|
The wealthier, somewhat more Germanic portion of Italy, comprising the Po valley, the Piedmont, and the northern Appenines. Contains: Aquileia, Arimnus, Asti, Bergamo, Bozzolo, Brescia, Caisra, Carniola, (Friuli, Istria), Carpi, Chamars, Colorno, Corsica, Cospaia, Cremona, Curtun, Dezana, Elba, the Etruscans, Fidenza, Finale Borgo, Fosdinovo, Friuli, Genoa, Gorizia, Görz, Guastalla, Ivrea, Lodi, Lucca, Mantua, Massa-Carrara, Messerano, Milan (temporal), Milan (Archbishopric), Mirandola, Modena, Montferrat, Novara, Novellara, Ossola, Padua, Parma, Pavia, Perusna, Piacenza, Piedmont, Piombino, Pisa, Reggio nell'Emilia, Sabbioneta, Savona, Savoy, Seborga, Siena, Treviso, Tarchna, Trieste, Turin, Tuscany, Udine, Venice, Ventimiglia, Veii, Verona, Vescovato, and Vicenza.
|
GENOA
An
important port in northwestern Italy, famous for its maritime and mercantile
merchant-princes. The eternal rival of Venice for colonies and and overseas
markets, the city always was hamperd by incessant political factionalism
during the late Mediaeval and Renaissance eras. Famous as the hometown
of Christopher Columbus, it is more darkly known as the port that saw the
introduction of the plague into Europe, in 1346.