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13 - Republicanism and Commercial Society in Eighteenth-century Italy
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- By Eluggero Pii, Professor of History, University of Florence, Italy
- Edited by Martin van Gelderen, European University Institute, Florence, Quentin Skinner, University of Cambridge
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- Book:
- Republicanism
- Published online:
- 11 January 2010
- Print publication:
- 21 November 2002, pp 249-274
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
In the eighteenth century, before the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle was signed in 1748, Italy was made up of states large and small, a kaleidoscope which coalesced and dissolved continually in accordance with the ever-changing alliances between the monarchies of Europe. Whereas those actively engaged in the practice of politics took good care to adapt to the changes, the literati showed a tendency to search for common themes with a view to launching a debate in opposition to the armed might of the victorious powers. That explains why, in the context of the highly varied situation that pertained in Italy, they found in the republican tradition an important element of cohesion, based on two factors: the first arising from the palpable existence of concrete realities – in the shape of states like Venice, Lucca, Genoa and San Marino – which offered living proof of the resistance offered by the republican form of government to the monarchical system of the great kingdoms of Europe; and the second, of a cultural nature, deriving from the memory of republican Rome transmitted through the literary genres and styles of the local academies in accordance with the tired gestures of academic life, enlivened from time to time by an occasional burst of energy.
But if republican sentiment had difficulty, understandably, in fulfilling the role of guardian of republican memory whilst striving to accommodate itself to conditions of everyday reality, it did not find it any easier to foster a lively ideological debate, and even less to transform itself into a fully elaborated system.