The Classical Republicanism of John Milton

History of Political Thought 25 (2):243-275 (2004)
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Abstract

We know that John Milton read Machiavelli’s Discourses on Livy with very great care, and there is evidence suggesting that initially he found its argument attractive. In the end, however, he repudiated Machiavelli’s peculiar populism in no uncertain terms, and he did so by embracing Aristotle and Cicero in a manner that highlights the radical break which the Florentine initiated with the republicanism of the ancient Romans and Greeks

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Paul Anthony Rahe
Hillsdale College

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