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In the late Middle Ages and throughout the Renaissance, Tuscany was a center
of the arts and of learning. The Tuscan spoken language became the literary
language of Italy after Dante Alighieri, Petrarch, and Boccaccio used it.
Notable schools of architecture, sculpture, and painting developed from the
11th cent. in many cities, particularly Florence, Pisa, Siena, and
Arezzo.
Since the 16th century, however, intellectual and artistic life was almost
wholly concentrated in Florence. There are universities at Florence, Pisa,
and Siena.
Tuscany has considerable industry, although farming is still an important
chief occupation. Manufactures include cotton and woolen textiles, metal
products, chemicals, machinery, motor vehicles, precision instruments,
glass, refined petroleum, and fertilizer. The region is also well-known for
its artisans, especially those in Florence, and tourism is an important
industry.
Modern Tuscany corresponds to the larger part of ancient Etruria, and most
of our knowledge of Etruscan civilization is derived from findings there.
The Romans conquered the region in the mid-4th cent. B.C. After the fall of
Rome, it was a Lombard duchy (6th-8th cent. A.D.), with Lucca as its
capital, and later a powerful march under the Franks (8th-12th cent.).
Matilda (d.1115), the last Frankish ruler, bequeathed her lands to the
papacy, an act which long caused strife between popes and emperors.
In spite of the dual claims, most cities became (11th-12th cent.) free
communes; some of them (Pisa, Lucca, Siena, and Florence) developed into
strong republics. Commerce, industry, and the arts flourished. Guelph
(pro-papal) and Ghibelline (pro-imperial) strife, however, was particularly
violent in Tuscany, and there were strong rivalries both within and among
cities. After a period of Pisan hegemony (12th-13th cent.), Florence gained
control over most Tuscan cities in the 14th-15th cent.; Siena (1559) was the
last city to fall under Florence's influence.
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Under the Medici, the ruling family of Florence, Tuscany became (1569) a
grand duchy, and thus again a political entity; only the republic of Lucca
and the duchy of Massa and Carrara remained independent. After the
extinction of the Medici line, Tuscany passed (1737) to ex-duke Francis of
Lorraine (later Holy Roman Emperor Francis I), who was succeeded by Grand
Duke Leopold I (1765-90; later Emperor Leopold II) and then by Ferdinand III
(1790-1801; 1814-24). The French Revolutionary armies invaded Tuscany in
1799, and it was briefly included in the kingdom of Etruria (1801-7) and was
ruled under the duchy of Parma, before it was annexed to France by Napoleon I.
In 1814, Tuscany again became a grand duchy, under the returning Ferdinand
III and then under Leopold II (1824-59) and briefly under Ferdinand IV
(1859-60). In 1848, Leopold was forced to grant a constitution, and in 1849
he had to leave Tuscany briefly when it was for a short time a republic.
However, in 1852 he was able, with the help of Austria, to rescind the
constitution. In 1860, Tuscany voted to unite with the kingdom of Sardinia.
Tuscany is one of Italy's world famous regions. Tuscany, with its enchanted
landscapes from the mountain to the sea. Tuscany, with its towns with
museums, cathedrals, historical buildings, streets, towns like Florence,
Siena, Pisa and more. Tuscany, full of ancient Etruscan and Roman ruins...
But one can not pass through this land without being aware of Medieval
Tuscany.
Still visible are the small walled towns which are a testimony to
the Middle Ages just as much as its great cities. Castles, fortresses,
watch-towers, and town walls appear everywhere; some are well preserved,
others are in ruins, but the main remnants are not on the tourist routes. In
this site, created to inform people of the existence and preservation state
of these testimonies to the medieval era, you will find history, photos, and
plans of some of these fortifications. |