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The minor rural aristocracy and great lords in thirteenth-century Tuscany: three cases from the entourage of the Guidi counts
Authors:T. CasiniAuthor Vitae
Affiliation:Via Guido Rossa 48, 52025 Levane, Italy
Abstract:This article examines relations in thirteenth-century Tuscany between the minor rural aristocracy and great rural lords, that is, those based outside cities. The subject is approached through a study based on three families, with special emphasis on the way they were bound to the extended family of the Guidi counts, who were prominent at the highest level in the thirteenth-century kingdom of Italy. In the thirteenth century, attendance on the counts was not attractive to families of the minor aristocracy: it was universally acknowledged that the great rural lords of Tuscany had little to offer their adherents in terms of wealth, power and prestige, incentives which could be obtained from the cities of the region. Minor aristocrats who chose to live as professional soldiers were particularly attracted to the cities, which were always in need of soldiers for their armies.
Keywords:City commune   Guidi counts   Rural aristocracy   Rural seigniory   Tuscany   Italy   Thirteenth century
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