The Prince | Chapter III - Page 2

The Prince who establishes himself in a Province whose laws and language differ from those of his own people, ought also to make himself the head and protector of his feebler neighbours, and endeavour to weaken the stronger, and must see that by no accident shall any other stranger as powerful as himself find an entrance there. For it will always happen that some such person will be called in by those of the Province who are discontented either through ambition or fear; as we see of old the Romans brought into Greece by the Aetolians, and in every other country that they entered, invited there by its inhabitants. And the usual course of things is that so soon as a formidable stranger enters a Province, all the weaker powers side with him, moved thereto by the ill-will they bear towards him who has hitherto kept them in subjection. So that in respect of these lesser powers, no trouble is needed to gain them over, for at once, together, and of their own accord, they throw in their lot with the government of the stranger. The new Prince, therefore, has only to see that they do not increase too much in strength, and with his own forces, aided by their good will, can easily subdue any who are powerful, so as to remain supreme in the Province. He who does not manage this matter well, will soon lose whatever he has gained, and while he retains it will find in it endless troubles and annoyances.

In dealing with the countries of which they took possession the Romans diligently followed the methods I have described. They planted colonies, conciliated weaker powers without adding to their strength, humbled the great, and never suffered a formidable stranger to acquire influence. A single example will suffice to show this. In Greece the Romans took the Achaians and Aetolians into their pay; the Macedonian monarchy was humbled; Antiochus was driven out. But the services of the Achaians and Aetolians never obtained for them any addition to their power; no persuasions on the part of Philip could induce the Romans to be his friends on the condition of sparing him humiliation; nor could all the power of Antiochus bring them to consent to his exercising any authority within that Province. And in thus acting the Romans did as all wise rulers should, who have to consider not only present difficulties but also future, against which they must use all diligence to provide; for these, if they be foreseen while yet remote, admit of easy remedy, but if their approach be awaited, are already past cure, the disorder having become hopeless; realizing what the physicians tell us of hectic fever, that in its beginning it is easy to cure, but hard to recognize; whereas, after a time, not having been detected and treated at the first, it becomes easy to recognize but impossible to cure.

And so it is with State affairs. For the distempers of a State being discovered while yet inchoate, which can only be done by a sagacious ruler, may easily be dealt with; but when, from not being observed, they are suffered to grow until they are obvious to every one, there is no longer any remedy. The Romans, therefore, foreseeing evils while they were yet far off, always provided against them, and never suffered them to take their course for the sake of avoiding war; since they knew that war is not so to be avoided, but is only postponed to the advantage of the other side. They chose, therefore, to make war with Philip and Antiochus in Greece, that they might not have to make it with them in Italy, although for a while they might have escaped both. This they did not desire, nor did the maxim leave it to Time, which the wise men of our own day have always on their lips, ever recommend itself to them. What they looked to enjoy were the fruits of their own valour and foresight. For Time, driving all things before it, may bring with it evil as well as good.

But let us now go back to France and examine whether she has followed any of those methods of which I have made mention. I shall speak of Louis and not of Charles, because from the former having held longer possession of Italy, his manner of acting is more plainly seen. You will find, then, that he has done the direct opposite of what he should have done in order to retain a foreign State.

King Louis was brought into Italy by the ambition of the Venetians, who hoped by his coming to gain for themselves a half of the State of Lombardy. I will not blame this coming, nor the part taken by the King, because, desiring to gain a footing in Italy, where he had no friends, but on the contrary, owing to the conduct of Charles, every door was shut against him, he was driven to accept such friendships as he could get. And his designs might easily have succeeded had he not made mistakes in other particulars of conduct.

By the recovery of Lombardy, Louis at once regained the credit which Charles had lost. Genoa made submission; the Florentines came to terms; the Marquis of Mantua, the Duke of Ferrara, the Bentivogli, the Countess of Forli, the Lords of Faenza, Pesaro, Rimini, Camerino, and Piombino, the citizens of Lucca, Pisa, and Siena, all came forward offering their friendship. The Venetians, who to obtain possession of a couple of towns in Lombardy had made the French King master of two-thirds of Italy, had now cause to repent the rash game they had played.

Let any one, therefore, consider how easily King Louis might have maintained his authority in Italy had he observed the rules which I have noted above, and secured and protected all those friends of his, who being weak, and fearful, some of the Church, some of the Venetians, were of necessity obliged to attach themselves to him, and with whose assistance, for they were many, he might readily have made himself safe against any other powerful State. But no sooner was he in Milan than he took a contrary course, in helping Pope Alexander to occupy Romagna; not perceiving that in seconding this enterprise he weakened himself by alienating friends and those who had thrown themselves into his arms, while he strengthened the Church by adding great temporal power to the spiritual power which of itself confers so mighty an authority. Making this first mistake, he was forced to follow it up, until at last, in order to curb the ambition of Pope Alexander, and prevent him becoming master of Tuscany, he was obliged to come himself into Italy.

And as though it were not enough for him to have aggrandized the Church and stripped himself of friends, he must needs in his desire to possess the Kingdom of Naples, divide it with the King of Spain; thus bringing into Italy, where before he had been supreme, a rival to whom the ambitious and discontented in that Province might have recourse. And whereas he might have left in Naples a King willing to hold as his tributary, he displaced him to make way for another strong enough to effect his expulsion. The wish to acquire is no doubt a natural and common sentiment, and when men attempt things within their power, they will always be praised rather than blamed. But when they persist in attempts that are beyond their power, mishaps and blame ensue. If France, therefore, with her own forces could have attacked Naples, she should have done so. If she could not, she ought not to have divided it. And if her partition of Lombardy with the Venetians may be excused as the means whereby a footing was gained in Italy, this other partition is to be condemned as not justified by the like necessity.

  • Aetolians – Aetolia was an area of ancient Greece that was colonized by Aetolus, King of elis. The Aetolians were well known for being robbers and thieves. The Romans and Aetolians joined forces during the First Macedonian War (215 – 205 B.C.).
  • formidable – strong
  • hitherto – up till now; so far
  • subjection – ruled by others
  • conciliated – satisfied
  • Achaians – members of a Greek tribe during the Bronze (or Mycenaean) Era
  • Antiochus – the ruling dynasty in Syria (280 – 64 B.C.). Antiochus III was ruler of this area from 223 – 187 B.C. He conquered much of Asia Minor, but suffered a devastating loss in 191 B.C., when the Romans defeated him.
  • Philip – Philip V (238 – 179 B.C.), King of Macedon (221 – 179 B.C.) who assisted the Achaians in their war against the Spartans (220 – 217 B.C.). Philip formed a treaty with Hannibal in 215 B.C., which led to the first Macedonian War with Rome. After the Second Macedonian War, Philip began to unite his Empire with Rome.
  • diligence – a steady effort
  • inchoate – immature
  • sagacious – having sound judgment, wise
  • maxim – a fundamental truth
  • valour – courage
  • Louis – Louis XII
  • Charles – Charles VIII (1470 – 1498), King of France (1483 – 1498); King Louis XII's cousin, who invaded Italy in 1494.
  • “…by the ambitions…State of Lombardy.” – In exchange for supporting King Louis XII, the Venetians were guaranteed rights to two northern Italian cities.
  • Genoa – a country on the coast of northern Italy
  • Florentines – inhabitants of Florence, Italy
  • Marquis of Mantua – Francesco II of Gonzaga (1466 – 1519), Marquis of Mantua from 1484 – 1519
  • Duke of Ferrara – could refer to two dukes: ercole d'Este, who ruled from 1471 – 1505, or Alfonso I who reigned from 1505 – 1511
  • BentivogliBentivoglio – Giovanni Il Bentivogli ruled Bologna from 1443 – 1508.
  • Countess of Forli – Caterina Sforza (1463 – 1509) was Countess of Flori, part of northern Italy; she surrendered to France after a devastating battle in 1500.
  • Faenza, Pesaro,…Siena – areas located in central to northern Italy
  • obliged – indebted
  • “But sooner was he…occupy Romagna…” – With this statement, Machiavelli is making a reference to the relationship between King Louis XII and Pope Alexander VI. Pope Alexander VI (1431 – 1503) wanted Romagna (an area in northern Italy) to belong to the Church, which would also give him with complete authority over it. Based on the changes that took place after 1498, it was rumored that the Pope and the King had some kind of secret arrangement: the Pope's son, Cesare Borgia, became Duke of the Valentinois (an area in southeast France); troops were given to Pope Alexander VI to invade Romagna; Louis XII was approved for a divorce and married Charles VIII's widow, Anne, which provided a link between France and Brittany; Louis' adviser George d'Amboise was promoted to Archbishop of Rouen.
  • temporal – natural; as opposed to spiritual
  • “Making this first mistake…to come himself to Italy.” – This statement refers to how King Louis XII was forced to return to Italy because Cesare Borgia, who had come to govern most of Romagna, was threatening to seize Tuscany. King Louis XII and the Florentines were allies, so the king returned to “…prevent [Cesare Borgia from] becoming master of Tuscany…”
  • Tuscany – an area in northwest Italy ruled primarily by Florence
  • aggrandized – made more powerful
  • “…divide it with the King of Spain…” – on November 11, 1500, Kings Louis XII and Ferdinand II divided the Kingdom of Naples through the Treaty of Granada.
  • tributary – a contributory
  • “And whereas he might…effect his expulsion.” – The Battle of Garigliano (1503) awarded Spain with the entire Kingdom of Naples, despite the treaty signed years earlier.
  • ensue – to follow, pursue