«Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli

Only in three parts of Machiavelli’s writings occurs a stark expression: «tagliare a pezzi». Two of them are in The Prince, the third one in Discorsi. Two of them concern ancient examples (Hiero and Clearchus), the other one a modern experience, the famous and violent episode in which Cesare Borgia...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Giorgio E.M. Scichilone
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: University of Bologna 2012-12-01
Series:Montesquieu.it
Subjects:
Online Access:https://montesquieu.unibo.it/article/view/5154
id doaj-7be8d4b4adb2457bae34662dda289954
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7be8d4b4adb2457bae34662dda2899542020-11-25T01:02:59ZspaUniversity of BolognaMontesquieu.it2421-41242012-12-014110.6092/issn.2421-4124/51544723«Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in MachiavelliGiorgio E.M. Scichilone0Università di PalermoOnly in three parts of Machiavelli’s writings occurs a stark expression: «tagliare a pezzi». Two of them are in The Prince, the third one in Discorsi. Two of them concern ancient examples (Hiero and Clearchus), the other one a modern experience, the famous and violent episode in which Cesare Borgia executes his lieutenant Rimirro, a capital punishment that Machiavelli watched in Cesena. The essay tries to show how all of Machiavelli’s examples deal in a subtle way with a topical Machiavelli’s view – civil principality. From this discussion, a survey (or journey) between Machiavelli’s text and historical context begins, where some other striking questions are approached, such as the absence of Cesare Borgia in Discorsi (so sensational as neglected), the relationship between Machiavelli and Michelangelo linked by a ‘republican’ David, or the figure of pope Leo X, that would be, according to this essay, that «certain prince of present times, whom it is best not to name», and not, according to the common opinion, Ferdinand the Catholic.https://montesquieu.unibo.it/article/view/5154MachiavelliCesare BorgiaRamiro de Lorquapope Leo XCivil Principality
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giorgio E.M. Scichilone
spellingShingle Giorgio E.M. Scichilone
«Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
Montesquieu.it
Machiavelli
Cesare Borgia
Ramiro de Lorqua
pope Leo X
Civil Principality
author_facet Giorgio E.M. Scichilone
author_sort Giorgio E.M. Scichilone
title «Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
title_short «Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
title_full «Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
title_fullStr «Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
title_full_unstemmed «Tagliare a pezzi». Cesare Borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in Machiavelli
title_sort «tagliare a pezzi». cesare borgia tra rimandi biblici e fonte senofontea in machiavelli
publisher University of Bologna
series Montesquieu.it
issn 2421-4124
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Only in three parts of Machiavelli’s writings occurs a stark expression: «tagliare a pezzi». Two of them are in The Prince, the third one in Discorsi. Two of them concern ancient examples (Hiero and Clearchus), the other one a modern experience, the famous and violent episode in which Cesare Borgia executes his lieutenant Rimirro, a capital punishment that Machiavelli watched in Cesena. The essay tries to show how all of Machiavelli’s examples deal in a subtle way with a topical Machiavelli’s view – civil principality. From this discussion, a survey (or journey) between Machiavelli’s text and historical context begins, where some other striking questions are approached, such as the absence of Cesare Borgia in Discorsi (so sensational as neglected), the relationship between Machiavelli and Michelangelo linked by a ‘republican’ David, or the figure of pope Leo X, that would be, according to this essay, that «certain prince of present times, whom it is best not to name», and not, according to the common opinion, Ferdinand the Catholic.
topic Machiavelli
Cesare Borgia
Ramiro de Lorqua
pope Leo X
Civil Principality
url https://montesquieu.unibo.it/article/view/5154
work_keys_str_mv AT giorgioemscichilone tagliareapezzicesareborgiatrarimandibibliciefontesenofonteainmachiavelli
_version_ 1725202937634881536