Marano: una fortezza contesa

Venice’s reconquest of Marano in 1542 was a key moment in the history of the Republic. The fortress of Marano was in fact at the top of its glory between the XV and XVI century, when it was contested between Austria and Venice. When it fell in the hands of Austria in 1513, Venice tried to reconquest...

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Main Author: Elisa Della Mea
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Debrecen University Press 2017-12-01
Series:Italianistica Debreceniensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/itde/article/view/4636
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spelling doaj-640aa96238a44f1d8757f1e177a22f7d2021-08-29T07:11:23ZengDebrecen University PressItalianistica Debreceniensis1219-53912677-12252017-12-0123465910.34102/italdeb/2017/46364039Marano: una fortezza contesaElisa Della Mea0Università di UdineVenice’s reconquest of Marano in 1542 was a key moment in the history of the Republic. The fortress of Marano was in fact at the top of its glory between the XV and XVI century, when it was contested between Austria and Venice. When it fell in the hands of Austria in 1513, Venice tried to reconquest it with every possible means. After years of unsuccessful attempts, the feat was carried out by Beltrame Sacchia, an ambitious and adventurous merchant from Udine, who occupied the fortress in 1542 in name of the King of France. This article analyses the repercussions of Marano’s reconquest on European political equilibrium. What happened on the morning of January 2, 1542, as well as making a turning point in the boundary dynamics between Venice and the Austrian, deeply damaged the diplomatic relations between the main powers of Europe: the Venetian Republic, France, the Empire and the Ottomans.https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/itde/article/view/4636maranoveneziaudinefortezzacrisi
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elisa Della Mea
spellingShingle Elisa Della Mea
Marano: una fortezza contesa
Italianistica Debreceniensis
marano
venezia
udine
fortezza
crisi
author_facet Elisa Della Mea
author_sort Elisa Della Mea
title Marano: una fortezza contesa
title_short Marano: una fortezza contesa
title_full Marano: una fortezza contesa
title_fullStr Marano: una fortezza contesa
title_full_unstemmed Marano: una fortezza contesa
title_sort marano: una fortezza contesa
publisher Debrecen University Press
series Italianistica Debreceniensis
issn 1219-5391
2677-1225
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Venice’s reconquest of Marano in 1542 was a key moment in the history of the Republic. The fortress of Marano was in fact at the top of its glory between the XV and XVI century, when it was contested between Austria and Venice. When it fell in the hands of Austria in 1513, Venice tried to reconquest it with every possible means. After years of unsuccessful attempts, the feat was carried out by Beltrame Sacchia, an ambitious and adventurous merchant from Udine, who occupied the fortress in 1542 in name of the King of France. This article analyses the repercussions of Marano’s reconquest on European political equilibrium. What happened on the morning of January 2, 1542, as well as making a turning point in the boundary dynamics between Venice and the Austrian, deeply damaged the diplomatic relations between the main powers of Europe: the Venetian Republic, France, the Empire and the Ottomans.
topic marano
venezia
udine
fortezza
crisi
url https://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/itde/article/view/4636
work_keys_str_mv AT elisadellamea maranounafortezzacontesa
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