Machiavelli's Ideal Prince In The Epic Of Gilgamesh

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“Once upon a time in a far away land” in every imagination, is the start of how a prince and a princess live happily ever after. The fairy tales come to mind when thinking about princes, how charming, intelligent admiring, and many more characteristics that the “idyllic” prince has in many minds like my own. The question is simply asked, “What makes the idyllic prince?” most of us think of someone who has high quality and very first class. Niccolo Machiavelli describes an ideal prince as someone who is in control and dominant. The ideal prince should understand warfare and statecraft. Machiavelli was born in Florence Italy in 1496. He served as an administrator and a diplomat in the Florence Republic, and was imprisoned at various points of his career. One of his notable positions was serving as a political advisor to the Borgia family. He knew many political leaders of Italy, particularly Cesare Borgia, who he wrote The Prince about. Machiavelli judges Gilgamesh as a prince based on his behavior, qualities, and characteristics that Machiavelli describes in The Prince and the behaviors of Gilgamesh in the Epic of Gilgamesh. …show more content…

He goes by the name of Gilgamesh. He is the king of Uruk. He is a charming, tough, and an insanely smart man. He built high walls around his city to keep people out, and built incredible towers and monuments. Gilgamesh had a tyrannical behavior that made him fail in his most important duties to his people. He worked his people to death and took what he wanted from them. He used the women as he pleases and killed the men at will. The people of Uruk cried out to the gods so they can have peace. After his return, and after neglecting people for a very long time, Gilgamesh returns and acts like the king he wanted to

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