The plebe in the Florentine Histories: Machiavelli’s notion of humours revisited

History of European Ideas 44 (5):493-512 (2018)
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Abstract

ABSTRACTAccording to recent scholarship, the Florentine Histories expresses Machiavelli’s growing scepticism toward the popolo. This more elitist ‘late Machiavelli’, however, is an illusion. I show that the illusion arose from the scholarly oversight of Machiavelli’s criticism of the popolo in his early work, Discourses, and the failure to notice his new terminological distinction between the popolo and the plebe in the Florentine Histories. Machiavelli never was a whole-hearted defender of the popolo in the first place, for his consistent commitment was to preserve the balance between the popolo and the grandi. Nor was he unusually critical of the popolo in his later work, Florentine Histories: he directs his harshest criticism to the lower-class plebe and not to the middle-class popolo.

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Machiavelli and the Medici.Humfrey Butters - 2010 - In John M. Najemy (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Machiavelli. New York: Cambridge University Press.

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