This is a colorful, comprehensive, and
authoritative introduction to the life and work of the
author of The Prince--Florentine statesman,
writer, and political philosopher Niccolò Machiavelli
(1[zasłonięte]469-15). Corrado Vivanti, who was one of the world's
leading Machiavelli scholars, provides an unparalleled
intellectual biography that demonstrates the close
connections between Machiavelli's thought and his
changing fortunes during the tumultuous Florentine
republic and his subsequent exile. Vivanti's concise
account covers not only Machiavelli's most famous
works--The Prince, The Discourses, The
Florentine Histories, and The Art of War--but
also his letters, poetry, and comic dramas. While
setting Machiavelli's life against a dramatic backdrop
of war, crisis, and diplomatic intrigue, the book also
paints a vivid human portrait of the man. Vivanti's
narrative breaks Machiavelli's life into three parts:
his career in a variety of government and diplomatic
posts in the Florentine republic between 1494 and 1512,
when the Medici returned from exile, seized power, and
removed Machiavelli from office; the pivotal first part
of his subsequent exile, when he formulated his most
influential ideas and wrote The Prince; and the
final decade of his life, when, having returned to
Florence, he wrote The Art of War, The
Florentine Histories, the satirical play The
Mandrake, and other works. Along the way, the
biography presents unmatched accounts of many intensely
debated topics, including the precise nature of
Machiavelli's cultural and intellectual background, his
republicanism, his political and personal relationship
to the Medici, and his ideas about religion.
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