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11 - Patronage and its role in government: the Florentine patriciate and Volterra

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2009

William J. Connell
Affiliation:
Seton Hall University, New Jersey
Andrea Zorzi
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi, Florence
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Summary

Volterra represents a remarkable anomaly in the formation of the Florentine territorial state. It may be impossible to detect a general pattern in the incorporation of the communities into the large dominion emerging in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century Tuscany. However, the case of Volterra seems atypical for many reasons, the first of them being the late date of its formal submission to Florence (1472), which makes this town the only significant case of enlargement of the Florentine state in the Medicean period. On the other hand, this submission was only the final act of a long process begun in 1361.

And yet, precisely this atypicality, and in particular the persistence for over a century of a fundamental ambiguity in the relationships between ‘quasi-ruler’ and ‘quasi-subject’, makes it possible to distinguish with greater clarity some important elements relating to the general theme of this volume. I refer here, for example, to the divergence between juridical forms and political realities, to the complex relationship between institutional framework and practice of government, to the combination of regional policy with day-to-day local relations, and to the ubiquity of formal as well as informal negotiations.

Before discussing Volterra's case in broader terms, it may be opportune to outline the principal stages of its subjugation.

Florentine hegemony over Volterra, only intermittently established in the thirteenth century and in the first half of the fourteenth, was put on a solid and durable basis beginning in 1361.

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Chapter
Information
Florentine Tuscany
Structures and Practices of Power
, pp. 225 - 241
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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