The third subproject adds to the results of the second. From the vantage point of Alberico Gentili’s Wars of the Romans (1599), a Carneadean debate on the justice of Roman imperialism, the extraordinary influence of that Ciceronian tradition of thought shall be examined. Gentili’s treatise has to be seen, not merely as the outgrowth of Ciceronian political thought as framed by Lactantius and Augustine, but also as one of the key early modern texts that struggled to define the possibility of moral and ultimately legal norms between the emerging empires of Europe, and between those empires and the polities they conquered. Before Gentili, Augustine’s view of a strict dichotomy between Roman pagan virtue and Christian virtue (Horn 1999) was taken up again and rendered forcefully, and influentially, by Machiavelli (for very different interpretations, see Pocock 2003; Rahe 2008).
While for Augustine gloria remained highly ambivalent at best, Machiavelli gave it a straightforwardly sympathetic rendering (Irwin 2007: 725-43; Perreau-Saussine 2007). Adopting Augustine’s dichotomy between pagan and Christian virtue, but appraising pagan virtue in a way diametrically opposed to the church father, Machiavelli aims to show how the Romans’ virtue (as opposed to fortune) was instrumental in expanding their empire. This is in stark contrast to Cicero’ own stance; the point is that when writing on virtue, Cicero has in mind, not Augustine and Machiavelli’s pagan virtue with its concern for glory, but rather other-regarding virtue, what he calls the honestum (Skinner 1981; Colish 1978, without sufficient emphasis on the conflict; Berlin 2013, taking Machiavelli's Augustinian pagan-Christian dichotomy at face value however).