ISBN-13: 9783565214594 / Angielski / Miękka / 180 str.
Niccolò Machiavelli wrote The Prince in 1513 not as a cynical manual for tyrants, but as a desperate attempt to regain his career after torture, imprisonment, and exile from the Florentine Republic he had served for 14 years. This biography traces how his experiences as a diplomat negotiating with Cesare Borgia, witnessing military disasters, and watching republics fail shaped his radical understanding of power between 1469 and 1527.Drawing on Machiavelli's diplomatic dispatches, personal letters, and the political chaos of Renaissance Italy, the narrative follows his transformation from a middle-ranking civil servant to the era's most controversial political theorist. It explores how his missions to French, German, and papal courts revealed the gap between moral rhetoric and actual statecraft, how Florence's militia experiment reflected his belief in civic virtue, and how the Medici restoration destroyed both his career and his faith in idealistic politics.The book reexamines The Prince, Discourses on Livy, and his plays through biographical context: his advice to Lorenzo de' Medici was less flattery than a job application written by an unemployed official, his republicanism emerged from witnessing institutional failure, and his supposed amorality reflected honest observation rather than personal cruelty. It traces how Machiavelli navigated Italian Wars, Savonarola's theocracy, and shifting allegiances while trying to answer one question: how do political systems actually survive?Relevant for readers interested in how personal failure drives intellectual innovation, how political violence shapes theory, and why realism often appears immoral to those who prefer comforting fictions.
Machiavelli wrote The Prince not to praise tyranny, but to understand why republics fall-a question born from watching his own republic collapse around him.