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Index to
Dialogue In Hell
Adige, 128
Agathocles, 9
Agesilaus, 130, 132
Alexander the Great, (also, Alexander,
Alexander ofMacedon), 9, 127,
148
Alexander VI, 138
Alfred the Great, 130
Alps, 127
Amur, 127
Aristotle, 23
Asia,30, 149
Athenians, 26
Augustus. See Caeser, Augustus.
Austria, 17
Baltic, 128
Barbarossa, Frederich, 12
Barras, Paul, Vicomte de, 25
Belgium, 17
Boileau, Nicolas, 128
Bonaparte, See Napoleon 1.
Borgia, Cesare, 8, 9, 45, 77, 96, 138
Bossuet, Jacques Benigne, 90
Brutus, 10
Byron, 76
Caesar, Augustus, 9, 11, 52, 57, 127 ,
148
Caesar, Julius, 9, 11,44, 127
Caesarism, 94; of Late Empire, 27
Caeser. See Caeser, Julius.
Caligula, 34, 90, 136
Cannes, 128
Catholicism, 95
Cato, 12
Charlemagne, 9,34, 51,128, 136
Charles the Wise, 148
China, 27, 36, 71
Chinese, 27
Christ, 135
Christianity, 26, 36,94
Church, 95
Clovis, 9, 34, 51, 128, 136
Constant, Benjamin, 67
Constantine, 136
Constitution of the United States, 51
Court of Rome, 95
Cromwell, Oliver, 130
Cyrus, 148
Danube, 128
Dialectics, 9
Diderot, Denis, 10
Dion,147
Dubois, Guillaume, 96
Egypt, 127, 149
Encyclopedists, 12
England: 17, 19,23, 11,0,116
Enlightenment, 24
Europe, 7, 10, 11,15, 17, 18, 21, 23,
30,40,52,75, 99, 104, 106, 107,
128, 134, 138, 139, 145
Florentine Republic, 7
France, 12, 17, 19,21,26, 29, 71,76,
82,84,94, 133
Frederick II, 51
French Revolution, 31, 32
Ganges, 127
Gardens of Rucellai, 45
German Confederacy, 17
Germany, 12, 27,76, 138
Gonzalo of Cordova, 9
Gospels, 94, 95
Gracchus, 130, 132
Great Wall of China, 127
Greatness of the Romans and Their
Decline, 57
Greece (also Greek Republics), 11, 27
Hannibal, 127
Helots, 133
Henry IV, 141, 148
Holbach, Paul Henri, Baron d', 10
Holland, 17
Holy Scripture, 34
Holy See, 95, 96
Hugh Capet, 9, 34
Hydra ofLerna, 65
Incas, 127
India, 27, 36
Italian Republics, 12
Italy, 17,27, 76, 95, 138
Jacquerie, 134
Japan, 27
Julius II, 8,12
Lauzon, Antonin, 1 48
LeoX, 12, 89
Louis IV, 12
Louis XI (also Saintly Louis, and Saint
Louis) 9, 130, 149
Louis XII, 8
Louis XIV, 12, 128,129, 136, 148
Louis XVI, 148
Louis XVIII, 26
Dialogue in Hell
Lybia, 127
Lycurgus, 51, 130, 132
Lysander, 9
MachiaveJli: on the army: reform ot;
133, usulper's blood pact with, 44-
46, on the budget process and how
to manipulate it, 111-118; the
building policy of, 129-130, 134-
135; on centralization as the
salvation for modern societies, 27;
on Christian periods, 27; on
conspiracies and secret societies:
how to neutralize them, 76-79, how
to make use of them, 100; on the
coup d'etat: the one "little thing"
and one "big thing" to follow, 45-
46; on the countenance of the
prince in detail, 131-147; and his
encounter with Montesquieu, 7-8;
enigma of life ot; 7-9; on factions
in contemporary society, 43-44; on
"genius" as the sine qua non of
rulers, 49; on history and its cycles,
26; liberty and critique of, 27-28;
the Papal policy ot; 93-96;on a
police state and how to erect it, 97-
101 ; the praetorian guard of, 133;
on the public debt and new
methods of deficit financing, I 18-
125; on popular sovereignty: and
its incompatibility with
representative government, 25-26;
on the press; measures to defend
against, 63-68, and the uses to
which it can be put" 69-75; 117-
120; on mass society and its
character, 24,27; on the
Constitution; reform of the popular
Assembly, 54-55, refonn of the
Judiciary, 80-81,83-85, 100-101,
reform of ministerial responsibility,
53, reform of the Senate, 57,
ratification by means of plebiscite,
50-51; on reform of other
institutions and practices: the
Council of State, 59-60, 84, the
Public Ministry and sovereign
immunity, 82-83, the Comptroller
and Board of Auditors, 111, 118;
the new modes and orders of: a
"sketch", 38-42, the ways of
proceeding to, 38-41,44-45, 52,
61-61; on social groups and
institutions: the clergy, 93-96, the
militia, 91, the law profession, 91-
92; universities 92; the "theory of
force" of, 9-12, on universal
suffrage: as the basis of the new
constitution, 50-51, and how to rig
votes, 86-90; on the working class
masses: 24, 27, 48 and its
relationship to the prince, 44, 46,
105-106, 129-130, 136-137,146;
on the thought and character of the
works of, 9-12, 18-19,
Maistre, Joseph de, 51
Mandragola, 76
Marquis Hugo, 19
Medici, 8
Mesopotamia, 127
Middle Ages, 15,18, 22
Mississippi, 127
Montesquieu: on authority, divine and
human, and their respective checks
on despotism 32-33;on borrowing
and sinking funds arrangements,
116; on budgeting in modern-day
states, 108-116; on Christianity and
1iberty, 26; on commerce and
industry: effects on modem
societies, 36, as great moral ideas
coming from Christianity 36; on
despotism: the economic and
financial obstacles to despotism in
modern states, 103-107, the
political and institutional obstacles
to, 17-21; its impossibility in
certain regimes today, 13-16, its
poverty and the necessity to
conquer, 103-104, its transitional
role in history , 31; on France, as
immune to sinister doctrines, 29;
the French Revolution as
orientation of works of, 31; on
institutions and their progressive
refinement, 15, 18-20, 30-31 ;on
history: its tendency to perfection
and progress, 30-31, on lack of
knowledge of, 21 -22; on justice and
moraIity-its relevance to
po1itics-a rejoinder to
Machiavelli's theory of force, 15;
on liberty as a timeless desideratum
of politics, 31; on the people in
enlightened times, 24; on popular
sovereignty, rightly understood, 32;
34-36; on the press, 21 ;on the
separation of powers and the
constitutional regime, 19-21; on the
Roman Empire and what brought
its downfall, 94; and the wager
with MachiaveJli, 36-37,43
Moses, 9
Napoleon 1,25;
Napoleons, 12
Nebuchadnezzar,127
Nero, 9, 34, 44, 136
Osiris, 132
Papacy,96,122
Papal States, 96
Pericles, II, 92
Persia, 103
Peru,127
Peter the First, 51,129
Phillip II, 12
Phillip of Macedon, 9
Piladus, 147
Pisastatus,11,44
Potosi (mines), 116
Prussia, 17, 138
Republic. See Roman Republic.
Robespierre, Augustin, 25
Roman Empire, 11,94, 140
Roman Republic, 11,27, 52, 57
Roman Senate, 57,58
Roman World, 17
Romans, 26, 44
Rome, Title, 52, 77, 95, 127
Romulus, 9
Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 10
Russia, 30
Saint Peter, 96
Saint Vincent de Paul, 132
Salic Monarchy, 86
Sardanopolus, 148
Scipio, 127
Sesostris, 9, 51, 127
Smith, Adam, 21
Social Contract, 26
Socrates, 9
Solderini, 8
Solomon 9
Solon, 17,51
Spain, 12
Spanish, 8
Stoicism, 26
Sulla, Title, 77
Sweden, 138
Switzerland, 17
Tacitus, 140
Tamerlane, 133
Tarquin,9,11
Persian Letters, 12, 142
The Prince, 8, 9, 10, 19,21,34, 40,41,
44, 45, 48, 61, 110, 11,139, 136,
140
The Spirit of the Laws, Title, 7, 12, 17,
26, 34, 41,63, 66, 83, 88, 94, 95,
98, 103, 107, 133, 137, 147
United States, 51, 86, 110
Themis, 58
Theodoric, 9
Titus, 34
Titus Livy, 52
Turkey, 30, 103,
Valentinois, Duke de, See Borgia,
Cesare.
Varus, 128
Vespasian,34
Vicar of Christ. See Papacy.
Vishnu, 70,97
Washington, George, 50, 51, 148
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