- Dedication
- Chapter I - How Many Kinds of Principalities There are,
and by What Means They are Acquired
- Chapter II - Concerning Hereditary Principalities
- Chapter III - Concerning Mixed Principalities
- Chapter IV - Why the Kingdom of Darius, Conquered by Alexander,
Did Not Rebel Against the Successors of Alexander at His Death
- Chapter V - Concerning the Way to Govern Cities or Principalities
Which Lived Under Their Own Laws Before They were Annexed
- Chapter VI - Concerning New Principalities Which are Acquired
by One’s Own Arms and Ability
- Chapter VII - Concerning New Principalities Which are Acquired
Either by the Arms of Others or by Good Fortune
- Chapter VIII - Concerning Those Who Have Obtained a Principality by Wickedness
- Chapter IX - Concerning a Civil Principality
- Chapter X - Concerning the Way in Which the Strength of All Principalities
Ought to be Measured
- Chapter XI - Concerning Ecclesiastical Principalities
- Chapter XII - How Many Kinds of Soldiery There are,
and Concerning Mercenaries
- Chapter XIII - Concerning Auxiliaries, Mixed Soldiery, and One’s Own
- Chapter XIV - That Which Concerns a Prince on the Subject of the Art of War
- Chapter XV - Concerning Things for Which Men, and Especially Princes,
are Praised or Blamed
- Chapter XVI - Concerning Liberality and Meanness
- Chapter XVII - Concerning Cruelty and Clemency,
and Whether it is Better to be Loved Than Feared
- Chapter XVIII - Concerning the Way in Which Princes Should Keep Faith
- Chapter XIX - That One Should Avoid Being Despised and Hated
- Chapter XX - Are Fortresses, and Many Other Things
to Which Princes Often Resort, Advantageous or Hurtful?
- Chapter XXI - How a Prince Should Conduct Himself So as to Gain Renown
- Chapter XXII - Concerning the Secretaries of Princes
- Chapter XXIII - How Flatterers Should Be Avoided
- Chapter XXIV - Why the Princes of Italy Have Lost Their States
- Chapter XXV - What Fortune Can Effect in Human Affairs
and How to Withstand Her
- Chapter XXVI - An Exhortation to Liberate Italy from the Barbarians
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