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Welcome to real history mysteries

of the Italian Renaissance,

featuring the brilliant and winsome

Nicola Machiavelli 


 
COMING SOON:  Machiavelli, Murder and the Medici  
 
The latest Nicola Machiavelli Real History Mystery focuses on her not-yet-infamous father Niccolo and the brutal recapture of Florence by the Medici that pushed him from porwer and eventually into imprisonment and torture for a crime he likely didn't commit. As always you will find murder, sex, romance,  Nicola's great detective work and great Renaissance art throughout. 
 

The Nicola Machiavelli historical mystery series, which will span the entire high Renaissance, is the brainchild of Stanford history graduate Maryann Philip. A Borgia Daughter Dies, Da Vinci Detects, and Martin Luther and Murder have collectively sold tens of thousands of e-copies and consistently gotten 4 out of 5 stars on Amazon. 
 
The fourth real history mystery takes Nicola to England early in the reign of Henry VIII and his first and most fascinating Queen, Katherine or Aragon. Assassins steal cannons Henry VIII ordered from Italy's finest armory and behead those guarding them. Is one of England's feuding families determined to reignite the War of the Roses, or does the young king have new enemies? Caught in the middle between a lustful King Henry, his jealous Queen Katherine and the unknown conspirators is the brilliant and beautiful Nicola Machiavelli, who delivered the cannons. The King pursues her for sex and threatens her with death. The Queen, seeking to protect everyone, asks her to investigate. Nicola will explore coastal castles and witness the splendor of Tudor Christmas traditions to expose crimes that endanger Henry's crown. 

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Loved The Medici? Loving the Serpent Queen? Curious what happened in between?

The real history behind the mystery: when the Medici fell from power, Niccolo Machiavelli rose. When guile and slaughter of innocents returned the Medici to power, Machiavelli was imprisoned and tortured for a crime he likely didn't commit.  

Did you love The Medici miniseries and are you loving The Serpent Queen?  Do you wonder why Netflix skipped several generations before resuming the Medici saga with Catherine, the cruel and devious "Serpent Queen" who was nothing like her great grandfather, Lorenzo Il Magnifico?  

 

My guess is that Netflix abandoned the Medici because they were pushed out of power and exiled from Florence after Il Magnifico's death, for the first time in the family's four hundred year reign. Their story became that of the short-lived Republic of Florence and Niccolo Machiavelli, its second-in-command.  Real history: the Republic repeatedly staved off Il Magnifico's inept oldest son, Catherine de' Medici's grandfather. Treachery, guile, and the slaughter of thousands of innocents opened a path for the family's return.

 

Machiavelli was then imprisoned and repeatedly tortured on order of Il Magnifico's youngest son--later a pope--for a crime he likely didn't commit.  

 

Machiavelli, Murder and the Medici tells that story, as a backdrop to a murder mystery intertwined with the politics of the short-lived Florentine Republic and the Medici followers who helped  overthrow it. If Amazon lets me I will  give it away for free for a brief period after first publication.  Watch for a link here.  

 

After more than 500  Amazon reviews, all four previous Nicola Machiavelli "Real History Mysteries" average four out of five stars. All contain amazing Renaissance art. Machiavelli's  fictional illegitimate daugher is the mystery-solving protagonist in each, traveling to meet famous historical figures such as the Borgias, the artists Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael, the young Martin Luther, and Henry VIII early in his reign with his formidable first queen, Katherine of Aragon. 

 

Films have always wrongly portrayed Niccolo Machiavelli as dour, dishonest and cynical based on The Prince, the "Machiavellian" book that made him infamous. Machiavelli, Murder and the Medici will show you the far more fascinating real man. He was a cameleon: a brilliand diplomat but also a jokester, a womanizer, a poet, a bon vivant, a Florentine patriot and a friend to many in the Florentine elite. It says much about him that he published a comic play as his first public act after his torture and imprisonment. All Italy enjoyed it--even the Medici pope who ordered his arrest and torture. It also speaks volumes  that Machiavelli's The Prince was not published until after his death, though he pubished his histories, discourses and thousands of pages of other writings during his lifetime. 

 

The Prince was intended only for the eyes of Catherine de' Medici's father, who never read it. He was a very different Lorenzo from his grandfather, Il Magnifico. Catherine was very much her father's daughter. 

  

 

 

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