ITALIAN NATIONALISM AND ROMANITÀ

Rome ◽  
2016 ◽  
pp. 324-335
Author(s):  
Rabun Taylor ◽  
Katherine Rinne ◽  
Spiro Kostof
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Alexander Lee

Scholars have long believed that ‘medieval’ universalism was supplanted by ‘Italian’ nationalism over the course of the fourteenth century. As this chapter demonstrates, however, nothing could be further from the truth. Although the humanists were often more concerned with the fate of Italy, or of individual cities, than of mankind as a whole, they did not waver in their belief that the Holy Roman Empire enjoyed universal dominion. Only at the very end of the Visconti Wars, when the Empire was seen to threaten the peace and liberty of the peninsula did ‘Italianness’ at last begin to come to the fore. Yet this is not to say that their universalism was unvarying. Depending on whether they chose to view it more as the successor of the ancient imperium Romanum or as an instrument of providence, they could paint it in idealistically ‘Roman’ colours, or endow it with a more ‘hegemonic’ tinge.


Italica ◽  
1931 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 129
Author(s):  
Enzo G. Giachino ◽  
G. Megaro
Keyword(s):  

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