|
![]() |
|
|||||||||||||
|
Frontmatter
I. INTRODUCTION: THE HISTORICAL APPROACH TO VIOLENCE
II. VIOLENCE IN THE LATE MIDDLE AGES: A BACKGROUND
III. ORDER AND DISORDER IN ROMAGNA, 1450-1500
IV. THE ASSASSINATION OF GALEAZZO MARIA SFORZA AND THE REACTION OF ITALIAN DIPLOMACY
V. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN FERRARA, 1440-1500
VI. SOME PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL ROOTS OF VIOLENCE IN THE TUSCAN CITIES
VII. THE FLORENTINE POPOLO MINUTO AND ITS POLITICAL ROLE, 1340-1450
VIII. CRIME, PUNISHMENT, AND THE TRECENTO VENETIAN STATE
IX. THE ANATOMY OF REBELLION IN FOURTEENTH-CENTURY SIENA: FROM COMMUNE TO SIGNORY?
X. CONTEMPORARY VIEWS ON FACTION AND CIVIL STRIFE IN THIRTEENTH- AND FOURTEENTH-CENTURY ITALY
XI. VIOLENCE, DISORDER, AND ORDER IN THIRTEENTH-CENTURY ROME
XII. POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Permanent URL for this title: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/heb.01282.0001.001 | ||
Site created by the Scholarly Publishing
Office of the University of Michigan Library | ||