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Volume I.
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book I.: of laws in general.
book II.: of laws directly derived from the nature of government.
book III.: of the principles of the three kinds of government.
book IV.: that the laws of education ought to be relative to the principles of government.
book V.: that the laws, given by the legislator, ought to be relative to the principle of government.
book VI.: consequences of the principles of different governments with respect to the simplicity of civil and criminal laws, the form of judgements, and the inflicting of punishments.
book VII.: consequences of the different principles of the three governments, with respect to sumptuary laws, luxury, and the condition of women.
book VIII.: of the corruption of the principles of the three governments.
book IX.: of laws, in the relation they bear to a defensive force.
book X.: of laws, in the relation they bear to offensive force.
book XI.: of the laws which establish political liberty, with regard to the constitution.
book XII.: of the laws that form political liberty, as relative to the subject.
book XIII.: of the relation which the levying of taxes and the greatness of the public revenues have to liberty.
book XIV.: of laws as relative to the nature of the climate.
book XV.: in what manner the laws of civil slavery are relative to the nature of the climate.
book XVI.: how the laws of domestic slavery have a relation to the nature of the climate.
chap. I.: of domestic servitude.
chap. II.: that, in the countries of the south, there is a natural inequality between the two sexes.
chap. III.: that a plurality of wives greatly depends on the means of supporting them.
chap. IV.: that the law of polygamy is an affair that depends on calculation.
chap. V.: the reason of a law of malabar.
chap. VI.: of polygamy considered in itself.
chap. VII.: of an equality of treatment in case of many wives.
chap. VIII.: of the separation of women from men.
chap. IX.: of the connexion between domestic and political government.
chap. X.: the principle on which the morals of the east are founded.
chap. XI.: of domestic slavery independently of polygamy.
chap. XII.: of natural modesty.
chap. XIII.: of jealousy.
chap. XIV.: of the eastern manner of domestic government.
chap. XV.: of divorce and repudiation.
chap. XVI.: of repudiation and divorce amongst the romans.
book XVII.: how the laws of political servitude have a relation to the nature of the climate.
book XVIII.: of laws in the relation they bear to the nature of the soil.
book XIX.: of laws, in relation to the principles which form the general spirit, the morals, and customs, of a nation.
endmatter
Volume II.
Volume III.
Volume IV.
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Volume I.
The Complete Works of Montesquieu. Electronic Edition.
Volume I.
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