Niet blij met je aankoop? Geeft niet! Bij ons kun je binnen 30 dagen retourneren
Met een cadeaubon zit je altijd goed. De ontvanger kan de cadeaubon voor alles uit ons assortiment inwisselen.
Retourneren binnen 30 dagen
Niccolò Machiavelli did not invent power. He made it harder to lie about.
In Renaissance Florence, a city of beauty, faction, ambition, republican language, Medici influence, foreign invasion, and fragile liberty, Machiavelli learned politics from the inside. He served the Florentine Republic as diplomat, secretary, military organiser, and observer of rulers who understood that survival often demanded more than virtue.
He watched Cesare Borgia use fear, cruelty, speed, and calculation to build power. He saw mercenary armies expose Italy's weakness. He saw Savonarola rise through prophecy and fall because he lacked arms. He saw the Medici return, the republic collapse, and his own career destroyed by the violent turn of fortune.
From exile, humiliation, and political disappointment came one of the most dangerous books ever written: The Prince.
But Machiavelli was never only the teacher of ruthless rulers. He was also a republican thinker, historian, dramatist, military reformer, and wounded patriot who believed liberty required arms, discipline, conflict, renewal, and civic strength. His work asked questions that remain unsettling today: Can goodness survive without power? Can a republic stay free without force? When does mercy become weakness? When does necessity become excuse? How much of politics is appearance?
Machiavelli: The Man Who Rewrote Power tells the story of the man behind the adjective. It follows his rise, service, fall, writings, reputation, and legacy, showing how a dismissed Florentine official became one of the most influential political minds in history.
This is the story of the thinker who did not make politics cruel, but made its cruelty impossible to ignore.
Hoi! Ik ben Libroamiko, je boekadviseur.
Hoe kan ik je helpen?