Machiavelli
7
Of
New Dominions Acquired Those
who rise from private citizens to be princes merely by fortune have little
trouble in rising but very much in maintaining their position. They meet
with no difficulties on the way as they fly over them, but all their
difficulties arise when they are established. Such are they who are
granted a state either for money, or by favour of him who grants it, as
happened to many in Greece, in the cities of Ionia and of the Hellespont,
who were created princes by Darius in order to hold these places for his
security and glory; such were also those emperors who from private
citizens rose to power by bribing the army. Such as these depend
absolutely on the good will and fortune of those who have raised them,
both of which are extremely inconstant and unstable. They neither know how
to, nor are in a position to maintain their rank, for unless he be a man
of great genius it is not likely that one who has always lived in a
private position should know how to command, and they are unable to
maintain themselves because they possess no forces friendly and faithful
to them. Moreover, states quickly founded, like all other things of rapid
beginnings and growth, cannot have deep roots and wide ramifications, so
that the first storm destroys them, unless, as already said, the man who
thus becomes a prince is of such great genius as to be able to take
immediate steps for maintaining what fortune has thrown into his lap, and
lay afterwards those foundations which others make before becoming
princes. With
regard to these two methods of becoming a prince,—by ability or by good
fortune, I will here adduce two examples which have occurred within our
memory, those of Francesco Sforza and Cesare Borgia. Francesco, by
appropriate means and through great abilities, from citizen became Duke of
Milan, and what he had attained after a thousand difficulties he
maintained with little trouble. On the other hand, Cesare Borgia, commonly
called Duke Valentine, acquired the state by the influence of his father
and lost it when that influence failed, and that although every measure
was adopted by him and everything done that a prudent and capable man
could do to establish himself firmly in a state that the arms and the
favours of others had given him. For, as we have said, he who does not lay
his foundations beforehand may by great abilities do so afterwards,
although with great trouble to the architect and danger to the building.
If, then, one considers the procedure of the duke, it will be seen how
firm were the foundations he had laid to his future power, which I do not
think is superfluous to examine, as I know of no better precepts for a new
prince to follow than may be found in his actions; and if his measures
were not successful, it was through no fault of his own but only by the
most extraordinary malignity of fortune. In
wishing to aggrandize the duke his son, Alexander VI had to meet very
great difficulties both present and future. In the first place, he saw no
way of making him ruler of any state that was not a possession of the
Church. He knew that the Duke of Milan and the Venetians would not consent
in his attempt to take papal cities, because Faenza and Rimini were
already under the protection of the Venetians. He saw, moreover, that the
military forces of Italy, especially those which might have served him,
were in the hands of those who would fear the greatness of the pope, and
therefore he could not depend upon them, being all under the command of
the Orsini and Colonna and their adherents. It was, therefore, necessary
to disturb the existing condition and bring about disorders in the states
of Italy in order to obtain secure mastery over a part of them; this was
easy, for he found the Venetians, who, actuated by other motives, had
invited the French into Italy, which he not only did not oppose, but
facilitated by dissolving the first marriage of King Louis. The king came
thus into Italy with the aid of the Venetians and the consent of
Alexander, and had hardly arrived at Milan before the pope obtained troops
from him for his enterprise in the Romagna, which was made possible for
him thanks to the reputation of the king. The duke having thus obtained
the Romagna and defeated the Colonna, was hindered by two things in
maintaining it and proceeding further: the one, his forces, of which he
doubted the fidelity; the other, the will of France; that is to say, he
feared lest the arms of the Orsini of which he had availed himself should
fail him, and not only hinder him in obtaining more but take from him what
he had already conquered, and he also feared that the king might do the
same. He had evidence of this as regards the Orsini when, after taking
Faenza, he assaulted Bologna and observed their backwardness in the
assault. And as regards the king, he perceived his designs when, after
taking the dukedom of Urbino, he attacked Tuscany, and the king made him
desist from that enterprise. Whereupon the duke decided to depend no
longer on the fortunes and arms of others. The first thing he did was to
weaken the parties of the Orsini and Colonna in Rome by gaining all their
adherents who were gentlemen and making them his own followers, by
granting them large remuneration, and appointing them to commands and
offices according to their rank, so that their attachment to their parties
was extinguished in a few months, and entirely concentrated on the duke.
After this he awaited an opportunity for crushing the chiefs of the Orsini,
having already sup pressed those of the Colonna family, and when the
opportunity arrived he made good use of it, for the Orsini seeing at
length that the greatness of the duke and of the Church meant their own
ruin, convoked a diet at Magione in the Perugino. Hence sprang the
rebellion of Urbino and the tumults in Romagna and infinite dangers to the
duke, who overcame them all with the help of the French; and having
regained his reputation, neither trusting France nor other foreign forces,
in order not to venture on their alliance, he had recourse to stratagem.
He dissembled his aims so well that the Orsini made their peace with him,
being represented by Signor Paulo whose suspicions the duke disarmed with
every courtesy, presenting him with robes, money, and horses, so that in
their simplicity they were induced to come to Sinigaglia and fell into his
hands. Having thus suppressed these leaders and made their partisans his
friends, the duke had laid a very good foundation to his power, having all
the Romagna with the duchy of Urbino, and having gained the favour of the
inhabitants, who began to feel the benefit of his rule. And
as this part is worthy of note and of imitation by others, I will not omit
mention of it. When he took the Romagna, it had previously been governed
by weak rulers, who had rather despoiled their subjects than governed
them, and given them more cause for disunion than for union, so that the
province was a prey to robbery, assaults, and every kind of disorder. He,
therefore, judged it necessary to give them a good government in order to
make them peaceful and obedient to his rule. For this purpose he appointed
Messer Remirro de Orca, a cruel and able man, to whom he gave the fullest
authority. This man, in a short time, was highly successful in rendering
the country orderly and united, whereupon the duke, not deeming such
excessive authority expedient, lest it should become hateful, appointed a
civil court of justice in the centre of the province under an excellent
president, to which each city appointed its own advocate. And as he knew
that the harshness of the past had engendered some amount of hatred, in
order to purge the minds of the people and to win them over completely, he
resolved to show that if any cruelty had taken place it was not by his
orders, but through the harsh disposition of his minister. And having
found the opportunity he had him cut in half and placed one morning in the
public square at Cesena with a piece of wood and blood-stained knife by
his side. The ferocity of this spectacle caused the people both
satisfaction and amazement. But to return to where we left off. The
duke being now powerful and partly secured against present perils, being
armed himself, and having in a great measure put down those neighbouring
forces which might injure him, had now to get the respect of France, if he
wished to proceed with his acquisitions, for he knew that the king, who
had lately discovered his error, would not give him any help. He began
therefore to seek fresh alliances and to vacillate with France on the
occasion of the expedition that the French were undertaking towards the
kingdom of Naples against the Spaniards, who were besieging Gaeta His
intention was to assure himself of them, which he would soon have
succeeded in doing if Alexander had lived. These
were the measures taken by him with regard to the present. As to the
future, he feared that a new successor to the states of the Church might
not be friendly to him and might seek to deprive him of what Alexander had
given him, and he sought to provide against this in four ways. First, by
destroying all who were of the blood of those ruling families which he had
despoiled, in order to deprive the pope of any opportunity. Secondly, by
gaining the friendship of the Roman nobles, so that he might through them
hold as it were the pope in check. Thirdly, by obtaining as great a hold
on the College as he could. Fourthly, by acquiring such power before the
pope died as to be able to resist alone the first onslaught. Of these four
things he had at the death of Alexander accomplished three, and the fourth
he had almost accomplished. For of the dispossessed rulers he killed as
many as he could lay hands on, and very few escaped; he had gained to his
party the Roman nobles; and he had a great influence in the College. As to
new possessions, he designed to become lord of Tuscany, and already
possessed Perugia and Piombino, and had assumed the protectorate over
Pisa; and as he had no longer to fear the French (for the French had been
deprived of the kingdom of Naples by the Spaniards in such a way that both
parties were obliged to buy his friendship) he seized Pisa. After this,
Lucca and Siena at once yielded, partly through hate of the Florentines
and partly through fear; the Florentines had no resources, so that, had he
succeeded as he had done before, in the very year that Alexander died he
would have gained such strength and renown as to be able to maintain
himself without depending on the fortunes or strength of others, but
solely by his own power and ability. But Alexander died five years after
Cesare Borgia had first drawn his sword. He was left with only the state
of Romagna firmly established, and all the other schemes in midair,
between two very powerful and hostile armies, and suffering from a fatal
illness. But the valour and ability of the duke were such, and he knew so
well how to win over men or vanquish them, and so strong were the
foundations that he had laid in this short time, that if he had not had
those two armies upon him, or else had been in good health, he would have
survived every difficulty. And that his foundations were good is seen from
the fact that the Romagna waited for him more than a month in Rome,
although half dead, he remained secure, and although the Baglioni, Vitelli,
and Orsini entered Rome they found no followers against him. He was able,
if not to make pope whom he wished, at any rate to prevent a pope being
created whom he did not wish. But if at the death of Alexander he had been
well, everything would have been easy. And he told me on the day that Pope
Julius II was elected, that he had thought of everything which might
happen on the death of his father, and provided against everything, except
that he had never thought that at his father’s death he would be dying
himself. Reviewing thus all the actions of the duke, I find nothing to blame, on the contrary, 1 feel bound, as I have done, to hold him up as an example to be imitated by all who by fortune and with the arms of others have risen to power. For with his great courage and high ambition he could not have acted otherwise, and his designs were only frustrated by the short life of Alexander and his own illness. Whoever, therefore, deems it necessary in his new principality to secure himself against enemies, to gain friends, to conquer by force or fraud, to make himself beloved and feared by the people, followed and reverenced by the soldiers, to destroy those who can and may injure him, introduce innovations into old customs, to be severe and kind, magnanimous and liberal, suppress the old militia, create a new one, maintain the friendship of kings and princes in such a way that they are glad to benefit him and fear to injure him, such a one can find no better example than the actions of this man. The only thing he can be accused of is that in the creation of Julius II he made a bad choice for, as has been said, not being able to choose his own pope, he could still prevent any one individual being made pope, and he ought never to have permitted any of those cardinals to be raised to the papacy whom he had injured, or who when pope would stand in fear of him. For men commit injuries either through fear or through hate. Those whom he had injured were, among others, San Pietro ad Vincula, Colonna, San Giorgio, and Ascanio. All the others, if elected to the pontificate, would have had to fear him except Rohan and the Spaniards; the latter through their relationship and obligations to him, the former from his great power, being related to the King of France. For these reasons the duke ought above all things to have created a Spaniard pope; and if unable, then he should have consented to Rohan being appointed and not San Pietro ad Vincula. And whoever thinks that in high personages new benefits cause old offenses to be forgotten, makes a great mistake. The duke, therefore, erred in this choice, and it was the cause of his ultimate ruin.
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