kings, i. 338. ii.66,448,449. Proceeding from malice, is seldom or ever seen in pop- of the Babylonians and One of the greatest that ever other monarchies, ii. 357. was at Rome was appeased, ting bounds to princes. ii 353. When justified by God and tiquity of laws, ií. 401. Most natural to absolute mon- Julius Cæsar slain in it, ii. 91. From Solomon's time the To what some magistrates Seneff, the battle of it, ii. 333. our, ii. 437, 438. commonwealth, i. 448. ii. be bribed, ii. 296, 299. Shires, for inore ancient than meant by them, iii. 225, may be composed, ii. 371. nor, ii. 239. iii. 12, 13. fell at the battle of Pharsa- 327, 373, 438. ii. 51, 437. Often times arlvanced, i. 438. 70. No members of the civil so- of England, iii. 359. Absolutely resign themselves to the will of others, and why, ii. 186, 187. What states became so to What tributes they are forced men got above the law, ii. What denotes a slave, iii. 73, 140, 141. slaves, iji. 130, 131. of them began to govern their virtue had no equals, ii. 325. by it, i. 327, 352, 353, 365. tion, iii. 137. laws of a country, ii. 176, Often betray their masters in Several cities in Italy made against Cham and all his Always want fidelity or cour- age, ii. 214. ii. 332. tion, together with its ruin, the Syracusans, Spartans, and Romans, ii. 385. sion, ii. 90. nificence, ii. 251. His peaceable reign, ii. 252. Moses, ii. 422. rant, yet he was complained His wisdom surpassed that of oblige all to keep the laws competitions, i. 347. Majesty, the extravagancy of time, ii. 279. Roman people, ii. 112. must perpetually belong, as many to fight for their Spain, had nothing save Milan, marriage, ii. 224. 279. mea. Spain hereditary, ij. 49. iii. Had king's before the times of Hercules and Achilles, hended all Spain, ii. 109. Sacrificed their lives in de- of according to the humour 200. pet for 880 years, ii. 205. Hebrews, and what power the name of being head of 356. The poverty and simplicity the Carthaginians and Ro- Their legislature was in the by two lewd tyrants, ii. 223. Stability, the effect of good or- reduced Naples, Sicily, the i. 384. jj. 86, 87. ii. 86. subject to from the people, lute kingdoms, ii. 94, 253, 276, 280. Not wanting in Venice, ii. 99. 102. abolished, iïi. 203. Statues, from whom they receive jij. 347. vide acts of par- liament. national, iii. 339. of their kings, ii. 374. iii. i. 447. Subjection, lineal, neveranciently To the power however acquir- from Thebes and Epirus to And protection are relatives, iii. 166. restraint of liberty, ii. 183. men, who endeavoured to His opinion concerning tyran- ny, ii. 155. For aristocracy, ii. 156, 157, to gain the favour of weak Xerxes, his folly in inflicting and vicious princes, ii. 48. stripes upon the sea, i. 409. der the best princes, iii. 202, 199. Y fabulous story of him, ii. 257. which determine what is 360, 361. ii. 53. Z can be no revenge, ii. 345. an ill testimony of it, ii. 208. Zimri, his title to the supreme honour how acquired, i. by Agesilaus a good and Zoroaster, supposed to be Ham, i. 370. A way of killing worse than laws grew innumerable, ii. 125. man, but the scourge of the military, equally, con- mankind, iij. 79. from Rome, i. 331. jïi. 170. jussu populi, ii. 24. murder, ii. 100, 124, 154, How the people delivered legislative and executive 141, 186, 187, 284, 285. What followed from his being 'itary sword, ii. 24, 25. His counsel concerning the crowns often determined heads of corn, ji. 265. Taxes, upon what accounts to by the parliament at Paris, the people, ii. 452. use of to compel, iii. 375. their lords, iii. 293, 294. miseries of his death, ii. 286, any but by virtue of a con- tract, made either by him- was any one in the world, 440. Those of turpitude, how abol- Of the commons, as ancient as many of the nobilities, iii. 219. count of Rome, i. 426. ii. of his Apologetics, ii. 471, 472. and treatise of Scapula, ii. 472, 473. nobilitate felices, iji. 251. |