Book, Chapter
1 I, II | extended were Florence, Genoa, Pisa, Milan, Naples, and Bologna;
2 I, III| Fruili, created king of Italy—Pisa becomes great—Order and
3 I, III| the rising greatness of Pisa, in which city multitudes
4 I, V | city. Frederick halted at Pisa, desirous of making himself
5 I, V | Frederick, marching from Pisa, assailed and wasted the
6 I, VI | way of Genoa, he came to Pisa, where he endeavored to
7 I, VI | Robert, and returned to Pisa; and that he might more
8 I, VI | the emperor’s purpose; for Pisa and Lucca rebelled. The
9 I, VII| people of Rome—Council of Pisa—Council of Constance—Filippo
10 I, VII| appointed a council at Pisa, where they created Alexander
11 II, I | who were drawn together. Pisa, too, on account of its
12 II, V | entered Italy by the way of Pisa, and proceeded by the marshes
13 II, V | Florence, he returned to Pisa, where he entered into an
14 II, V | Ghibelline party become lord of Pisa and of Lucca, caused, with
15 II, VI | sovereignty of Lucca and of Pisa, and Castruccio Castracani,
16 II, VI | made himself master of Pisa, from whence, having been
17 II, VI | Castruccio made himself master of Pisa, but the Florentines, by
18 II, VII| with disgrace, and went to Pisa, where, either because they
19 II, VII| when the emperor had left Pisa to go into Lombardy, they
20 III, VI | duke having taken Bologna, Pisa, Perugia, and Sienna, and
21 III, VII| the Florentines—Taking of Pisa—War with the king of Naples—
22 III, VII| undertook the conquest of Pisa, and having gloriously completed
23 III, VII| enterprises; acquired Arezzo, Pisa, Cortona, Leghorn, and Monte
24 IV, IV | Inferiore, and the country about Pisa, proceeded to Volterra.
25 IV, V | few of his men escaping to Pisa. This defeat filled the
26 IV, V | occupied all the country of Pisa except Beintina, Calcinaja,
27 IV, V | discovered that was formed in Pisa, they would have secured
28 V, II | side, upon the confines of Pisa in the Genoese territory,
29 V, III| knight the government of Pisa for one year.~There were
30 V, VI | contrivance of Niccolo da Pisa, that his utmost exertions
31 VI, II | the latter having taken Pisa, and he himself having overcome
32 VI, III| Thence he proceeded toward Pisa, and with the assistance
33 VI, III| taken in the territory of Pisa, but also the Pomerancie
34 VI, III| harass the whole territory of Pisa. They were greatly alarmed
35 VI, V | smaller craft, which lay off Pisa, and during the siege of
36 VI, VII| again reached the sea near Pisa, accompanied by thick clouds,
37 VI, VII| separates the valleys of Pisa and Grieve. Between this
38 VIII, I | de’ Medici, archbishop of Pisa, being dead, Francesco Salviati,
39 VIII, I | Salviati, archbishop of Pisa, who, being ambitious and
40 VIII, I | Girolamo, to the college of Pisa, to study canon law, and
41 VIII, III| enemies from the territory of Pisa—They attack the papal states—
42 VIII, III| overran the country around Pisa.~At this time, ambassadors
43 VIII, III| provide for the places about Pisa. To keep the Lucchese faithful,
44 VIII, III| Calabria, proceeded toward Pisa, to meet Signor Roberto,
45 VIII, III| attack in the direction of Pisa, assembled the whole force
46 VIII, IV | December, and having arrived at Pisa, wrote to the government
47 VIII, VI | between the latter place and Pisa; but they could not, consistently
48 VIII, VI | the Florentines sent from Pisa to the camp a quantity of
49 VIII, VII| literature—The university of Pisa—The estimation of Lorenzo
50 VIII, VII| under Virginio Orsino, at Pisa, and complained to the pope,
51 VIII, VII| the districts of Prato, Pisa, and the Val di Pesa, he
52 VIII, VII| he opened a university at Pisa, which was conducted by
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