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The Prince.
Machiavelli’s concise and unsettling guide to power, statecraft, fear, reputation, and political survival.
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Edition details
- Niccolò Machiavelli
- DotBooks
- DotBooks
- January 1532
- Paperback
- Standard white
- 167
- en
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About this book
The Prince is one of the most debated works in political thought: brisk, unsentimental, and still startling in the directness of its advice. Writing in the turbulence of Renaissance Italy, Niccolò Machiavelli strips away idealized language about virtue and asks what actually allows a ruler to gain, secure, and hold power.
The result is a book that has shaped centuries of argument about ethics and politics. Some readers see it as a manual of hard realism, others as a warning about corrupt rule, and still others as a study in how public authority depends on performance, timing, military force, and the management of fear.
Why this classic still feels modern
Machiavelli’s language about image, necessity, fortune, and calculated decision-making continues to echo in contemporary debates about leadership and political communication. The book is short, but it opens large questions about whether moral goodness and political success can be reconciled under pressure.
Who this edition suits
This edition is ideal for readers interested in political theory, Renaissance history, diplomacy, leadership studies, and the long cultural life of Machiavellian thinking. It also works well as a compact gateway into the history of ideas because the text is brief enough to read in a few sittings while remaining endlessly discussable.
Further context
For readers interested in deeper framing, the book is often read alongside Machiavelli’s republican writings and the unstable political landscape of Florence and the Italian city-states in the early sixteenth century.
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The Prince
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