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The Architect of Realpolitik: Deconstructing Niccolò Machiavelli’s "The Prince"

Centuries after it was written, Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince remains one of the most polarizing works in the history of political thought. Composed in 1513 during a period of intense political upheaval in Florence, the treatise was originally intended as a "gift" and a job application to Lorenzo de’ Medici, the new ruler of the city. Machiavelli, an exiled diplomat, hoped the work would secure him a return to political life. Instead, it earned him a reputation as a "teacher of evil" and birthed the pejorative term "Machiavellian". A Departure from Idealism The Prince

Machiavelli's The Prince: Still Relevant after All These Years Instead, it earned him a reputation as a

Before Machiavelli, most political writing—often categorized as "mirrors for princes"—focused on how a ruler should act according to Christian virtues. Machiavelli famously stripped away this idealism, arguing that a leader who tries to be virtuous in every way will inevitably come to grief among so many who are not virtuous. an exiled diplomat

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