History of Florence and of the Affairs of Italy

by Niccolò Machiavelli

Paperback, 1966

Status

Available

Call number

945.51

Collection

Publication

Harper Torchbooks (1966), Paperback, 417 pages

Description

The description for this book, Florentine Histories, will be forthcoming.

User reviews

LibraryThing member timoroso
Probably not the greatest choice if you are looking for historical accuracy, but nonetheless interesting as another statement of Machiavelli's political thought. I read the "Istorie fiorentine" the same way I believe many others read it as well, to understand Machiavelli, not to know about the
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history of Florence, and taken in this way, it is a great book. The major theme of the work is the endless internal strife in Florence, but Machiavelli's analysis extends to the whole Italian peninsula and to the inability of any political power to unite it under a single government.

For someone only interested in Machiavelli's "theory", it might make sense only to read the first chapter of each of the 8 books of the work. In these chapters Machiavelli does not write about historical events but what he takes to be more universal features of politics and history. Machiavelli's invented speeches ascribed to historical people are fruitful as well.

What I personally found most interesting was the ending of Book II with its description of both the establishment of tyranny and its overthrow in a revolution.
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LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
A wonderful book by a man who really knew his subject. While everyone knows of "the Prince", "the history of Florence and the affairs of Italy" is up there with Thomas More's life of Henry VII as a sign that the Renaissance had arrived, and the world who be interpreted anew. Machiavelli looks for
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causes, makes some small predictions, and applies an even-handed mind to the study of his own city. If you are fresh from Froissart, and gearing up for Gibbon, this a useful step for the historiographer.
1525 is the publication date.
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LibraryThing member le.vert.galant
The wisdom that dominates The Prince and The Discourses on Livy merely adorns this text. It is received history, reworked from earlier chronicles, with dense narrative and only brief discussions. We find here not Machiavelli the political philosopher but Machiavelli the literary stylist.

In the
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first half, there are several episodes of high drama: the birth of the Guelphs and Ghibellines in petty family squabbles, the defeat of the tyranny of the Duke of Athens, the Revolt of the Ciompi and the radical reforms of Michele di Lando, the rise of the Medici.

When Cosimo de' Medici begins his domination of Florentine politics, Machiavelli broadens his focus to the shifting alliances of northern Italy. A numbing series of marches and battles are described, at times humorously. There is a barely disguised frustration with the ineptitude of the various Italian armies, where battles were often bloodless demonstrations of horsemanship and posing.

Concerning therule of the Medici, Machiavelli treads lightly. He wrote it at the behest of Cardinal Giulio de' Medici (later made Pope Clement VII, whose lack of resolve lead to the infamous sack of Rome in 1527), and his circumspection on the political careers of Cosimo and Lorenzo was dictated by his hope of regaining the favor the family.

In short, this at times gripping and at times tedious work is redeemed by the peerless insights of one of the greatest political thinkers of all time.
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Language

Original language

Italian

Original publication date

1674
1525

ISBN

none

Local notes

Torchbooks TB 1027 M
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