Nuanced understanding of the reciprocal nature of Spanish-Italian relations and the rich cultural production that was the product of the far-reaching exchanges between the two peninsulas throughout the early modern period guides the nineteen essays in this volume. The key political reality of sixteenth and seventeenth-century Spanish imperial domination in Italy-formal (Sicily, Sardinia, Naples, Milan), informal (Rome, Genoa, Tuscany), and more neutral or independent (Venice)-introduces the investigation in this volume into the methods and mechanisms of control and collaboration, cooperation and cooptation, assimilation and resistance. The connections between topics and problems in social, administrative, economic, and cultural history follow from political theory and practice. Politics, society, economy, and religion help us see both Spain and Italy more clearly.
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pág. 23
The Kingdom of Sardinia: A province in Balance between Catalonia, Castile, and Italy
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Naples and Florence in charles V´s Italy: Family, court, and Government in the Toledo-Medici alliance
pág. 135
Paying for the New St. Peter´s: Contributions to the Construction of the New Basilica from Spanish Lands, 1506-1620
pág. 181
"Pignatte di vetro": Being a Republic in Philip II´s Empire
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The Venetian territorial State: Constructing Boundaries in the Shadow of Spain
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The Profession of Arm and the Nobility in Spanish Italy: Some Considerations
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Evolving the History of Women in Early Modern Italy: Subordination and Agency
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Government/Administration: The Italian Kingdoms within the Spanish Monarchy
pág. 355
A Declining Economy: Central and Nothern Italy in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
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Exchanges Between Italy and Spain: Culture and Religion
pág. 433
Reform of the Church and Heresy in the Age of Charles V: Reflections of Spain in Italy
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