Machiavelli's The Prince

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The Prince is an analysis by Italian writer Machiavelli, who shows great conduct of men and their ruler. The book is an analysis over how the prince maintains and can acquire great political power. It shows ruling figures how to govern and to show international politics about the way they do things or how they should be. The book has specific situations and can display ways to deal with them. It also helps rulers fix situations on which they do not know about but need help on. This book is to give advice to rulers in the fifteenth- and sixteenth- century in Italy to a “prince” whose power needs help. Machiavelli gives examples from early times of history and shows the failings and successes of great rulers.

One theme that Machiavelli uses in The Prince is Law and arms. He makes it very clear that the main foundations of every state are from their laws and arms within that state. This means that the ruler such as the prince must mainstay his state to be legal, and must enforce laws and military codes if he wants to stay within his power. Also, he makes an argument about a prince and his state in which he bounds to come to grief. With this being said, Machiavelli also makes and states an emphasises that you can’t have good laws without good arms, but the good laws with follow with intent. …show more content…

If a state is lacking warfare and war preparation for not only the physical challenges but also the internal challenges within that state, the state's laws and its forces will begin to fail. For example, starting in chapter 13 He says that a wise prince will make use of his own forces for battle because no true win is possible with alien arms. In explanation that means that if you use your own troops in battle than strangers there is weight belonging to you the ruler rather than strangers who will put more weight on

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