The Prince Chapter Summaries I III The Prince

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The Prince Chapter Summaries I - III

The Prince Chapter Summaries I - III

The Prince Chapter 1 Summary Page 1 � Different kinds of states and how

The Prince Chapter 1 Summary Page 1 � Different kinds of states and how to conquer them � There are two types of governments: Republics (that's the U. S. ) and Monarchies (that's England, sort of). � Now, there are new monarchies or old ones, and new monarchies can be either totally new (if a democracy suddenly got a king) or sort of new (if a king just added some land to his kingdom). � It looks kind of like this: � Republics � Monarchies � New Monarchies Brand-spanking New Monarchies Sort of New Monarchies � Old Monarchies � Now, when you're doing this whole conquering thing—yes, you, since only princes or rulers can read this book—there a few things to keep in mind: 1)the place you are conquering either already had a ruler or 2)they are used to governing themselves. � Also, when you conquer them, you can do it yourself or get someone else to do it; and you might be lucky or you might work hard. These are all of the ways to conquer a place. � Got it? No? Well that's what the rest of the book is for.

The Prince Chapter 2 Summary Page 1 � Hereditary Monarchies � This book is

The Prince Chapter 2 Summary Page 1 � Hereditary Monarchies � This book is not about republics. � It's about monarchies—how to get 'em and how to keep 'em. � So remember those old monarchies, the ones where the kids become the new ruler? Those are a piece of cake to rule. Unless you are a total idiot, you can't mess up this sweet deal. � Even if other people invade, you'll probably get your power back once they have any kind of trouble because the people love you. Come on, they watched you in your royal, diamond-studded diapers—how could they not?

The Prince Chapter 3 Summary Page 1 � Mixed Monarchies � New monarchies are

The Prince Chapter 3 Summary Page 1 � Mixed Monarchies � New monarchies are hard to deal with, even the sort of new ones that are just adding a territory onto an old monarchy. Machiavelli calls these mixed monarchies. � What's the problem? The conquered will rebel at the first sign of a better situation, which is good if you want to take over but bad once you've conquered them. � As elected officials find out, you can never give people all the things they expected, so they'll hate you for a while. Here's the thing: you need them to not hate you because your army can't control the new land by themselves and need the people on their side.

�Machiavelli gives the example of when the king of France, Louis XII, tried to

�Machiavelli gives the example of when the king of France, Louis XII, tried to take Milan. �Everyone thought that Louis was going to be this awesome king, so they helped him kick out their ruler, Duke Ludovico. �The thing is, Louis XII was awful, so they ran back to Ludovico. �Even though it was easy to take over Milan the first time, after that, the Milanese wised up and it took "the whole world" to push their way in the second time (3. 2). �But then Louis was kicked out again. Why did he lose the second time?

King of France, Louis XII

King of France, Louis XII

�Let's take a look: �If the land you are adding to your kingdom shares

�Let's take a look: �If the land you are adding to your kingdom shares the same language as the rest of the kingdom, great. �All you have to do is kill the old rulers and you're set. �Leave everything else alone. Seriously. It'll all work out. Do that and you're golden.

� "But what if my new territory speaks a different language, " we hear

� "But what if my new territory speaks a different language, " we hear you bloodthirsty princes and princesses asking. � That's just a wee bit more difficult. In that case, you should go live there. You wanted a new summer home didn't you? � Then, if anyone tries to rebel, you can shut them down personally. � Also, then you don't have to trust that officials are taking care of your new pet country instead of stealing all of its riches. � Plus, people are more likely to like you if they see you as one of them, and most people would think twice about attacking your new crib. � Basically, this is the best way to go. Don't want to move? Then you can make colonies instead. � This is great because it doesn't require lots of military and it's super cheap. Just take land from the natives and give it to your colonialists. � The only downside is that the people whose land you took will be angry. But that doesn't matter because they are poor and have no land. Win-win.

� By the way, you should only deal with people in two ways: crush

� By the way, you should only deal with people in two ways: crush them or pamper them to death. � If you are going to hit, you need to hit so hard that they can't stand up again. Are you thinking about armies? � Stop it. Armies will cause widespread but uneven damage, leaving more than enough people left who can hit back and are looking for you. � Bad idea. � Okay, next thing you have to do is become the guardian angel for the weaker nations around your new land. � Or at least look like it. � What you are really doing is making sure a strong foreign power doesn't swoop in and start cramping your style.

Crush or Pamper

Crush or Pamper

� People have this silly tendency to ask foreign nations to come in and

� People have this silly tendency to ask foreign nations to come in and save them from their horrible rulers. � That's how the Roman Empire got so huge—people invited them in. You want to make sure that no foreigners come in and that everyone is on your side. � So play nice with the neighbors. Machiavelli has the perfect example: the Romans. � They had colonies, they made friends with the neighbors, they made strong neighbors weaker, and they didn't let any stronger people move into the neighborhood. Perfect. � They were preparing for trouble that might come in the future, which is the easiest and best way to deal with problems. � They didn't try to procrastinate, which only makes things worse. � They hit their problems head on. � Anyway, back to Louis and Milan. � Why was he so terrible again? � Oh yeah, he did the opposite of everything he was supposed to do. � He didn't play nice with his neighbors (even though they were begging to be friends) and he actually helped two stronger powers move in to the neighborhood. � He helped Pope Alexander invade Romagna and basically carried the King of Spain's moving boxes into Naples so they could split the Kingdom and be

� Machiavelli gets that Louis wanted more land, but it's best not to get

� Machiavelli gets that Louis wanted more land, but it's best not to get too greedy. It doesn't make sense to get more land if you can't do it on your own. Help comes with too many strings attached. So in total, Louis was stupid in six ways: 1. He got rid of his weaker buddies. 2. He made the pope stronger. 3. He brought a stronger king into his neighborhood. 4. He didn't live in his new land. 5. He didn't establish colonies. 6. And the worst offense: he took power away from Venice, which allowed another strong state to muscle its way in. � According to Machiavelli, it's no surprise that he lost his land. He did everything wrong, after all.