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Ancient Rome - Social, Cultural & Political Aspects, General & Miscellaneous Political Theory, Ancient History - Historiography, General & Miscellaneous Ancient Roman History
Discourses on Livy by Julia Conaway Bondanella and  Peter Bondanella β€” book cover

Discourses on Livy

by Julia Conaway Bondanella and Peter Bondanella
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Overview

Discourses on Livy, written in 1531, is as essential to an understanding of Machiavelli as his famous treatise, The Prince. Equally controversial, it reveals his fundamental preference for a republican state.
Comparing the practice of the ancient Romans with that of his contemporaries provided Machiavelli with a consistent point of view in all his works. Machiavelli's close analysis of Livy's history of Rome led him to advance his most original and outspoken view of politicsβ€”the belief that a healthy political body was characterized by social friction and conflict rather than by rigid stability. His discussion of conspiracies in Discourses on Livy is one of the most sophisticated treatments of archetypal political upheaval ever written. In an age of increasing political absolutism, Machiavelli's theories became a dangerous ideology.
This new translation is richly annotated, providing the contemporary reader with sufficient historical, linguistic, and political information to understand and interpret the revolutionary affirmations Machiavelli made, based on the historical evidence he found in Livy.

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Book Details

Published
March 13, 2003
Publisher
Oxford ; Oxford University Press, 2003.
Pages
448
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780192804730

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