The Italian City State

The Italian City State
Author: Philip Jones
Publsiher: Clarendon Press
Total Pages: 718
Release: 1997-05-22
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780191590306

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Italy in the Middle Ages was unique among the countries of Europe in recreating, in a changed environment, the urban civilization of antiquity - the society, culture, and political formations of city-states. This book examines the origins and nature of this phenomenon from the fall of Rome to the eve of its consummation, the Italian Renaissance. The explanation is sought in Italy's singular `double existence' between two contrasted worlds - ancient and medieval. The ancient was characterised by the total predominance of the landed aristocracy in economy and society, enforced through a peculiar system of city states embracing town and country. The new medieval influences were marked by the separation of town, country and aristocracy, by the identification of towns with trade and a mercantile bourgeoisie, and by commercial and proto-industrial revolution. Italy shared in both worlds. It remained a land of cities and of an urbanized ruling class (except in the Norman South) and re-established territorial city states; but the staes were very different from those of antiquity, the city leaders in the commercial revolution, and Italy itself seen as a nation of shopkeepers, birthplace of capitalism. In this fascinating and ground-breaking study, Philip Jones traces in detail the tension and interaction between the two traditions, civic and patrician, mercantile and bourgeois, through all phases of Italian life to their culmination in two rival regimes of communes and despots.

The Italian City republics

The Italian City republics
Author: Daniel Philip Waley
Publsiher: McGraw-Hill Companies
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1969
Genre: History
ISBN: STANFORD:36105001676175

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The City State in Europe 1000 1600

The City State in Europe  1000 1600
Author: Tom Scott
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 395
Release: 2012-02-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780199274604

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In this, the first comprehensive study of city-states in medieval Europe, Tom Scott analyzes reasons for cities' aquisitions of territory and how they were governed. He argues that city-states did not wither after 1500, but survived by transformation and adaption.

Power And Imagination

Power And Imagination
Author: Lauro Martines
Publsiher: Knopf
Total Pages: 611
Release: 2013-09-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780307830937

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The great Italian city-states: Venice, Florence, Milan, and the others. The particular nature of their history and culture through the five centuries of their emergence, magnificent flowering, and twilight is brilliantly explored in terms of the internal shifts of economic, social, and political power—by violence, by manipulation, by the gradual pressures of changing circumstance. And here are the life and culture and works of imagination that were created as the merchants and guilds wrested dominion from the ancient nobility, from the first struggles against the Holy Roman Empire in the twelfth century through the rich cultural blaze and political exhaustion of the sixteenth. Lauro Martines, Professor of History at UCLA, has drawn together and chronicled in a single fluent narrative all the explosive energies, the social strife, the civil disorder, the political violence, the economic transformations, the crises of control, the religious fervor and corruption, and the spectacular achievements of art and intellect that made and defined the city-states.

Politics and Diplomacy in Early Modern Italy

Politics and Diplomacy in Early Modern Italy
Author: Daniela Frigo
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2000-01-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 0521561892

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This 2000 volume was the first attempt at a comparative reconstruction of the foreign policy and diplomacy of the major Italian states in the early modern period. The various contributions reveal the instruments and forms of foreign relations in the Italian peninsula. They also show a range of different case-studies and models which share the values and political concepts of the cultural context of diplomatic practice in the ancien régime. While Venice, the Papal States, the duchy of Savoy, Florence (later the duchy of Tuscany), Mantua, Modena, and later the kingdom of Naples may be considered minor states in the broader European context, their diplomatic activity was equal to that of the major powers. This reconstruction of their ambassadors, their secretaries, and their ceremonies offers a fascinating interpretation of the political history of early modern Italy.

Citizens without Nations

Citizens without Nations
Author: Maarten Prak
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2018-08-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 1107504155

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Citizenship is at the heart of our contemporary world but it is a particular vision of national citizenship forged in the French Revolution. In Citizens without Nations, Maarten Prak recovers the much longer tradition of urban citizenship across the medieval and early modern world. Ranging from Europe and the American colonies to China and the Middle East, he reveals how the role of 'ordinary people' in urban politics has been systematically underestimated and how civic institutions such as neighbourhood associations, craft guilds, confraternities and civic militias helped shape local and state politics. By destroying this local form of citizenship, the French Revolution initially made Europe less, rather than more democratic. Understanding citizenship's longer-term history allows us to change the way we conceive of its future, rethink what it is that makes some societies more successful than others, and whether there are fundamental differences between European and non-European societies.

The Italian City state

The Italian City state
Author: Philip James Jones
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023
Genre: City-states
ISBN: 1383011273

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Italy in the Middle Ages was unique among the countries of Europe in recreating the urban civilization of antiquity - the society, culture, & political formation of city-states. This book examines the origins & nature of this phenomenon.

Venice Reconsidered

Venice Reconsidered
Author: John Jeffries Martin,Dennis Romano
Publsiher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 568
Release: 2003-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 0801873088

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Venice Reconsidered offers a dynamic portrait of Venice from the establishment of the Republic at the end of the thirteenth century to its fall to Napoleon in 1797. In contrast to earlier efforts to categorize Venice's politics as strictly republican and its society as rigidly tripartite and hierarchical, the scholars in this volume present a more fluid and complex interpretation of Venetian culture. Drawing on a variety of disciplines—history, art history, and musicology—these essays present innovative variants of the myth of Venice—that nearly inexhaustible repertoire of stories Venetians told about themselves.