Explore how Niccolò Machiavelli, a former diplomat of the Florentine Republic, wrote The Prince as a high-stakes resume while in exile from the Medici family.

Machiavelli was obsessed with how power actually works, not how we wish it worked. He believed that in the rough-and-tumble of political conflict, those who cling to moral ideals while their enemies use raw power will inevitably wither and die.
Machiavelli: the exile who wrote the rulebook of power






Niccolò Machiavelli was a powerful political figure in Renaissance Florence, serving as the right-hand man to the head of the Florentine Republic for fourteen years. At forty-three years old, his career collapsed when the Medici family returned to power with the support of Spanish troops and the Pope. This transition led to his immediate downfall, moving him from a position of immense city-wide influence to that of a prisoner accused of conspiracy.
Machiavelli wrote The Prince during a period of desperation and internal exile at his farm in San Casciano. Rather than being a dry academic text, the book served as a high-stakes resume and a frantic attempt to regain political relevance. After being released from prison following the election of Pope Leo X, the failed diplomat hoped to prove his continued usefulness to the ruling powers through his insights on political philosophy and power.
Following the Medici family's return to power, Machiavelli was accused of conspiracy and thrown into a dungeon. He was subjected to the strappado, a brutal form of torture that dislocated his shoulders. He narrowly escaped execution due to a general amnesty declared when Cardinal Giovanni de’Medici became Pope Leo X. Broken and unemployed, he was eventually sent into internal exile, where he began writing his rulebook of power.
Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
