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  1. Republican monarchy in the 1830 revolutions: from Lafayette to the Belgian Constitution.Brecht Deseure - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (7):992-1010.
    The Belgian Constitution of 1831 marked a decisive step in the continental evolution from Restoration constitutional monarchy, based on the monarchical principle, towards the establishment of parliamentary constitutional monarchy. At the time, the new balance of power desired by the Belgian revolutionaries was captured by the phrase ‘republican monarchy’. It is remarkable that this concept, despite being so central to the founding fathers’ deliberations, has hardly been commented upon by later historians and public lawyers. This article aims to reconstruct the (...)
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  • Evil lords, benign historians: strongman politics in medieval India and Renaissance Florence.Vasileios Syros - 2019 - Intellectual History Review 29 (1):11-34.
    Recent developments in Europe and the United States (US) attest to an increasing fascination with and nostalgia for the strong leaders of the past – especially those that emerged in the aftermath of the creation of nation states and during the period between the First World War and the end of the Cold War era. Considerations of the “strongman syndrome” have a long lineage in premodern European and Islamic political thought. The famous Italian humanist Leonardo Bruni (ca. 1370–1444), for example, (...)
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  • Maquiavelo. Repúblicas y principados, antiguos y modernos.Juan Manuel Forte - 2020 - Daimon: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 80:49-61.
    En alguna ocasión, Maquiavelo pensó su tiempo como un mundo agotado. No sólo porque Florencia e Italia sufrieran los estragos de las guerras europeas y tomaran conciencia de su propia debilidad política y militar, sino porque la virtud y la libertad, en términos maquiavelianos, parecían haberse ausentado del mundo. La cuestión entonces era cómo hacer revivir la antigua virtud en un mundo en el que las grandes monarquías territoriales, la cultura cristiana y el aburguesamiento de la sociedad se estaban convirtiendo (...)
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  • The quarrel between populism and republicanism: Machiavelli and the antinomies of plebeian politics.Miguel Vatter - 2012 - Contemporary Political Theory 11 (3):242-263.
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  • A tribune named Niccolò: Petrarchan revolutionaries and humanist failures in Machiavelli’s Florentine Histories.Danielle Charette & Michael Darmiento - 2018 - History of European Ideas 44 (8):1046-1062.
    ABSTRACTGiven Machiavelli’s fascination with ancient Rome’s plebeian tribunate, it is not surprising that he would take an interest in Cola di Rienzo, the Roman who declared himself Tribune of the Plebs in 1347. However, Cola appears just once in Machiavelli’s corpus, in a single short and enigmatic chapter in the Florentine Histories. This paper argues that Machiavelli nevertheless quietly elaborates on Cola’s legacy later in his Histories, when he introduces Stefano Porcari, another ‘Roman citizen’ whose reform efforts fail catastrophically. Though (...)
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  • Introduction: The Historiography of Republicanism and Republican Exchanges.Rachel Hammersley - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (3):323-337.
    Though the history of republicanism has been a popular topic of research since the mid-twentieth century, there are still various issues and areas that have remained neglected—not least the exchange of republican ideas from one cultural context to another, particularly across national boundaries. The purpose of this special issue is to offer some exploration of this neglected area, and this essay serves as an introduction to it. The essay offers an overview of the literature on republicanism that has been produced (...)
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  • Respublica utopiensium, ¿una utopía republicana?Dante E. Klocker - 2024 - Las Torres de Lucca: Revista Internacional de Filosofía Política 13 (1):53-66.
    A los efectos de mostrar el compromiso de Utopía de Moro con el ideal republicano de una civitas libera se siguen en este trabajo tres pasos o momentos. Tras unas breves, pero necesarias consideraciones terminológicas acerca de los dos principales sentidos de “república” a comienzos del siglo XVI, se desarrolla la concepción acerca de la naturaleza y legitimidad del poder defendida en la obra. Luego se analiza cómo dicho principio se traduce en las instituciones y prácticas de la comunidad utopiense. (...)
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  • Rewriting Eighteenth-Century Swedish Republican Political Thought: Heinrich Ludwig von Hess's Der Republickaner.Ere Pertti Nokkala - 2016 - History of European Ideas 42 (4):502-515.
    SUMMARYThis article provides the first comprehensive and historically genuine analysis of Heinrich Ludwig von Hess's pamphlet Der Republickaner. Hess was an important figure in both the German and Swedish eighteenth-century political context. Firstly, I will show that the proper historiographical context for Hess's pamphlet is Sweden. In previous historiography on the subject it has been argued that Der Republickaner was a comment on the constitutional reality of Hamburg. My article demonstrates that the original context of Hess's pamphlet was the power (...)
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