
STORIA DELLA REPUBBLICA DI FIRENZE. TOMO SECONDO.
A vivid portrait of medieval Florence unfolds in this richly detailed history, guiding listeners from the bustling streets of the 14th‑century city to the dramatic upheavals that threatened its republican fabric. The narrative opens with the infamous Ciompi revolt of 1378, where disgruntled laborers storm the Palazzo and a reluctant leader, Michele di Lando, seizes the reins of power. Through crisp descriptions of guild rivalries, conspiracies, and the everyday concerns of merchants and craftsmen, the book captures the volatile mix of ambition and popular unrest that defined the era.
Beyond the initial turmoil, the work follows the shifting balance between the major and minor arts, the bold maneuvers of ambitious families, and Florence’s tentative expansions into neighboring territories. Listeners will gain a clear sense of how internal politics intertwined with looming external threats, all presented in an accessible, narrative style that brings the city’s medieval heartbeat to life.
Language
it
Duration
~18 hours (1088K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
Italy: Barbèra, 1876.
Credits
Barbara Magni, Carlo Traverso and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2022-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1792–1876
A leading voice of moderate liberal thought in 19th-century Tuscany, he brought together politics, history, and education in work that helped shape the culture of the Italian Risorgimento. Best known today for his history of Florence, he was also a statesman whose home became a meeting place for major European thinkers.
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