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Esther Alo Freelancer @ Adekunle Ajasin University Akungba Akoko
In Leadership 3 min read
Beyond the Misconception: Who Was Machiavelli Really?
<p>Niccolò Machiavelli.</p><p>Who was he really?</p><p><br/></p><p>For most people, his name carries a dark shadow.</p><p>A brutal man.</p><p>A manipulative figure who believed leaders should be feared, ruthless, and cold.</p><p>That’s how I first heard of him too—through my lecturer. The way he was described, I pictured a monster in human form. But curiosity got the best of me. I wanted to know: what exactly did this man do to deserve such a reputation?</p><p><br/></p><p>So I went digging. I found his most famous work—The Prince. And what I discovered changed everything.</p><p><br/></p><p>See, Machiavelli wasn’t just sitting somewhere imagining theories. He lived in the chaos of Renaissance Italy, a time of betrayals, invasions, and unstable governments. He served in Florence’s government until the Medici family came back into power. Then he was stripped of office, imprisoned, tortured, and thrown into exile.</p><p><br/></p><p>It was in exile that he wrote The Prince—a brutally honest account of power and survival. Not the fairytale version, not the idealistic version—just raw reality.</p><p><br/></p><p>He wrote things like:</p><p>“It’s safer to be feared than loved.”</p><p>“Appearances matter more than morals.”</p><p>“Break promises if keeping them threatens the state.”</p><p>On the surface, that sounds harsh, even wicked. But here’s the thing—he wasn’t saying this is how leaders should behave. He was saying this is how they actually do behave. He was exposing the machinery of power, no matter how ugly it looked.</p><p><br/></p><p>And maybe that honesty was too much for his time. People painted him as evil, but in truth? He was a realist.</p><p>What many don’t know is that in another of his works, Discourses on Livy, he actually supported republicanism and civic virtue. He admired the Roman Republic. He believed in participation, stability, and the people.</p><p>So why then does The Prince feel so dark? Because it was born out of crisis. Florence had fallen. Chaos was everywhere. And Machiavelli was saying: “If you want to survive in this kind of world, this is what it takes.”</p><p><br/></p><p>That doesn’t make him immoral. It makes him honest. He held up a mirror to power—and most people didn’t like what they saw.</p><p><br/></p><p>Fast forward to today, and his ideas still echo in politics, leadership, even business. You don’t have to agree with him, but you can’t deny him. He dared to say:</p><p>“Power isn’t pretty. Here’s how it works. Now decide what you want to do with it.”</p><p><br/></p><p>So pause and think again.</p><p>Was Machiavelli truly a villain…</p><p>or just a man brave enough to tell the truth?</p><p><br/></p><p>Because maybe he wasn’t teaching evil.</p><p>Maybe he was teaching realism in a world that prefers illusions.</p><p><br/></p><p>He was Exiled, mocked, misunderstood—</p><p>but his ideas? Timeless. Priceless </p><p>A masterpiece💯</p><p><br/></p><p>So What do you think—was he ruthless, or just brutally honest?</p>
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Beyond the Misconception: Who Was Machiavelli R...
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