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    Chapter 11

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    CHAPTER XI

    CONCERNING ECCLESIASTICAL PRINCIPALITIES

    It only remains now to speak of ecclesiastical principalities,
    touching which all difficulties are prior to getting possession,
    because they are acquired either by capacity or good fortune, and they
    can be held without either; for they are sustained by the ancient
    ordinances of religion, which are so all-powerful, and of such a
    character that the principalities may be held no matter how their
    princes behave and live. These princes alone have states and do not
    defend them; and they have subjects and do not rule them; and the
    states, although unguarded, are not taken from them, and the subjects,
    although not ruled, do not care, and they have neither the desire nor
    the ability to alienate themselves. Such principalities only are
    secure and happy. But being upheld by powers, to which the human mind
    cannot reach, I shall speak no more of them, because, being exalted
    and maintained by God, it would be the act of a presumptuous and rash
    man to discuss them.

    Nevertheless, if any one should ask of me how comes it that the Church
    has attained such greatness in temporal power, seeing that from
    Alexander backwards the Italian potentates (not only those who have
    been called potentates, but every baron and lord, though the smallest)
    have valued the temporal power very slightly--yet now a king of France
    trembles before it, and it has been able to drive him from Italy, and
    to ruin the Venetians--although this may be very manifest, it does not
    appear to me superfluous to recall it in some measure to memory.

    Before Charles, King of France, passed into Italy,[*] this country was
    under the dominion of the Pope, the Venetians, the King of Naples, the
    Duke of Milan, and the Florentines. These potentates had two principal
    anxieties: the one, that no foreigner should enter Italy under arms;
    the other, that none of themselves should seize more territory. Those
    about whom there was the most anxiety were the Pope and the Venetians.
    To restrain the Venetians the union of all the others was necessary,
    as it was for the defence of Ferrara; and to keep down the Pope they
    made use of the barons of Rome, who, being divided into two factions,

    Orsini and Colonnesi, had always a pretext for disorder, and, standing
    with arms in their hands under the eyes of the Pontiff, kept the
    pontificate weak and powerless. And although there might arise
    sometimes a courageous pope, such as Sixtus, yet neither fortune nor
    wisdom could rid him of these annoyances. And the short life of a pope
    is also a cause of weakness; for in the ten years, which is the
    average life of a pope, he can with difficulty lower one of the
    factions; and if, so to speak, one people should almost destroy the
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