3 May 1469 A.D. Birth: Italian Writer Niccolo Machiavelli
3 May 1469 A.D. Birth: Italian Writer Niccolo Machiavelli
Editors. “Niccoli Machiavelli born.” History.com.
2009. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/niccolo-machiavelli-born. Accessed 1 May 2015.
On this day in 1469, the Italian
philosopher and writer Niccolo Machiavelli is born. A lifelong patriot and
diehard proponent of a unified Italy, Machiavelli became one of the fathers of
modern political theory.
Machiavelli entered the political
service of his native Florence by the time he was 29. As defense secretary, he
distinguished himself by executing policies that strengthened Florence
politically. He soon found himself assigned diplomatic missions for his
principality, through which he met such luminaries as Louis XII of France, Pope
Julius II, the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, and perhaps most importantly
for Machiavelli, a prince of the Papal States named Cesare Borgia. The shrewd
and cunning Borgia later inspired the title character in Machiavelli’s famous
and influential political treatise The Prince (1532).
Machiavelli’s political life took a
downward turn after 1512, when he fell out of favor with the powerful Medici
family. He was accused of conspiracy, imprisoned, tortured and temporarily
exiled. It was an attempt to regain a political post and the Medici family’s
good favor that Machiavelli penned The Prince, which was to become his
most well-known work.
Though released in book form
posthumously in 1532, The Prince was first published as a pamphlet in 1513. In
it, Machiavelli outlined his vision of an ideal leader: an amoral, calculating
tyrant for whom the end justifies the means. The Prince not only failed
to win the Medici family’s favor, it also alienated him from the Florentine
people. Machiavelli was never truly welcomed back into politics, and when the
Florentine Republic was reestablished in 1527, Machiavelli was an object of
great suspicion. He died later that year, embittered and shut out from the
Florentine society to which he had devoted his life.
Though Machiavelli has long been
associated with the practice of diabolical expediency in the realm of politics
that was made famous in The Prince, his actual views were not so
extreme. In fact, in such longer and more detailed writings as Discourses on
the First Ten Books of Livy (1517) and History of Florence (1525),
he shows himself to be a more principled political moralist. Still, even today,
the term “Machiavellian” is used to describe an action undertaken for gain
without regard for right or wrong.
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