Book, Chapter
1 II, I | the mountain and the river Arno. I imagine these markets
2 II, I | fluente, or flowing of the Arno; and in support of their
3 II, I | near the flowing of the Arno.” This, however, may be
4 II, I | refuge in the Upper Val d’Arno, where part of their castles
5 II, V | many castles in the Val d’Arno and the Val di Nievole;
6 II, VII| this, the waters of the Arno having, in 1333, risen twelve
7 II, I | nobility on this side of the Arno divided themselves into
8 II, I | remained on this side of the Arno, the Cavalcanti, who were
9 II, I | situation, being defended by the Arno; hence it was first necessary
10 II, I | for all those beyond the Arno took part with the conquerors.~
11 III, VII| enter the city by the river Arno, and with their friends
12 IV, IV | of infantry in the Val d’Arno Inferiore, and the country
13 V, VI | increased that he crossed the Arno, plundering and destroying
14 V, VI | Casentino from the Val d’Arno; and being in an elevated
15 V, VI | the direction of the Val d’Arno, the summit of which was
16 V, VI | the Casentino, the Val d’Arno, the Val di Chiane, or the
17 V, VII| bridge which crosses the Arno, close to Poppi, he turned
18 VI, III| of Cennina, in the Val d’Arno Superiore, and took possession
19 VI, III| could not enter by the Val d’Arno, as he had first intended,
20 VIII, II | by the populace into the Arno, whose waters were then
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