Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker i Cambridge Studies in Italian History and Culture-serien

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  • - The Birth and Death of a Nation State
     
    1 551,-

    This volume of essays offers a series of insights into the 'age of the Enlightenment', not only in Italy but throughout Europe. In its political reforms, Naples was influenced by European culture. However, Naples also exercised a strong influence upon European culture and helped shape modern, enlightened European culture.

  • - Structures and Practices of Power
     
    1 118,-

    The book collects the best recent research on the important dominion that was created by the Republic of Florence in Tuscany during the Renaissance. The essays include studies of state-building, fiscal policy, and the personal and political relations of Florentines with the inhabitants of subject communities.

  • - The Structure of Diplomatic Practice, 1450-1800
     
    1 356,-

    This 2000 volume was the first attempt at a comparative reconstruction of the foreign policy and diplomacy of the major Italian states during the early modern period. The discussion includes Venice, the Papal States, the duchy of Savoy, Florence, Mantua, Modena, and the kingdom of Naples.

  •  
    655,-

    A large number of Italian artists, singers, musicians and other performers travelled throughout Europe during the eighteenth century and made an important impact on taste and fashion. This multi-disciplinary 1999 book examines the importance of their influence outside Italy in locations as diverse as London, St Petersburg, Dresden, Stockholm and Vienna.

  •  
    466,-

    This 2002 book describes power and politics in Rome and the role of the papacy in early modern European politics. It attempts to overcome the traditional historiographical approach to the papacy during this period by focusing on the actual mechanisms of power in the papal court - political, personal, spiritual and ceremonial.

  • - The Structure of Diplomatic Practice, 1450-1800
     
    466,-

    This 2000 volume was the first attempt at a comparative reconstruction of the foreign policy and diplomacy of the major Italian states during the early modern period. The discussion includes Venice, the Papal States, the duchy of Savoy, Florence, Mantua, Modena, and the kingdom of Naples.

  •  
    759,-

    Drawing upon a wealth of archival material, this 2001 book deals with one of the most controversial subjects in Italian historiography, namely the success or failure of the Church's policy during the counter-Reformation to exert rigorous control not just over theology but over all branches of knowledge.

  • av Gigliola Pagano (Universita di Reggio Calabria De Divitiis
    1 446,-

    This book shows how England's conquest of Mediterranean trade proved to be the first step in building its future economic and commercial hegemony, and how Italy lay at the heart of that process. The author looks well beyond Braudel's influential picture of a Spanish-dominated Mediterranean world and sheds fresh light on Italy's gradual commercial decline.

  •  
    1 356,-

    This 2002 book describes power and politics in Rome and the role of the papacy in early modern European politics. It attempts to overcome the traditional historiographical approach to the papacy during this period by focusing on the actual mechanisms of power in the papal court - political, personal, spiritual and ceremonial.

  •  
    1 342,-

    Drawing upon a wealth of archival material, this 2001 book deals with one of the most controversial subjects in Italian historiography, namely the success or failure of the Church's policy during the counter-Reformation to exert rigorous control not just over theology but over all branches of knowledge.

  • - Spiritual Fun and Learning for Women
    av Elissa B. (University of Chicago) Weaver
    580 - 1 342,-

    A pioneering study of convent theatre in early modern Italy, an all-female dramatic tradition popular in its time but now virtually forgotten. It reveals much about convent authors, convent education, the high level of the nuns' literacy, and surprisingly close relationship between the convent and secular culture.

  • - Confraternities and Social Order in Early Modern Italy
     
    347,-

    An examination of how lay religious confraternities in Italy shaped early ritual kinship. This 1999 book discusses how sixteenth-century social change and religious reform transformed confraternities, and how these altered groups became key agents in achieving the more rigid social order of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

  • - Political Culture and the Thirty Years' War
    av Toby (University of Durham) Osborne
    712 - 1 476,-

    This book is a major study in English of the duchy of Savoy during the period of the Thirty Years War, examining the varied and powerful dynastic aspirations of the House of Savoy through the career of its leading ambassador, Alessandro Scaglia (1592-1641).

  • av Christopher (University of Dundee) Storrs
    407 - 1 426,-

    This book deals with the crucial relationship between war and state formation in early modern Europe by examining the participation of Savoy in the Nine Years War (1688-97) and the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14) under Duke Victor Amadeus II.

  • - The Birth and Death of a Nation State
     
    595,-

    This volume of essays offers a series of insights into the 'age of the Enlightenment', not only in Italy but throughout Europe. In its political reforms, Naples was influenced by European culture. However, Naples also exercised a strong influence upon European culture and helped shape modern, enlightened European culture.

  • - Art, Design and Culture
     
    347,-

    This volume of interdisciplinary essays explores the history and the diversity of the Italian garden from medieval times to the modern period, showing how different types of garden developed throughout the peninsula, depending on climate, situation and culture.

  • - The Foundations of Power in the Venetian State
    av Joanne M. Ferraro
    580,-

    This book focuses on the behavior of the ruling families of Brescia, a rich and strategically vital city under Venetian rule, during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century.

  • av Christine Shaw
    506 - 1 476,-

    Political exiles were a prominent feature of political life in Renaissance Italy, often a source of intense concern to the states from which they were banished, and a ready instrument for governments wishing to intervene in the affairs of their rivals and enemies. This book, first published in 2000, provides a systematic analysis of the role of exiles in the political life of fifteenth-century Italy. The main focus is on the experiences and reactions of the exiles, and on how Italian states dealt with their own exiles and those of other powers. Siena, notorious in the 1480s for the numbers of her citizens in exile, is used as the model with which other cities are compared. Such a detailed study of the phenomenon of exile also provides alternative perspectives on the nature and power of governments in fifteenth-century Italy, and on ideas about the legitimacy of political authority and political action.

  • - Confraternities and Social Order in Early Modern Italy
     
    1 730,-

    An examination of how lay religious confraternities in Italy shaped early ritual kinship. This 1999 book discusses how sixteenth-century social change and religious reform transformed confraternities, and how these altered groups became key agents in achieving the more rigid social order of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.

  •  
    1 700,-

    A large number of Italian artists, singers, musicians and other performers travelled throughout Europe during the eighteenth century and made an important impact on taste and fashion. This multi-disciplinary 1999 book examines the importance of their influence outside Italy in locations as diverse as London, St Petersburg, Dresden, Stockholm and Vienna.

  • - Structures and Practices of Power
     
    466,-

    The book collects the best recent research on the important dominion that was created by the Republic of Florence in Tuscany during the Renaissance. The essays include studies of state-building, fiscal policy, and the personal and political relations of Florentines with the inhabitants of subject communities.

  • av Saskatchewan, Canada) Terpstra & Nicholas (University of Regina
    610 - 1 640,-

    This 1995 book examines the confraternities, lay groups through which Italians of the Renaissance expressed their individual and collective religious beliefs. Intensely local and predominantly artisanal, the confraternities shaped the civic religious cult through charitable activities, public shrines and processions.

  •  
    1 566,-

    This is the first social and cultural study of the principal 'free' professions in Italy between unification and the First World War. It is a major contribution both to the history of the bourgeoisie in Italy and to our understanding of the developing role of professions in modern European society.

  • - Writing Statistics in Nineteenth-Century Italy
    av New York) Patriarca & Silvana (Columbia University
    551 - 1 356,-

    Numbers and Nationhood, first published in 1996, explores the role that statistics played in generating a national image of Italy in the nineteenth century. Silvana Patriarca's innovative study provides a fresh reading of Risorgimento Italy, bringing to the fore issues of science, ideology, and representation.

  • av Costa Rica) Schram, Albert (Researcher & Universidad Nacional
    506 - 1 446,-

    This book relates the history of Italian railways and their relation with the Italian state from the 1840s, when the first lines were constructed, until nationalization in 1905. During the nineteenth century and the process of unification, it is argued that railways had a pernicious and divisive influence on Italian political life.

  •  
    640,-

    This is the first social and cultural study of the principal 'free' professions in Italy between unification and the First World War. It is a major contribution both to the history of the bourgeoisie in Italy and to our understanding of the developing role of professions in modern European society.

  • - The Politics of Policing in Bologna
    av Steven C. Hughes
    491 - 1 401,-

    This 1994 book provides a meticulous examination of the ideology, structure, and functions of papal police as they operated in the city and province of Bologna in the period before Italian unity, and in doing so offers an important new interpretation of the Risorgimento.

  • - Pietro Maria Campi and the Preservation of the Particular
    av Simon (University of York) Ditchfield
    655 - 1 566,-

    This book offers a new interpretation of what the Catholic Reform meant at local diocesan level in the face of attempts by Rome to regularise worship c.1550-1700.

  • - The Life and Career of Cardinal Francesco Soderini, 1453-1524
    av K. J. P. (University of Birmingham) Lowe
    730,-

    This book is an extended study of a leading Italian Renaissance cardinal, offering a new vision of his lifestyle and activities. It challenges received opinion about the nature of political and ecclesiastical patronage and clientele systems, and offers new insights into the rivalry between the Medici and Soderini.

  • - Ercole d'Este (1471-1505) and the Invention of a Ducal Capital
    av Thomas Tuohy
    819,-

    The court of Ercole d'Este was one of the most glittering in Renaissance Italy. This book re-establishes Ercole's originality and importance, and sheds light on some general aspects of artist/patron relations during the Renaissance.

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