Book, Chapter
1 Int | vicissitudes through which Italy was then passing, and in
2 Int | enough to unite dismembered Italy, for in the unity of his
3 I, I | Attila, king of the Huns, in Italy—Genseric takes Rome—The
4 I, I | reverses, in overrunning Italy, and finally in pillaging
5 I, I | the barbarians, came into Italy under Attila their king.
6 I, I | Attila, having entered Italy, laid siege to Aquileia,
7 I, I | was so great that he left Italy and retired into Austria,
8 I, I | Danube.~Attila having left Italy, Valentinian, emperor of
9 I, I | master of Africa to come to Italy, representing to him the
10 I, I | ravaged many other places in Italy, and then, loaded with wealth,
11 I, I | events occurred both in Italy and in the countries beyond;
12 I, I | in a league and invaded Italy under Odoacer their general.
13 I, I | and thought of settling in Italy; for the others, either
14 I, II | Theodoric dies—Belisarius in Italy— Totila takes Rome—Narses
15 I, II | New form of Government in Italy—Narses invites the Lombards
16 I, II | invites the Lombards into Italy—The Lombards change the
17 I, II | and the Eruli and Turingi, Italy. The kingdom of the Ostrogoths
18 I, II | to drive Odoacer out of Italy, gave Theodoric permission
19 I, II | Theodoric marched into Italy, slew Odoacer and his son,
20 I, II | took the title of king of Italy.~Theodoric possessed great
21 I, II | who might design to assail Italy; and if, toward the latter
22 I, II | goodness, not only Rome and Italy, but every part of the western
23 I, II | were truly miserable for Italy and the provinces overrun
24 I, II | easily imagine how much Italy and the other Roman provinces
25 I, II | dialects of France, Spain and Italy; which, partaking of the
26 I, II | for France, Spain, and Italy are full of fresh names,
27 I, II | thirty-eight years he reigned in Italy, he brought the country
28 I, II | hope of driving him out of Italy. Justinian appointed Belisarius
29 I, II | from thence passing into Italy, occupied Naples and Rome.
30 I, II | determined to send him into Italy again; but, coming with
31 I, II | compelled him to abandon Italy to Totila, who again took
32 I, II | a force to the relief of Italy; but the Sclavi, another
33 I, II | who, having arrived in Italy, routed and slew Totila.
34 I, II | the power of the Goths in Italy was quite annihilated, after
35 I, II | of Teias.~No sooner was Italy delivered from the Goths
36 I, II | form to the government of Italy; for he did not appoint
37 I, II | and governed the whole of Italy for the emperor, was given
38 I, II | facilitated the ruin of Italy, and gave the Lombards an
39 I, II | invade and take possession of Italy.~The Lombards, as was said
40 I, II | their king led them into Italy; where, having been established
41 I, II | drank. Being invited into Italy by Narses, with whom he
42 I, II | him think the conquest of Italy already secured; he therefore
43 I, II | attend to the affairs of Italy; and this seeming to Longinus
44 I, II | Lombards and of the whole of Italy, he communicated his design
45 I, II | from occupying the whole of Italy, or of extending their dominion
46 I, II | their being driven out of Italy. The affairs of the Lombards
47 I, III| greatness of the pontiffs in Italy—Abuse of censures and indulgences—
48 I, III| Fruili, created king of Italy—Pisa becomes great—Order
49 I, III| division of the states of Italy—Electors of the emperor
50 I, III| Nevertheless, the whole of Italy, being subject either to
51 I, III| importance in the affairs of Italy, was Theodoric, king of
52 I, III| having taken possession, and Italy being divided into many
53 I, III| barbarians carried on in Italy, it may be here remarked,
54 I, III| still continued, and kept Italy weak and unsettled. And,
55 I, III| principalities which ruled Italy till the coming of Charles
56 I, III| Pepin, who sent an army into Italy, and besieged the Lombards
57 I, III| reorganize the states of Italy, consented that they should
58 I, III| ordered all that part of Italy adjoining to them, which
59 I, III| created his son Pepin, king of Italy, whose dominion extended
60 I, III| the title of Eugenius II. Italy having come into the hands
61 I, III| occasioned them the loss of Italy; for the Lombards, gathering
62 I, III| duke of Fruili, king of Italy. These events induced the
63 I, III| occupied Pannonia, to assail Italy; but, in an engagement with
64 I, III| the whole country. Thus Italy was in those times very
65 I, III| that he would come into Italy and relieve him from the
66 I, III| Berengarii.~The States of Italy were governed in this manner:
67 I, III| in Rome and the rest of Italy, in proportion as they were
68 I, III| The Emperor Otho came into Italy, took the kingdom from the
69 I, III| whereupon the emperor came into Italy and replaced him; and the
70 I, IV | Dominic and St. Francis.~Italy was at this time governed
71 I, IV | kingdom. Some of the people of Italy took the part of the pope,
72 I, IV | and the Ghibellines; that Italy, relieved from the inundations
73 I, IV | his people to come into Italy, and fall barefooted upon
74 I, IV | of these people came into Italy at the time when the province
75 I, IV | William, the troubles of Italy were in some measure abated;
76 I, IV | plundered the coasts of Italy daily. On this account William
77 I, IV | took the title of king of Italy, but afterward contented
78 I, IV | think himself safe even in Italy, on account of the disunion
79 I, IV | mind, but came again into Italy to subdue certain places
80 I, IV | time Frederick returned to Italy, and while he was preparing
81 I, IV | Emperor Henry came into Italy with Gostanza his wife,
82 I, IV | endeavored to withdraw him from Italy as he had done Otho. Frederick
83 I, V | CHAPTER V~The state of Italy—Beginning of the greatness
84 I, V | this time the states of Italy were governed in the following
85 I, V | III. there had come into Italy a man called Ezelin, who,
86 I, V | as occasioned the ruin of Italy; for the factions of the
87 I, V | to him, and establish in Italy a firm bulwark against the
88 I, V | excited him to come into Italy to take possession of that
89 I, V | in Germany, marched into Italy against Charles, with whom
90 I, V | being unknown, put to death.~Italy remained in repose until
91 I, V | Emperor Rodolph to come into Italy and assist him. Thus the
92 I, V | Rodolph did not come into Italy, being detained by the war
93 I, V | might design to come into Italy, and from the French, who
94 I, V | instead of coming into Italy, gave the empire the advantage
95 I, V | French and Germans left Italy, and the country remained
96 I, V | secretly sent Sciarra into Italy, who, having arrived at
97 I, V | emperors having abandoned Italy, many places became free,
98 I, VI | Emperor Henry comes into Italy—The Florentines take the
99 I, VI | Milan—The Emperor Louis in Italy —John, king of Bohemia,
100 I, VI | John, king of Bohemia, in Italy—League against the king
101 I, VI | which afterward governed Italy, I shall speak of them from
102 I, VI | Frederick II. coming into Italy, and the Ghibelline party,
103 I, VI | of Luxemburg, came into Italy, with the pretext of going
104 I, VI | themselves with the Guelphs of Italy and become princes in the
105 I, VI | receive the crown, came into Italy; and being at Milan, as
106 I, VI | Rome, in order to disturb Italy with less difficulty, he
107 I, VI | despairing of the affairs of Italy, returned to Germany. He
108 I, VI | change in the parties of Italy; for the Florentines and
109 I, VI | above any principality of Italy. But that this surprise
110 I, VI | interfering in the affairs of Italy.~When Attila, king of the
111 I, VI | amid the devastations of Italy, and soon increased both
112 I, VI | drive the Lombards out of Italy, the duke of Benevento and
113 I, VI | in veneration throughout Italy. This was so completely
114 I, VI | not only to the princes of Italy, but to the ultramontane
115 I, VI | pontificate and finding Italy lost, fearing, too, that
116 I, VI | himself in the defense of Italy. To this end he issued a
117 I, VI | intention of going into Italy. In consequence of this,
118 I, VI | death, brought forces into Italy, and drove Queen Joan and
119 I, VI | adjacent, but the whole of Italy sent ambassadors to him.
120 I, VI | Egidio, a Spaniard, into Italy. He restored the reputation
121 I, VI | throughout the whole of Italy; he recovered Bologna from
122 I, VI | victories, resolved to visit Italy and Rome, whither also the
123 I, VI | Cardinal Egidio was dead, Italy again recommenced her ancient
124 I, VII| Naples—Political condition of Italy.~A schism having thus arisen
125 I, VII| sent Louis of Anjou into Italy to recover the kingdom for
126 I, VII| of making himself king of Italy, he died. Boniface IX. succeeded
127 I, VII| period in the armies of Italy, commanded partly by those
128 I, VII| warriors the princes of Italy long carried on their wars,
129 I, VII| and advised him to come to Italy. Having a personal interview
130 I, VII| the principal leaders of Italy, among the first of whom
131 I, VII| explaining the condition of Italy in respect of her princes
132 I, VII| falling into the customs of Italy, submitted their forces
133 I, VII| others.~Thus the arms of Italy were either in the hands
134 I, VII| with so little prudence, Italy honored.~With these idle
135 II, I | world, and particularly in Italy, in comparison of ancient
136 II, I | Carthaginians, rendered Italy secure from foreign invasion,
137 II, I | enumerated among the cities of Italy.~There are various opinions
138 II, I | like the other cities of Italy. Besides, Cornelius refers
139 II, I | the fortune of the rest of Italy; and, during this period,
140 II, I | wane, all the places of Italy governed themselves with
141 II, I | take part in the sects of Italy, was afterward the more
142 II, I | city, as all the rest of Italy had long time been, became
143 II, II | among the first cities of Italy, and would have attained
144 II, II | of those whose power in Italy had become great, even when
145 II, III| to meet all the states of Italy with her own forces. The
146 II, IV | having been called into Italy by the king of Naples, to
147 II, V | Emperor Henry was coming into Italy, and with him all the Florentine
148 II, V | people. The emperor entered Italy by the way of Pisa, and
149 II, VI | Louis of Bavaria visits Italy—The excitement he produces—
150 II, VI | of the pope, to come into Italy. After passing through Lombardy
151 II, VII| this time the emperor left Italy. The anti-pope, by means
152 III, I | maintain their influence in Italy, sent among us multitudes
153 III, I | terrified all the cities of Italy. The Florentines not only
154 III, I | corruption of all the cities of Italy, magnificent Signors! has
155 III, I | certainly in the cities of Italy all that is corruptible
156 III, I | formidable, and the whole of Italy is reduced to a state of
157 III, II | residing at Avignon, governed Italy by legates, who, proud and
158 III, V | served the pope and others in Italy. Their fears from without
159 III, VI | Louis of Anjou came into Italy, to recover the kingdom
160 III, VI | to make himself king of Italy by force. In 1391 he commenced
161 III, VI | which to be crowned king of Italy at Florence, died before
162 IV, I | the view of the princes of Italy as well as in their own;
163 IV, I | defeat, famous throughout all Italy, no death occurred except
164 IV, V | misfortunes over the whole of Italy, we did not wish to slander
165 IV, VII| there were few places in Italy which did not contain some,
166 V, I | of empires—The state of Italy—The military factions of
167 V, I | force. These causes made Italy, first under the ancient
168 V, I | situated in the middle of Italy, wealthy, and prepared for
169 V, I | long peace, was wasted in Italy by the contemptible manner
170 V, I | were again admitted into Italy, and she again sunk under
171 V, I | be avoided and decried.~Italy was reduced to such a condition
172 V, I | factions or armed parties in Italy, the Sforzesca and the Braccesca.
173 V, I | almost all the forces of Italy were assembled. Of the two,
174 V, II | terrified the princes of Italy, who, being jealous of the
175 V, II | had alarmed the princes of Italy with the apprehension that
176 V, III| forsaken by the whole of Italy; now we have the duke in
177 V, III| they are disunited, all Italy being filled with their
178 V, III| letters to every part of Italy, overcharged with complaints,
179 V, IV | CHAPTER IV~New wars in Italy—Niccolo Piccinino, in concert
180 V, IV | entertained that the arms of Italy would be laid aside, although
181 V, IV | possessing nearly all the arms of Italy, under the two principal
182 V, IV | for having dispersed over Italy letters intimating that
183 V, IV | curbed, all the powers of Italy would soon have to submit
184 V, IV | considered well the powers of Italy, he would see that some
185 V, IV | sufficient influence in Italy in free us from any apprehension
186 V, V | the mountains which divide Italy from Germany, so that it
187 V, V | of Trento, and entering Italy, does not immediately traverse
188 V, VII| abodes in various parts of Italy, each according to his own
189 VI, I | became known throughout Italy, he had again reorganized
190 VI, I | position among the states of Italy, the count would be the
191 VI, I | join Filippo and divide Italy among them. The Florentines
192 VI, II | against Sforza—General war in Italy—Losses of the duke of Milan —
193 VI, II | times there was not one in Italy who surpassed him in vigor
194 VI, II | to La Marca, the whole of Italy would have obtained repose
195 VI, III| endeavors to restore peace to Italy—The Venetians oppose this
196 VI, III| peace among the princes of Italy, and with this object endeavored,
197 VI, IV | be more to the safety of Italy for him to ratify the peace
198 VI, IV | republic of Florence and for Italy, that the count should be
199 VI, IV | highly beneficial both to Italy and the republic; for it
200 VI, V | Venetians, and all the powers of Italy, of which some from ambition
201 VI, V | duke well knew that in all Italy he could not find braver
202 VI, V | Frederick III., came into Italy to be crowned. On the thirtieth
203 VI, V | great pomp throughout all Italy.~The month of May, 1452,
204 VI, VI | of Anjou is called into Italy by the Florentines —René
205 VI, VI | made by the Florentines in Italy to resist the hostile League,
206 VI, VI | allow René of Anjou to enter Italy in favor of the duke and
207 VI, VI | who promised to come into Italy during the month of June,
208 VI, VI | commenced his march into Italy, but was stopped by the
209 VI, VI | part of his forces into Italy by sea, and, in the meantime,
210 VI, VI | successful; for René came into Italy by sea, and his forces,
211 VI, VI | and send his son John into Italy, according to his promise,
212 VI, VI | Notwithstanding this, that Italy might still retain the seeds
213 VI, VII| return to the affairs of Italy. In the year 1456, the disturbances
214 VI, VII| the manners and customs of Italy, would be able to govern
215 VI, VII| so powerful an enemy in Italy, and was doubtful of the
216 VI, VII| concurrence of the powers of Italy in its favor he signified
217 VI, VII| internal dissensions of Italy might be quelled, and the
218 VII, I | account of the affairs of Italy, still it would be improper
219 VII, I | other princes and states of Italy, have most commonly arisen
220 VII, I | a rebel. Traveling about Italy, with the design of exciting
221 VII, I | magnificence of buildings in Italy alone, he erected an hospital
222 VII, I | princes and governments of Italy, but throughout all Europe.
223 VII, II | enemies.~While Florence and Italy were in this condition,
224 VII, II | now the first general in Italy, and possessing no territory,
225 VII, II | all the principalities of Italy might change their rulers
226 VII, II | celebrated cavaliers of Italy. Among the most distinguished
227 VII, II | republic, and to the whole of Italy, as their alliance with
228 VII, IV | in Florence, the rest of Italy, though at peace, was filled
229 VII, IV | of the best generals of Italy, succeeded him. Pope Paul
230 VII, IV | regarded by the princes of Italy, and all sought to obtain
231 VII, IV | eldest son of the duke.~Italy being at peace, the principal
232 VII, IV | is there, throughout all Italy, so many and such shocking
233 VII, IV | at home, but throughout Italy. After Piero’s death, the
234 VII, IV | the city, the condition of Italy, and the views of her princes,
235 VII, IV | expected from the princes of Italy, by his means? Diotisalvi
236 VII, V | sending to all the princes of Italy to request assistance, none
237 VII, VI | after having traveled over Italy and visited Venice and Milan (
238 VII, VI | to become parties to it. Italy was thus divided in two
239 VII, VI | of the first generals of Italy; and had long served the
240 VII, VI | distinguished warriors of Italy, left two sons, Oddo and
241 VII, VI | spread consternation all over Italy; but those which shortly
242 VIII, I | injure their primary object.~Italy, as we have seen above,
243 VIII, II | long-continued peace of Italy? They have no excuse for
244 VIII, III| available arguments, and filled Italy with accounts of the treachery
245 VIII, IV | hereafter seen, the ruin of Italy.~Lorenzo de’ Medici had
246 VIII, IV | propriety upon the affairs of Italy, the disposition of her
247 VIII, IV | the duke and the rest of Italy, occasioned the utmost joy
248 VIII, V | New occasions of war in Italy—Differences between the
249 VIII, V | effecting the pacification of Italy. With this view, at the
250 VIII, V | ruin of the church and of Italy, he endeavored to make peace
251 VIII, V | The Venetians, finding all Italy united against them, endeavored
252 VIII, VI | the principal cities of Italy, to give some account of
253 VIII, VI | treaty all the powers of Italy were united, except the
254 VIII, VII| saw no safer connection in Italy than Lorenzo’s, and therefore
255 VIII, VII| to the internal wars of Italy, and by his wisdom and authority
256 VIII, VII| most distinguished men in Italy. For Mariano da Chinazano,
257 VIII, VII| not only by the princes of Italy, but by those of distant
258 VIII, VII| raised his fame throughout Italy, and his reputation for
259 VIII, VII| in Florence, or even in Italy, one so celebrated for wisdom,
260 VIII, VII| citizens and all the princes of Italy mourned for him, and sent
261 VIII, VII| in a little time ruined Italy, and continue to keep her
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