uniquely wide recognition of the range of issues it encompassed, and a provocative reinterpretation of Machiavellis thought that makes modernitys dark prophet appear positively naive in comparison with Petrarch, all accompanied by lucid forays into contemporary political theory and philosophy. For students of early modern political thought and philosophy, Hankinss book will be an essential point of departure for some time. -- Mark Jurdjevic * Journal of Modern History * [ A] masterpieceIt showswith erudition, diligent scholarship, and great intelligencehow the Renaissance humanists, beginning with Petrarch, became convinced that the viciousness and lawless violence of fourteenth-century Italy was not, as previous thinkers had suggested, a problem that could be solved through drafting better laws. Instead, they argued that the eight centuries of peace, stability, and unity under the Romans were a reflection not of that states laws but of the moral qualities of its rulers. -- Rory Stewart * Times Literary Supplement * Wide-ranging and magisterialIf a greater focus on character education based on classical virtue does come about in our own time, its reasonable to think that this shift will take its bearings and example from the past. Hankinss history of the Renaissance humanists offers a useful starting place for discovering what that kind of cultural rejuvenation might look like. -- Ian Lindquist * Education Next * An accomplished study of the Renaissance humanists political thoughtWe are unlikely to see soon another book that combines such extensive and precise learning with such a mature and subtle grasp of important matters. We are fortunate to have it. -- Mark Blitz * Law & Liberty * Investigates how [ Renaissance humanists] explored a whole range of political issues. These included questions of wealth and economic injustice, the legitimacy of imperial rule, whether states should freely accept migrants and how to deal with debilitating partisanship This work should prompt us to ask profound questions about the current culture of politicsA landmark piece of scholarship that will influence the study of political thought in the Renaissance for years to come. -- Bijan Omrani * Literary Review * Virtue Politics gives an impressive and thorough tour of Renaissance humanism from Petrarch to Leonardo Bruni to Machiavelli[ It] puts on display the detailed investigation of sources that can only come with decades of thought and research. -- Amanda Madden * Renaissance and Reformation * James Hankins is one of the most important scholars at work today in Renaissance intellectual history, so a new monograph from him demands attentionVirtue Politics will reset the discussion of Renaissance political thought for the next generation. -- Craig Kallendorf * Neo-Latin News * An enormous, sprawling work, providing rich and detailed but nonetheless succinct encapsulation of much of classical and medieval as well as, of course, Renaissance political theory[ A] rich and deeply erudite discussion of the Italian Renaissance. -- Jesse Russell * VoegelinView * Virtue Politicsis both intellectual history and an intervention into contemporary education and political culture[ Hankinss] sensitive and erudite readings of an impressively broad array of humanist texts make important contributions to our knowledge and understanding of humanism during Italys long fifteenth century. -- Charles F. Briggs * Intellectual History Review * Gives Renaissance political thought the place it deserves within the history of Western political thought. -- Tommaso De Robertis * Bibliotheca Dantesca * A magnificent and major reinterpretation of Italian Renaissance political thought, and of the Italian Renaissance itselfIt is a pleasure to spend time with this textAnyone teaching the Renaissance or the history of political thought should have this volume readily at hand. -- Stephen Varvis * Fides et Historia * Virtue Politics is suffused with eloquence, and truly innovative. James Hankins argues that Renaissance humanists worked for political regimes of vastly different types. What was important to them was that leaders put the interests of the stateits stability, peace, and flourishingbefore their own more immediate enrichment, or desire for power, or other selfish imperatives. In short, they believed that you could and should judge the moral character of a state and of the people who ran it. The concept of virtue politics offers a helpful corrective to prior attempts to situate Renaissance thinkers into teleologically conceived narratives of the history of political theory. Not only is this one of the most important books written on humanist political thought, it is in many ways the first, given the unique way Hankins frames his project. It will change the way scholars conceive of the history of political thought. -- Christopher Celenza, author of Machiavelli James Hankinss masterwork takes us from Petrarchs struggles against a decadent academic clerisy to Machiavelli and Confucius. But the central narrative thread never loosens: that character and virtue are the anchors of all healthy political systems, whether democratic or not. The lessons for today are clear and profound. -- Robert D. Kaplan, author of The Revenge of Geography A tour-de-force revisionist account of Italian humanism, and a courageous effort to revive the humanist practice of moral education for political leaders in our own day. Machiavelli thought that he lived in an age of historically unprecedented corruption among political leaders. If he were to survey the behavior of so-called leaders in our contemporary worldhe might very well concede that at least a measure of Hankinss moral virtue must accompany his own realist virtue if good government were to have any chance of being achieved today. -- John P. McCormick, University of Chicago James Hankins is one of the worlds most distinguished authorities on the political thought of the Italian Renaissance, and Virtue Politics is a truly monumental work of scholarship, destined to leave its imprint for decades to come. It isto a quite remarkable degreea history of newly discovered things: new writers, new texts, new ideas, new connections. -- Peter Stacey, University of California, Los Angeles [ The] magnum opus of a consummate intellectual historian. James Hankins is the living authority on Italian fifteenth-century neo-Latin literatureHankins understands that by breathing new life into a beleaguered Renaissance movement, one can also come to the rescue of the Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian heritages, now under fire, on which the Renaissance drew, in order to understand the currently debated legacy of Western modernity. Inviting readers into the midst of an ongoing fray, Virtue Politics reminds us that we all have high stakes in this game. -- Rocco Rubini * European Legacy * MagisterialHumanist scholars in the Italian Renaissance were concerned with many of the same puzzles that obsess us todayHankins shows that the humanists obsession with character explains their surprising indifference to particular forms of government. If rulers lacked authentic virtue, they believed, it did not matter what institutions framed their power. * Wall Street Journal * Puts the politics back into humanism in an extraordinarily deep and far-reaching wayThis is certainly a landmark publicationFor generations to come, all who write about the political thought of Italian humanism will have to refer to it; its influence will belike that of virtue itself in the theories of the authors it studiesnothing less than transformative. -- Noel Malcolm * American Affairs * Perhaps the greatest study ever written of Renaissance political thought. The breadth of James Hankinss book surpasses that of the reigning incumbents, Hans Barons Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance and the first volume of Quentin Skinners classic Foundations of Modern Political Thought. It is also a book of bold argument and relevance. Hankins concentrates on the classic Italian RenaissancePetrarch to MachiavelliHowever, he escapes the conventional fixation on Florence and its chancellors. Leonardo Bruni and Machiavelli are here, but so too are the Roman jurist Mario Salamonio, the Greek translator George of Trebizond, the travelling merchant scholar Cyriac of Ancona. Nor does Hankins limit himself to the familiar canon, but mines a deep vein of histories, biographies, letters, orations and treatises, both printed and scribally published. His mastery of the archive is astonishing. -- Jeffrey Collins * Times Literary Supplement * ExtraordinaryThe central themeis that Renaissance humanism was neither a superficial aesthetic movement nor a purely political one. At its core, it was a movement of moral reformHankinss grasp of the Italian Renaissance is deeply learned and insightfulVirtue Politics demonstrates why Hankins has earned his place as one of the worlds best intellectual historians of that period. -- Khalil M. Habib * New Criterion * A magisterial work by one of the worlds leading experts on the intellectual history of the RenaissanceOne of the many strengths of Hankins volume is the great erudition with which he persuasively presents a different paradigm for understanding the Italian Renaissance. -- Carl OBrien * Bryn Mawr Classical Review * A work to celebrateA major book which not only synthesizes much of his previous work, but develops it further in ways both pathbreaking and panoramicAs Hankins shows, the central project of humanism was political, to instill virtue in rulers; there was broad agreement on this one point, but fascinating disagreement on many others. Deeply scholarly but marvelously lucid and reader-friendly, this book will be the indispensable study of this whole topic. -- Noel Malcolm * Times Literary Supplement * So timelyA book that is not only the fruit of a long and accomplished career but that also offers a rich and deep perspective on two time periods simultaneously: the Italian Renaissance and our own. Which is another way of saying that Virtue Politics gives readers a clear-eyed account of how the most creative minds of the Italian Renaissance addressed the permanent problems of human nature, virtue, tyranny, and political decay. * Washington Examiner * Magisterial Hankins has piled up evidence more than sufficient to make his case. He has, moreover, opened up a new field of studyWhatever the course of future scholarship, it will have been Virtue Politics that opened up the field and set the agenda for those who came after. -- Paul A. Rahe * Claremont Review of Books * [ A] magnum opusA history of the political thought of the Italian Renaissance: from Petrarch in the middle of the 14th century to Machiavelli in the early 16thHankins is a stylish and sensitive guide to these men and their works, acutely aware that the political questions with which they grappledwhat made a tyrant? Could a good man serve him?were, for them, far from purely theoreticalReaders of Virtue Politics will close the book not only with a richer understanding of the Renaissance, but with a sense of how very differently we might think about politics today. * Standpoint * A bold new argument about the nature and significance of Renaissance political thought and a sweeping new vision of humanism itselfAn exceptional scholarly accomplishmenta tour-de-force defense of the aspiration to improve character, a survey of Italian humanism with a uniquely wide recognition of the range of issues it encompassed, and a provocative reinterpretation of Machiavellis thought that makes modernitys dark prophet appear positively naive in comparison with Petrarch, all accompanied by lucid forays into contemporary political theory and philosophy. For students of early modern political thought and philosophy, Hankinss book will be an essential point of departure for some time. -- Mark Jurdjevic * Journal of Modern History * [ A] masterpieceIt showswith erudition, diligent scholarship, and great intelligencehow the Renaissance humanists, beginning with Petrarch, became convinced that the viciousness and lawless violence of fourteenth-century Italy was not, as previous thinkers had suggested, a problem that could be solved through drafting better laws. Instead, they argued that the eight centuries of peace, stability, and unity under the Romans were a reflection not of that states laws but of the moral qualities of its rulers. -- Rory Stewart * Times Literary Supplement * Wide-ranging and magisterialIf a greater focus on character education based on classical virtue does come about in our own time, its reasonable to think that this shift will take its bearings and example from the past. Hankinss history of the Renaissance humanists offers a useful starting place for discovering what that kind of cultural rejuvenation might look like. -- Ian Lindquist * Education Next * An accomplished study of the Renaissance humanists political thoughtWe are unlikely to see soon another book that combines such extensive and precise learning with such a mature and subtle grasp of important matters. We are fortunate to have it. -- Mark Blitz * Law & Liberty * Investigates how [ Renaissance humanists] explored a whole range of political issues. These included questions of wealth and economic injustice, the legitimacy of imperial rule, whether states should freely accept migrants and how to deal with debilitating partisanship This work should prompt us to ask profound questions about the current culture of politicsA landmark piece of scholarship that will influence the study of political thought in the Renaissance for years to come. -- Bijan Omrani * Literary Review * Virtue Politics gives an impressive and thorough tour of Renaissance humanism from Petrarch to Leonardo Bruni to Machiavelli[ It] puts on display the detailed investigation of sources that can only come with decades of thought and research. -- Amanda Madden * Renaissance and Reformation * James Hankins is one of the most important scholars at work today in Renaissance intellectual history, so a new monograph from him demands attentionVirtue Politics will reset the discussion of Renaissance political thought for the next generation. -- Craig Kallendorf * Neo-Latin News * An enormous, sprawling work, providing rich and detailed but nonetheless succinct encapsulation of much of classical and medieval as well as, of course, Renaissance political theory[ A] rich and deeply erudite discussion of the Italian Renaissance. -- Jesse Russell * VoegelinView * Virtue Politicsis both intellectual history and an intervention into contemporary education and political culture[ Hankinss] sensitive and erudite readings of an impressively broad array of humanist texts make important contributions to our knowledge and understanding of humanism during Italys long fifteenth century. -- Charles F. Briggs * Intellectual History Review * Gives Renaissance political thought the place it deserves within the history of Western political thought. -- Tommaso De Robertis * Bibliotheca Dantesca * A magnificent and major reinterpretation of Italian Renaissance political thought, and of the Italian Renaissance itselfIt is a pleasure to spend time with this textAnyone teaching the Renaissance or the history of political thought should have this volume readily at hand. -- Stephen Varvis * Fides et Historia * Virtue Politics is suffused with eloquence, and truly innovative. James Hankins argues that Renaissance humanists worked for political regimes of vastly different types. What was important to them was that leaders put the interests of the stateits stability, peace, and flourishingbefore their own more immediate enrichment, or desire for power, or other selfish imperatives. In short, they believed that you could and should judge the moral character of a state and of the people who ran it. The concept of virtue politics offers a helpful corrective to prior attempts to situate Renaissance thinkers into teleologically conceived narratives of the history of political theory. Not only is this one of the most important books written on humanist political thought, it is in many ways the first, given the unique way Hankins frames his project. It will change the way scholars conceive of the history of political thought. -- Christopher Celenza, author of Machiavelli James Hankinss masterwork takes us from Petrarchs struggles against a decadent academic clerisy to Machiavelli and Confucius. But the central narrative thread never loosens: that character and virtue are the anchors of all healthy political systems, whether democratic or not. The lessons for today are clear and profound. -- Robert D. Kaplan, author of The Revenge of Geography A tour-de-force revisionist account of Italian humanism, and a courageous effort to revive the humanist practice of moral education for political leaders in our own day. Machiavelli thought that he lived in an age of historically unprecedented corruption among political leaders. If he were to survey the behavior of so-called leaders in our contemporary worldhe might very well concede that at least a measure of Hankinss moral virtue must accompany his own realist virtue if good government were to have any chance of being achieved today. -- John P. McCormick, University of Chicago James Hankins is one of the worlds most distinguished authorities on the political thought of the Italian Renaissance, and Virtue Politics is a truly monumental work of scholarship, destined to leave its imprint for decades to come. It isto a quite remarkable degreea history of newly discovered things: new writers, new texts, new ideas, new connections. -- Peter Stacey, University of California, Los Angeles [ The] magnum opus of a consummate intellectual historian. James Hankins is the living authority on Italian fifteenth-century neo-Latin literatureHankins understands that by breathing new life into a beleaguered Renaissance movement, one can also come to the rescue of the Greco-Roman and Judeo-Christian heritages, now under fire, on which the Renaissance drew, in order to understand the currently debated legacy of Western modernity. Inviting readers into the midst of an ongoing fray, Virtue Politics reminds us that we all have high stakes in this game. -- Rocco Rubini * European Legacy *

Daugiau informacijos

Winner of Helen and Howard R. Marraro Prize 2020 (United States) and Parnassus Prize 2024 (United States).
Preface xi
1 A Civilization in Crisis
1(30)
A New "Paideuma" and the Birth of the Humanities---The Causes of the Crisis---The Reform of Christian Culture---The Humanist Movement Takes Shape
2 Virtue Politics
31(32)
Obedience and Legitimacy---Virtue Politics---Classical Sources of Virtue Politics---How Not to Reform a Republic---Eloquence and the "Virtuous Environment"---A New Way of Thinking about Politics
3 What Was a Republic in the Renaissance?
63(40)
The Renaissance Concept of the State---What Is the Meaning of Respublica in the Italian Renaissance?---Respublica Romano.---Respublica in Medieval Scholasticism---Leonardo Bruni and Respublica in the Fifteenth Century---Respublica: An Idealization of Ancient Government---Is Civic Humanism Found Only in Non-monarchical Republics?
4 Taming the Tyrant
103(50)
Tyranny in Greek Philosophy---Cicero's Understanding of Caesar's Tyranny as Violation of Ius---Bartolus of Sassoferrato and Baldo degli Ubaldi---Petrarch on Living with Tyrants---Was Caesar a Tyrant? Petrarch, Salutati, Guarino, Poggio---Poggio on Tyranny and the "Problem of Counsel"---Pier Candido Decembrio on the Virtues of a Tyrant---The Recovery of Ancient Greek Sources on Tyranny
5 The Triumph of Virtue: Petrarch's Political Thought
153(21)
Petrarch's Politics of Virtue---Cola di Rienzo: Populism and Its Limits---Petrarch's New Realism
6 Should a Good Man Participate in a Corrupt Government? Petrarch on the Solitary Life
174(18)
The De Vita Solitaria: An Ideal of Private Life for Literary Men---The Defense of Private Life---Seneca versus Augustine: Political Obligation and Political Autonomy
7 Boccaccio on the Perils of Wealth and Status
192(26)
Boccaccio's Political Experience---The Need to Reform the Materia Prima of Politics: Human Nature---Virtue, Education, and Tyranny---Boccaccio and the Humanist Debate about Private Wealth and Economic Injustice---Boccaccio and Virtue Politics
8 Leonardo Bruni and the Virtuous Hegemon
218(20)
Why Florence Deserves to Be the Heir of Rome: The Panegyric of the City of Florence---Political Liberty as a Source of Virtue---The Etruscan Model: Leadership in a Federal Republic---Dante and Bruni on the Legitimation of Empire
9 War and Military Service in the Virtuous Republic
238(33)
Late Medieval Civic Knighthood and the Context of Leonardo Bruni's DeMilitia---Excursus: The Humanists and Partisan Politics---Bruni's De Militia: A New Interpretation---Excursus on the "Virtuous Environment": Donatello and the Representation of Classical Military Virtue---Do Humanist Teachings on Warfare Anticipate Machiavelli?---Virtue in Military Life---Roberto Valturio on the Education of Soldiers
10 A Mirror for Statesmen: Leonardo Bruni's History of the Florentine People
271(18)
History as Political Theory---Virtue in the Service of the Republic's Glory---The Primacy of the Popolo and the Suppression of Factions---Moderation in Politics as the Key to Social Concord
11 Biondo Flavio: What Made the Romans Great
289(16)
The Roma Triumphans and the Revival of Roman Civilization---What Was the Respublica Romana for Biondo?---Biondo's Virtue Politics, Republicanism, and the Greatness of Rome---A Cosmopolitan Papalist
12 Cyriac of Ancona on Democracy and Empire
305(13)
A Short History of the Term Democratia---Cyriac of Ancona's Attempted Rehabilitation of the Term Democratia---Cyriac the Caesarian
13 Leon Battista Alberti on Corrupt Princes and Virtuous Oligarchs
318(17)
Why Virtue Is Incompatible with Court Life---Who Should Constitute the Political Elite?---The De Iciarchia and the Regime of Virtuous "House-Princes"
14 George of Trebizond on Cosmopolitanism and Liberty
335(16)
George's Attack on Nativism and Defense of Cosmopolitanism---A Renaissance Libertarian?
15 Francesco Filelfo and the Spartan Republic
351(13)
Filelfo and the Recovery of the Spartan Tradition---Filelfo and Humanist Adaptations of the Myth of Sparta
16 Greek Constitutional Theory in the Quattrocento
364(22)
The "Second Wave" of Greek Constitutional Theory---Legitimation and the Republican Regime---Francesco Patrizi on Republican Constitutions---Delegitimation: Bruni and the Chivalric Ideal---Substitution: Platonizing Venice's Constitution---Mario Salamonio Compares Florence to Athens
17 Francesco Patrizi and Humanist Absolutism
386(37)
The Recovery of Ancient Greek Monarchical Theory---Patrizi and His Project in the De Regno---Virtuous Royal Legitimacy and Humanist Absolutism---The Argument for Monarchy---Can Monarchical Power Be Virtuous?---How the King May Become Virtuous
18 Machiavelli: Reviving the Military Republic
423(26)
The Calamita d'Italia---Machiavelli and Humanist Literary Culture---Machiavelli's Political Education and The Art of War---Why Princes and Republics Should Follow the Ancient Way of Warfare
19 Machiavelli: From Virtue to Virtu
449(27)
Machiavelli's Prince and Renaissance Conceptions of Tyranny---The Machiavellian Revolution in Political Thought---Machiavelli's Virtu
20 Two Cures for Hyperpartisanship: Bruni versus Machiavelli
476(19)
Two Competing Narratives of Florentine History---The Ordinances of Justice---Walter of Brienne and the Instability of Tyranny---The Restoration of Popular Institutions in 1343---Two Cures for Hyperpartisanship
21 Conclusion: Ex Oriente Lux
495(22)
Appendixes
517(2)
A Petrarch on Political Obligations: De vita solitaria 2.9.19--22 (Chapter 6)
517(4)
B Speech of Rinaldo Gianfigliazzi before the Florentine Priors, 1399, from Leonardo Bruni's History of the Florentine People, 11.75--78 (Chapter 10)
521(4)
C Renaissance Editions, Translations, and Compendia of Francesco Patrizi of Siena's Political Works (Chapter 16)
525(4)
Notes: Note on Sources and Translations---Abbreviations 529(122)
Bibliography: Texts and Translations---Secondary Literature 651(48)
Acknowledgments 699(6)
Index of Manuscripts and Archival Documents 705(2)
General Index 707
James Hankins is Professor of History at Harvard University and founder and General Editor of the I Tatti Renaissance Library. He is the author of Virtue Politics: Soulcraft and Statecraft in Renaissance Italy, winner of the Marraro Prize and a Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year; Political Meritocracy in Renaissance Italy: The Virtuous Republic of Francesco Patrizi of Siena; and Plato in the Italian Renaissance; and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Philosophy. Widely regarded as one of the worlds leading authorities on Renaissance philosophy and political thought, he is a Corresponding Member of the British Academy.