The Prince

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A guide to reading The Prince Historical context Although Machiavelli wrote a number of treatises in his lifetime, only three of them – The Prince, The Discourses on the First Decade of Livy (also known as the Discourses), and The Art of War – continue to remain influential in the study of politics today. Of those three treatises, The Art of War was the only text that was published in his lifetime; the other two texts were published posthumously. In 1498, four years after the Medici family lost power in Florence and the city‐state became a republic, Machiavelli was appointed the Second Chancellor of the republic. During his fourteen years career as the city‐state’s Second Chancellor, Machiavelli held a number of diplomatic and military responsibilities. As a diplomat, he met Cesare Borgia, the French King Louis XII, and the Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian. In 1506, he set up a citizen militia to defend Florence. However, in 1512 Machiavelli’s political career came to its end when the city‐state surrendered to Spanish troops and the Medici family returned to power. Machiavelli was first stripped off his post and then his liberty after being accused of conspiracy against the Medici family. After being tortured for months in prison, Machiavelli was finally released on the occasion of Giovanni de’ Medici’s election as Pope Leo X. Removed from public life, Machiavelli retired to his farm and became an internal exile. It was during his internal exile that he wrote The Prince, hoping to prove his capabilities as an advisor to the Medici family. Although historian dispute as to whether Machiavelli actually sent the book to the Medici family, he never returned to public life. When The Prince was first published posthumously in 1532, it immediately stirred controversy. The tactics that Machiavelli outlined in his work were seen as evil and the word ‘Machiavellian’ quickly became a synonym for evil and deceptive methods of rule. The Vatican went to extreme of banning the book. Even today, many consider the book to be a guide for tyrants. Nevertheless, writing in 1762, Jean Jacques Rousseau claimed that Machiavelli’s work was not intended for tyrants but republicans. Rousseau claimed that under the guise of giving advice to tyrants, Machiavelli revealed the brutal face of tyranny, and thereby taught a valuable lesson to people on the dangers of absolutism. This claim of Rousseau is significant since Machiavelli’s other posthumous publication, the Discourses, reveals his commitment to republicanism. Key questions In the following pages, we produce the text of The Prince, translated by W.K.Marriott in 1908. The text is annotated with mini questions to guide the reader to engage critically with Machiavelli’s thoughts. At the end of the reading, the reader should be able to answer the following questions:  What is the significance of Machiavelli’s work in understanding politics today?  What did Machiavelli seek to achieve in writing The Prince?  Is it correct to portray Machiavelli’s work as being suitable only for tyrants?  Despite the ruthless tactics that Machiavelli teaches in his treatise, does he reveal any love for liberty and republicanism – as Rousseau had claimed? 1


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