Thursday, July 2, 2026

Review of Machiavelli: Philosopher of Power by Ross King

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = History
Book Club Event = Book List (07/25/2026)
Intriguing Connections = 1) Biographies: Auto, Memoir, and Other Types


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“Close-up observations of Julius had obviously set him to thinking about the elements of political leadership.  In 1503 he had been troubled by the downfall of Cesare Borgia, who seemed to have done everything right.  Now he was puzzled by the success of the pope, who seemed to have done everything wrong.  What lessons, if any, could be taken from these unexpected developments?” – Ross King, Chapter Nine, Page 76

 

“Machiavelli’s great dream had failed spectacularly.  The citizen militia in which he had invested more than six years of hope and toil had proved itself an even bigger disaster than the futile canal or the unreliable and unscrupulous condottieri.  His faith in the courage and trustworthiness of a citizen army had proved itself the flimsiest of illusions.  The people of Prato had paid for this delusion in blood.  Florence, it now appeared, would pay the price with its liberty.” – Ross King, Chapter Thirteen, Page 109

 

“Over the years he had alienated many Florentine businessmen and politicians, first with his arrogance and abrasiveness, and then with scandalous behavior that became the fodder for so much gossip.  Finally, the drastic dereliction of his vaunted militia in Florence’s hour of direst need seemed to prove the worthlessness of both his pet project and, more generally, his abilities as a leader.  The plaudits won on the Fiume Morto in 1509 had turned, three years later, into widespread grumbling about folly and incompetence.  Still, if he felt that autumn that his situation could not get any worse, he was sadly mistaken: within months he was arrested and thrown into prison.” – Ross King, Chapter Fourteen, Page 114


Review

Is This An Overview?

Machiavelli learned abouts politics and war through experience.  Ideas developed based on assignments from the Florence republic, for the Signoria.  To be effective in the official post, usually meant seeming supportive of someone making demands, without providing any valid obligations to honor the demands.  Machiavelli observed that outcomes were not dependent on character and making the right decisions, as other factors influenced the outcomes.  Machiavelli observed that people have consistent behavioral traits.  Traits that can be fortunate in situations in which the trait facilitates a favorable outcome, but problematic when the situation requires a different behavioral trait. 

 

Power and sovereign independence require military force to have and defend.  Florence, like other Italian states, used mercenaries known as condottieri, to fight their battles.  The mercenaries were known to be idle, evasive, and duplicitous.  Machiavelli took up the task to raise a communal militia.  Mercenaries might have been unreliable, but the militia did not provide the wanted courage and trustworthiness. 

 

Caveats?

This is not a book about the ideas of Machiavelli, but there were some references to the ideas.  This is a book about the events that Machiavelli participated in, the events which inspired the ideas, provided evidence for the ideas.  Most of the book is about Italian conflicts, specifically, conflicts that involved Florence.  For many of the events, there is not much information about how Machiavelli influenced the events, the information provided is mostly about the resolution of the events. 


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•Who was Machiavelli?
•What was Machiavelli’s profession?
•What was the importance of Pisa?
•Who were the condottieri? 
•How did the Signoria want to handle contracts?
•Who was Caterina Sforza?
•What were the Papal States?
•Who was Cesare Borgia?
•How would Machiavelli deal with a city divided by factions?
•In Florence, how long did political office last? 
•What did Machiavelli think of astrologers?
•What happened to the communal militia?
•What did Machiavelli think of Julius? 
•What did Machiavelli think of people’s behaviors? 
•Who are the ottimati? 
•What was the Holy Roman Empire? 
•Why was Machiavelli go to jail?  What happened in the jail?

Book Details
Edition:                   EPub Edition
Publisher:               HarperCollins
Edition ISBN:         9780061870736
Pages to read:          192
Publication:             2007
1st Edition:              2007
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    4
Content          3
Overall          3