Academic literature on the topic 'Italy – Commerce – History'

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Journal articles on the topic "Italy – Commerce – History"

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Stapelbroek, Koen. "Commerce and morality in eighteenth-century Italy." History of European Ideas 32, no. 4 (2006): 361–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.histeuroideas.2006.08.004.

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Lazzini, Arianna, Giuseppina Iacoviello, and Rosella Ferraris Franceschi. "Evolution of accounting education in Italy, 1890–1935." Accounting History 23, no. 1-2 (2017): 44–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1032373217715041.

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This article focuses on the development of the study of accounting in the Italian education system between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It also focuses on the subsequent formation of a scientific and experimental forma mentis that would prepare students for administrative and managerial activities in industry, commerce and public administration. Starting from the second half of the nineteenth century – when the presence of accounting in education was limited to secondary school and implemented with sporadic educational initiatives by private bodies – and covering approximately the 5
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Nevola, Fabrizio. "Home Shopping." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 70, no. 2 (2011): 153–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2011.70.2.153.

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Fabrizio Nevola considers the form, function, and significance of shops and the other commercial spaces contained in the ground floors of the Renaissance palaces of Siena, Florence, and Rome. Home Shopping: Urbanism, Commerce, and Palace Design in Renaissance Italy also investigates the social interaction between the private environment of the home and the public space of the street. Contrary to much that has been written about the palaces of the fifteenth century, their designers did not abandon botteghe (shops), nor more broadly construed commercial functions. The resulting buildings are hyb
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Reinert, Sophus A. "Lessons on the Rise and Fall of Great Powers: Conquest, Commerce, and Decline in Enlightenment Italy." American Historical Review 115, no. 5 (2010): 1395–425. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/ahr.115.5.1395.

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Morris, Colin. "San Ranieri of Pisa: The Power and Limitations of Sanctity in Twelfth-Century Italy." Journal of Ecclesiastical History 45, no. 4 (1994): 588–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022046900010770.

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Studies of medieval society in recent years have laid increasing stress on the effectiveness of the power of the saints. They enriched their churches, defended their possessions, created great centres at once of pilgrimage and commerce and provided for the healing of the sick and the care of the poor. The cults of the saints formed a model for secular government. Kings appeared before their people as walking reliccollections and exercised the power of healing, and patron saints (like St Mark at Venice and St Denis in France) helped to define the identity of the political communities over whose
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Yagou, Artemis. "Popular Luxury in Southeastern Europe in the Long Eighteenth Century: A Case-Study of Italian Ceramics and Ottoman Greek Clients." Journal of Early Modern History 24, no. 4-5 (2020): 407–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700658-12342652.

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Abstract In late eighteenth-century Ottoman Epirus (today northwestern Greece), novel and pleasurable objects expressed on a material level the rise of new mentalities. We discuss specifically the ceramic trefoil jugs with Greek verses manufactured in Pesaro, Italy, by the firm of Casali and Callegari and its successors. These wine jugs follow a pre-existing formal typology and bear painted decoration; their particularity is that they are also inscribed with verses written in Greek, as they were produced following commissions by merchants from Epirus. This region boasted centers of commerce, w
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Pitts, Martin. "Globalisation vs the state? Macro- and micro-perspectives on Roman economies." Antiquity 92, no. 366 (2018): 1674–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2018.236.

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There can be few topics in Roman archaeology and history that are contested with such vigour and widespread interest as the Roman economy. In part, this present situation arises as a legacy of older debates on the significance of ancient economic growth and long-distance trade, in which key twentieth-century figures such as M.I. Finley, M. Rostovtzeff and K. Hopkins continue to loom large and provide compelling insights. More recently, the debate has been re-cast around questions of state involvement vs free markets, and the extent of market integration, as this pair of edited collections demo
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WUBS-MROZEWICZ, JUSTYNA. "The late medieval and early modern Hanse as an institution of conflict management." Continuity and Change 32, no. 1 (2017): 59–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416017000066.

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ABSTRACTEver since research on the Hanse began in the nineteenth century, there have been repeated efforts to redefine the boundaries and the core of the phenomenon. Views of the Hanse have evolved, and it has been seen by turns as a profoundly German league of towns, and as a network or organisation of towns and traders that was present in commercial centres and harbours from Novgorod to Portugal, and from Norway to Italy. In more general discussions on the institutional development of commerce in Europe, many of them influenced by the New Institutional Economics, the Hanse has even appeared
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WALKDEN, GORDON. "PROMOTING ART, MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE IN ONE—THE SOCIETY'S ROLE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF A BRITISH MARBLE INDUSTRY." Earth Sciences History 37, no. 2 (2018): 363–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-37.2.363.

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Amongst its promotions at the start of the nineteenth century, the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce included calls for British marbles. The calls were repeated annually for two decades but what initiated them was more than just an altruistic desire to promote indigenous sources of statuary and decorative stone. Supplies of both, especially statuary marble, greatly relied upon imports from France and Italy. At the time of the first calls these were jeopardised by the revolutionary and Napoleonic upheavals and other sources of stone became necessary, but the Socie
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Karpov, Sergey P. "Timur-sultan and Kerim-birdi: Two attacks on Venetian Tana in 1410 and in 1418." Golden Horde Review 10, no. 4 (2022): 758–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.22378/2313-6197.2022-10-4.758-769.

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The purpose of the study is to consider the problem of the existence of the Venetian and Genoese trading stations in Tana within the territory of the Golden Horde city of Azak during the internecine war in the Golden Horde between the sons of Toktamysh and Idegei. Through an analysis of sources, an effort is made to determine the circumstances of the attacks of the Golden Horde khans and the level of damage that arose from them. Research materials: Unpublished documents of the State Archives of Venice (Italy), as well as Venetian chronicles and historical works of the 15th–16th centuries. Resu
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Italy – Commerce – History"

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Cilmi, Giancarla. "Les Jacquemart-André collectionneurs d’art italien. Acquisitions et marché de l’art entre la France et l’Italie (fin XIXe-début XXe siècle)." Thesis, Paris Sciences et Lettres (ComUE), 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019PSLEP053.

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Edouard André (1833-1894) et Nélie Jacquemart (1841-1912) s’inscrivent parfaitement dans cette pratique du collectionnisme de la fin du XIXe siècle apanage de la bourgeoisie fortunée de la société occidentale. Leur passion pour l’art de la Renaissance italienne les mène à constituer un musée privé unique en ce genre : ils rassemblent des œuvres (peintures, sculptures, objets d’art) s’attachant à récréer l’ambiance d’un palais florentin. Pendant près de trente ans ils entretiennent des relations étroites avec les meilleurs antiquaires italiens et les plus grands experts de l’époque qui leur per
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Ganzarolli, Giovanna. "La ceramica comune dall’alto al basso medioevo in Veneto (Italia) : tipologie, commerci e analisi sui residui organici." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017AIXM0363/document.

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Cette recherche doctorale porte sur l’analyse des « céramiques communes à pâte grossière » issues de 4 fouilles archéologiques de la Vénétie : celles de la cathédrale de Padoue, de Rocca de Monselice (Padoue), du château de Montagnone à Montegrotto Terme (Padoue) et de l’ancien cinéma Astra à Chioggia (Venise). Cette recherche se focalise plus particulièrement sur la « céramique commune à pâte grossière » employée pour l’usage culinaire à l’échelle de la Vénétie. Elle vise à mieux comprendre les changements de morphologies, de matières premières employées mais également de fonctionnalité entre
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Minervini, Fausto. "Photographie et peinture entre Italie et France dans la seconde moitié du XIXème siècle : production, édition et dynamiques de marché." Thesis, Paris 4, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016PA040065.

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Dans la seconde moitié du XIXème siècle, comme dans les autres arts visuels, la France, et plus particulièrement Paris, a été une référence fondamentale quant à la réception des nouveautés provenant du domaine photographique des cercles artistiques italiens. La production photographique française et ses protagonistes ont offert aux communautés italiennes des modèles à suivre, des vecteurs pour la diffusion et l’accueil de leurs productions à l’étranger ainsi qu’un support fonctionnel aux dynamiques qui régulèrent le marché international de leurs œuvres. Cette recherche s’interroge tout d’abord
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HOUSSAYE, MICHIENZI Ingrid. "Réseaux et stratégies marchandes : le commerce de la compagnie Datini avec le Maghreb (fin XIVe - début XVe siècles) : réseaux, espaces Méditerranéens et stratégies marchandes." Doctoral thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/14484.

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Defence date: 4 May 2010<br>Examining Board: Prof. Anthony Molho (EUI) – Supervisor; Prof. Antonella Romano (EUI); Prof. David Abulafia (University of Cambridge); Prof. Matthieu Arnoux (Université Paris VII et EHESS, Paris).<br>PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digital archive of EUI PhD theses<br>Le rôle d’intermédiaire que jouait le Maghreb dans les relations méditerranéennes, entre l’Orient et l’Europe, et les échanges entre les Maghrébins et les différentes puissances commerciales italiennes et espagnoles, ont ancré de manière importante le Maghreb dans l’histoire méditerranéenne et
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GONZALEZ, DE LARA Yadira. "Enforceability and risk-sharing in financial contracts : from the sea loan to the commenda in late medieval Venice." Doctoral thesis, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/4938.

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Defence date: 23 June 2000<br>Examining board: Prof. Avner Greif, Stanford University ; Prof. Ramon Marimon, EUI, Supervisor ; Prof. Leandro Prados de la Escosura, Universidad Carlos III, Madrid ; Prof. Jaime Reis, EUI<br>PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
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PELLEGRINO, Anna. "La città più artigiana d'Italia : Firenze 1861-1929." Doctoral thesis, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5934.

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Defence date: 18 October 2004<br>Examining board: Prof. Maurice Aymard (EHESS) - external supervisor ; Prof. Peter Becker (EUI) ; Prof. Gérard Delille (EUI) - supervisor ; Prof. Luigi Tomassini (Università di Bologna)<br>PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017<br>Percorsi di vita, fortune imprenditoriali, ristrutturazioni urbanistiche, aggregazioni associative, conflitti politici e sociali, compongono la storia del nuovo artigianato urbano fiorentino: caso singolare di una formazione sociale in parte consistente “inventata” su
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KHVALKOV, Evgeny. "The colonies of Genoa in the Black Sea Region : evolution and transformation." Doctoral thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/40744.

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Defence date: 8 September 2015<br>Examining Board: Professor Luca Molà, EUI/ Supervisor; Professor Jorge Flores, EUI; Doctor Serena Ferente, King's College London; Professor Kate Fleet, University of Cambridge. Description: Thesis in 2 volumes.<br>The period from the thirteenth to the fifteenth centuries was a time of significant economic and social progress in the history of Europe. The development of industry and urban growth, the increasing role of trade and the expansion of geographical knowledge led to an époque of colonial expansion for Italy. Its maritime republics, Genoa and Venice, be
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VLAMI, Despina. "Business, community, and ethnic identity : the Greek merchants of Livorno, 1700-1900." Doctoral thesis, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/6008.

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Defence date: 28 May 1996<br>Examining board: Angiolini Franco, University of Pisa (supervisor) ; Delille Gerard, EUI ; Dertilis George University of Athens (co-supervisor) ; Papataxiarhis Efthimios, University of Aegean, Rowland Robert ISCTE Lisbon<br>PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
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CAGLIOTI, Daniela Luigia. "Il guadagno difficile : commercianti e artigiani napoletani nella seconda meta dell'800." Doctoral thesis, 1992. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5806.

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Defence date: 9 October 1992<br>Examining board: Prof. Heinz-Gerhard Haupt, IUE ; Prof. Daniel Roche, Paris I (supervisore esterno) ; Prof. Raffaele Romanelli, Università di Pisa ; Prof. Robert Rowland (supervisore) ; Prof. Pasquale Villani, Università di Napoli<br>First made available online: 16 October 2015
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KIRK, Thomas Allison. "Genoa and the sea : ships and power in the early modern Mediterranean (1559-1680)." Doctoral thesis, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5857.

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Defence date: 5 July 1996<br>Examining board: Prof. Franco Angiolini, Università degli Studi di Pisa (co-supervisor) ; Prof. Kirti N. Chaudhuri, European University Institute (supervisor) ; Prof. Laurence Fontaine, European University Institute ; Dr. Richard Mackenney, University of Edinburgh ; Prof. Rodolfo Savelli, Università degli Studi di Genova<br>PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
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Books on the topic "Italy – Commerce – History"

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Divitiis, Gigliola Pagano De. English merchants in seventeenth-century Italy. Cambridge University Press, 1997.

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Andreozzi, Daniele, and Carlo Gatti. Trieste e l'Adriatico: Uomini, merci, conflitti. Edizioni Università Trieste, 2005.

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Balbi, Giovanna Petti. Mercanti e nationes nelle Fiandre: I genovesi in età bassomedievale. GISEM, 1996.

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Orietta, Sorgi, and Centro regionale per l'inventario, la catalogazione e la documentazione dei beni culturali e ambientali (Sicily, Italy), eds. Mercati storici siciliani. Regione siciliana, Assessorato dei beni culturali, ambientali e della pubblica istruzione, Dipartimento dei beni culturali, ambientali e dell'educazione permanente, CRICD, 2006.

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Orietta, Sorgi, and Centro regionale per l'inventario, la catalogazione e la documentazione dei beni culturali e ambientali (Sicily, Italy), eds. Mercati storici siciliani. Regione siciliana, Assessorato dei beni culturali, ambientali e della pubblica istruzione, Dipartimento dei beni culturali, ambientali e dell'educazione permanente, CRICD, 2006.

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Donadon, Marco. Per una dimensione imperiale: Ca' Foscari e Venezia di fronte al colonialismo e imperialismo italiano (1868-1943). Edizioni Ca' Foscari - Digital Publishing, 2019.

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Stöckly, Doris. Le système de l'Incanto des galées du marché à Venise (fin XIIIe-milieu XVe siècle). E.J. Brill, 1995.

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Dursteler, Eric. Venetians in Constantinople: Nation, identity, and coexistence in the early modern Mediterranean. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006.

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Courten, Ludovica De. La Marina mercantile italiana nella politica di espansione, 1860-1914: Industria, finanza e trasporti marittimi. Bulzoni, 1989.

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Carette, Alice. Italie et Espagne entre Empire, cités et États: Constructions d'histoires communes (XVe-XVIe siècles). Viella, 2017.

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Book chapters on the topic "Italy – Commerce – History"

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Flohr, Miko. "Fora and commerce in Roman Italy." In Urban Space and Urban History in the Roman World. Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780367809331-13.

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Jones, Philip. "From Commune to Signoria, 1100-1300: I Commercial Revolution, Trends and Counter-trends." In The Italian City-State. Oxford University PressOxford, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198225850.003.0003.

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Abstract When Otto of Freising wrote it would certainly have required uncommon prescience to prophesy in any form a check to urban libertas, the resubjection of commune to hierarchy and monarchy, lordship (or signoria). In his day Italy-acclaimed ‘garden of delights’1-was in the midst of transformation, a further, revolutionary advance, unparalleled in Western Europe, of towns and trade, the urbanization and commercialization of economy, society, and, in growing measure, government. Between the eleventh and thirteenth centuries, the era of Western expansion, Italy-and more especially now the N
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Weiss, Piero. "Opera Moves To Venice And Goes Public." In Opera. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195116373.003.0007.

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Abstract In its earliest years opera emerged as an enhancement of festivities designed to glorify the rule of dynasties in city-states or the power of cardinals in Rome. Its arrival in Venice led to a radical transformation in its very essence and a new beginning in its history. Coming from Rome in 1637, what the first opera troupe found upon arriving in Venice was not a dynasty to glorify (unless it was Venice herself) but thriving commerce and, especially during carnival, a teeming international, pleasure-seeking public. Opera took root immediately, on an entirely new basis: in one form or a
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Zanoni, Elizabeth. "Introduction." In Migrant Marketplaces. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041655.003.0001.

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The Introduction defines migrant marketplaces, the book’s theoretical framework, as urban spaces characterized by material and imagined transnational linkages between mobile people and goods. As one of the most mobile ethnic groups during the age of mass migration, Italians in the United States and Argentina illuminate the historical formation of migrant marketplaces. It situates the book within the fields of transnational and comparative migration history, gender and food history, and the history of globalization. The introduction contends that Italian-language commercial newspapers, includin
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Ellis, Peter Berresford. "Introduction." In Dictionary Of Celtic Mythology. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195089615.003.0001.

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Abstract The Celtic languages contain one of Europe’s oldest and most vibrant mythologies. By virtue of the fact that they were written down only early in the Christian period, the Celtic languages and therefore Celtic mythology are predated by Greek and Latin. But the mythology is a development from a far earlier oral tradition. Contained in many of the stories are voices from the dawn of European civilisation, for the Celts were one of the great founding peoples of Europe. It is generally thought they commenced their spread across Europe from their original homeland around the headwaters of
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Neff, Robert. "Luigi Casati: from Alumnus of the Regia Scuola di Commercio to Last Italian Consul to The Great Empire of Korea." In I rapporti internazionali nei 150 anni di storia di Ca’ Foscari. Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-265-9/007.

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After studying Japanese language at Ca’ Foscari in the early 1870s, Luigi Casati spent most of his diplomatic career in Japan. Later, he moved to The Great Empire of Korea that, under the Eulsa Treaty of 1905, had become a protectorate of Japan. Casati was Italian consul in Seoul for about three years, and here he spent his final days with two of his daughters. Diplomatic records indicate that at the time Italy was trying to expand its economic presence on the peninsula through the acquisition of a gold mining concession and the increase of trade but, unlike his predecessors (one authored seve
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Fant, Clyde E., and Mitchell G. Reddish. "Corinth." In A Guide to Biblical Sites in Greece and Turkey. Oxford University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195139174.003.0013.

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No city in the ancient world both benefited and suffered from its location more than Corinth. Situated on the main north-south route between northern and southern Greece, and with two good ports that linked it to Italy on the west and Asia Minor on the east, Corinth quickly became a center for commerce. But the location of Corinth also had its downside. The city often found itself caught in the middle between hostile neighbors, Athens to the north and Sparta to the south. Armies crisscrossed its streets as often as merchants, and more than once the city had to arise from ashes and rubble. Toda
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Conference papers on the topic "Italy – Commerce – History"

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Empler, Tommaso, and Ariana Caldarone. "L’Isola d’Elba nella Seconda guerra mondiale. Studi e riflessioni a 80 anni dallo sbarco del 17 giugno 1944." In FORTMED2025 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. edUPV. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025. https://doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2025.2025.20355.

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The contribution presents the results of research conducted on the military posts of World War II on the Island of Elba, a territory that has been contested since ancient times due to its mineral resources and strategic position in maritime commercial traffic. Following World War I, the renewed geopolitical scenario within the Kingdom of Italy identified France as a potential enemy to defend against in the event of an invasion. For this reason, a defense process was initiated between 1920 and 1930, leading to the first plans for the construction of eight coastal batteries on the island. With I
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