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Marquisate of Saluzzo

Italian state (1125–1548)

Marquisate of Saluzzo

Summary

Italian state (1125–1548)

FieldValue
native_namela
conventional_long_nameMarquisate of Saluzzo
common_nameSaluzzo
government_typeMonarchy (Marquistate)
year_start1142
year_end1548
event_startDonation of Boniface del Vasto to his son Manfred
date_start
event_endAnnexion to France
date_end23 February
event_pre
event_post
date_post
p1March of Turin
flag_p1Arms of the house of Savoy (Ancient).svg
border_p1no
s1Kingdom of France
flag_s1Royal Standard of the King of France.svg
s2Duchy of Savoy
flag_s2State Flag of the Savoyard States (late 16th - late 18th century).svg
today
image_flagFlag_of_the_Marquistate_of_Saluzzo_(14th_century-c._1507).svg
flagFlag of Piedmont#Marquisate of Saluzzo
flag_typeFlag
(14th century–)
image_coatArms of the house of Del Vasto.svg
symbolAleramici
symbol_typeAleramici
(Argent a chief azure)
image_mapSavoye1494.jpg
image_map_captionMap of Italy in 1494. Saluzzo is to the Southhwest, in yellow
capitalSaluzzo
national_mottola
it
englishmotto"Still, still" and "Not just for this reason"
common_languages
religionRoman Catholicism
leader1Manfred I of Saluzzo (first)
leader2Gian Gabriele I of Saluzzo (last)
year_leader11142–1175
year_leader21537–1548
title_leaderMarquis
footnotes
era

(14th century–) (Argent a chief azure) it

The Marquisate of Saluzzo () was a historical Italian state that included parts of the current region of Piedmont and of the French Alps. The Marquisate was much older than the Renaissance lordships, being a legacy of the feudalism of the High Middle Ages.

Marquisate territories

The Marquisate of Saluzzo occupied parts of the modern province of Cuneo and Metropolitan City of Turin, and at times areas now under French control; the core of its lands was the area between the Stura di Demonte, the Po and the Alps. The del Vasto family, who ruled Saluzzo throughout its period, also owned other territories in Italy after a series of arranged marriages, but these were never officially annexed to the marquisate.

Del Vasto rule

The House of Del Vasto became masters of the city when Ulric Manfred II of Turin chose to enfeoff Boniface del Vasto as marquis. His eldest son Manfred inherited it. From that moment the del Vasto became Marquis of the Piedmontese town and handed the title dynastically as a true seigniory.

Manfred II tried to extend the marquisate beyond its domain against the House of Savoy. After Manfred's death, his widow Azalaïs had to provide them a number of tributes per year: from these tributes, Savoy established claims of mastery over the marquisate which led them to clash repeatedly against the weak Marquis.

The [[Castello della Manta]], a possession of the lords of [[Saluzzo]].

Often torn by internal dissension, Saluzzo reached the period of greatest splendor under the rule of Ludovico I and Ludovico II in the 15th century: the former, with a policy of neutrality towards wars in Italy, was able to act as mediator between the discord and received praises from the emperor and the king of France; the latter, looking for glory on the battlefield, was repeatedly defeated, beginning the decline of the Marquisate. During his reign, however, he was attentive in developing trade by building the first Alpine tunnel, the Buco di Viso connecting with a safe road Saluzzo with the Dauphiné and Provence.

At Ludovico II's death, however, his children fought bitterly for the throne, tearing the countryside and draining finances. The King of France, who had its eye over the Marquisate, then formally annexed it to the crown of Paris after deposing the last Marquis, Gabriele in 1548.

Saluzzo became part of France for half a century, until the Savoy, with the Treaty of Lyon (1601), succeeded in taking possession of it and retaining control, with alternating phases, until the Unification of Italy.

References

References

  1. Ruggiero, Michele. (1979). "Storia del Piemonte".
  2. "SALUZZO, marchesi di in "Dizionario Biografico"".
  3. "Il Marchesato di Saluzzo".
  4. "Il Marchesato di Saluzzo".
Wikipedia Source

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