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Mercenary Companies and the Decline of Siena (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science)
 
 
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Mercenary Companies and the Decline of Siena (The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science) [Hardcover]

William Caferro (Author)

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Book Description

0801857880 978-0801857881 May 1, 1998

Among the most dramatic problems faced on the Italian peninsula in the fourteenth century were the raids of marauding mercenary companies. These companies, known locally as Companies of Adventure and more generally as Free Companies, were private armies, composed of professional soldiers and adventurers from throughout Europe. They sold their services to the highest bidder in times of war, and staged ruinous raids in times of peace. The city of Siena, visually opulent and wedged between Florence and the lands of the pope—two frequent employers of mercenaries—was an especial target.

In this groundbreaking volume, William Caferro explores the social, economic and administrative impact of the companies on Siena from the arrival of Werner of Urslingen and the Great Company in 1342 until the fall of the Sienese republic in 1399. During this time, Caferro explains, Siena endured some thirty-seven raids, characterized by arson, pillage, and looting in the countryside and extortion of enormous bribes from the city government. He shows that the raids constituted a persistent and significant drain on both the human and financial resources of Siena. Payments to the companies siphoned off valuable (and limited) funds, damaging an already circumscribed economy, while the government was forced to borrow money on an unprecedented scale from its citizens. Sienese officials pressed money out of every available resource, including the Church (which had previously been taxed only sporadically) and Jews (who were belatedly granted the "right" to lend money to the state). Other desperate measures included pawning land, forcing purchases of salt, and readmitting exiles for a fee. The stresses caused by the mercenaries were greatly exacerbated by plague and famine, which often coincided precisely with the raids—each disaster serving to intensify the effects of the other.

Caferro concludes that the stress of the companies acted as an agent of change on the machinery of state, bringing both decentralization and confusion. If, as some historians have argued, military expenditure led to more streamlined bureaucracies and helped "make" states elsewhere, it is nonetheless clear that the same phenomenon helped "unmake" Siena. The raids, therefore, were more than an exotic nuisance, but a key factor in Siena's decision to abandon independence in 1399.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

In this book, William Caferro ably connects his interests in economic history with his studies of mercenary companies during the fourteenth century in Italy.

(Carla Sodini H-Italy, H-Net Reviews )

This is an exceptionally important book that will repay careful reading as it shows how military stress far short of all-out war can, in effect, unmake a state.

(Bernard S. Bachrach Historian )

The relation between Mercenary Companies and the Decline of Siena is a major theme that has long needed its historian. William Caferro offers still more in this realistic appraisal. He provides a thoughtful and challenging examination of Sienese public finance and administration in the second half of the fourteenth century that presents valuable insights into hitherto unrevealed continuities in the history of a fascinating Italian city republic.

(William M. Bowsky, University of California, Davis )

About the Author

William Caferro is assistant professor in the Department of History at the University of Tulsa.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Of the many calamities that befell Europe in the fourteenth century, there was none worse than the raids of the great mercenary companies. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mercenary raids, lire assessment, communal gabelles, gabelle rates, origini della fattoria toscana, delta milizia, storia della milizia, esso riunite, gabelle farmers, marauding companies, gabelle revenue, city council deliberations, communal coffers, voluntary loan, speedy turnover, retail wine, mercenary companies, monte shares, marauding ways, ancillary offices, communal officials, buon governo, del sale, popolo minuto, storia patria
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Company of the Hat, Great Company, John Hawkwood, Gabella Generale, Conrad of Landau, Frederigo of Brescia, Company of the Star, White Company, Cecchino Broglia, Via Francigena, Hannekin Baumgarten, Giangaleazzo Visconti, Azzo da Castello, Boldrino da Panicale, Count of Carrara, Werner of Urslingen, Charles of Durazzo, Albert Sterz, Ambrogio Visconti, Eberhard of Landau, Hospital of Santa Maria, War of the Eight Saints, Enguerrand of Coucy, John Beltoft, Fra Moriale
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