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Volume I.
Volume II.
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book XX.: of laws in relation to commerce, considered in its nature and distinctions.
book XXI.: of laws relative to commerce, considered in the revolutions it has met with in the world.
book XXII.: of laws in relation to the use of money.
book XXIII.: of laws in the relation they bear to the number of inhabitants.
chap. I.: of men and animals, with respect to multiplication of their species.
chap. II.: of marriage.
chap. III.: of the condition of children.
chap. IV.: of families.
chap. V.: of the several orders of lawful wives.
chap. VI.: of bastards in different governments.
chap. VII.: of the father’s consent to marriage.
chap. VIII.: the same subject continued.
chap. IX.: of young women.
chap. X.: what it is that determines to marriage.
chap. XI.: of the severity of government.
chap. XII.: of the number of males and females in different countries.
chap. XIII.: of sea-port towns.
chap. XIV.: of the productions of the earth which require a greater or less number of men.
chap. XV.: of the number of inhabitants with relation to the arts.
chap. XVI.: the concern of the legislator in the propagation of the species.
chap. XVII.: of greece, and the number of its inhabitants.
chap. XVIII.: of the state and number of people before the romans.
chap. XIX.: of the depopulation of the globe.
chap. XX.: that the romans were under a necessity of making laws, to encourage the propagation of the species.
chap. XXI.: of the laws of the romans relating to the propagation of the species.
chap. XXII.: of the exposing of children.
chap. XXIII.: of the state of the world after the destruction of the romans.
chap. XXIV.: the changes which happened in europe, with regard to the number of the inhabitants.
chap. XXV.: the same subject continued.
chap. XXVI.: consequences.
chap. XXVII.: of the law made in france to encourage the propagation of the species.
chap. XXVIII.: by what means we may remedy a depopulation.
chap. XXIX.: of hospitals.
book XXIV.: of laws as relative to religion, considered in itself, and in its doctrines.
book XXV.: of laws as relative to the establishment of religion and its external polity.
book XXVI.: of laws, as relative to the order of things on which they determine.
book XXVII.: of the origin and revolutions of the roman laws on successions.
book XXVIII.: of the origin and revolutions of the civil laws among the french.
book XXIX.: of the manner of composing laws.
book XXX.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the establishment of the monarchy.
book XXXI.: theory of the feudal laws among the franks, in the relation they bear to the revolutions of their monarchy.
endmatter
Volume III.
Volume IV.
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Volume II.
The Complete Works of Montesquieu. Electronic Edition.
Volume II.
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