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in perpetuity. Jacopo's election owed something to an alliance between Padua's own
Ghibelline and Guelph factions, and after his election many Ghibelline exiles returned. Jacopo sent the poet
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from 1318 to 1405. He governed with the advice of the leading citizens during a rule characterized by unity within the city. He is usually considered the first
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193:
Politische
Reflexion in der Welt des späten Mittelalters: Political thought in the age of scholasticism: Essays in honour of Jürgen Miethke
140:. Anna gave him one daughter, Taddea, and died in 1321. He himself died in 1324 and was buried in the Church of Saint Stephen in
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besieged Padua and demanded the abdication of Jacopo in return for peace. Jacopo stepped down temporarily to save the city; the
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and continuous internal feuding, shortly after 25 July 1318 the Paduan aristocracy elected Jacopo as
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66:
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235:
8:
173:
Society and
Politics in Medieval Italy: The Evolution of the Civil Life, 1000–1350
110:
137:
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144:. Taddea moved to Venice on her father's death and there married Cangrande's nephew
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50:
187:
Gregorio Piaia (2004), "The Shadow of
Antenor: On the Relationship between the
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224:
117:. In the end Jacopo succeeded in preventing Padua from falling to either the
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and pined for the old commune, into exile that year. In 1319 the
Ghibelline
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168:
141:
122:
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34:
58:
74:
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38:
195:, Jürgen Miethke and Martin Kaufhold, edd. (BRILL), 200.
56:(to a single lord), a characteristic regime known as a
222:
214:(Manchester: Manchester University Press), 3.
191:and the Institutions of the City of Padua,"
49:), his election marking the transition from
128:Jacopo was married to Anna, daughter of
73:in 1311 over the disputed possession of
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183:
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256:Burials at the Church of the Eremitani
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198:
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136:and Tomasina Morosini, the niece of
77:. In response to the threat of the
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14:
272:
69:, led the Paduans to war against
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150:Church of San Giorgio Maggiore
1:
251:14th-century Italian nobility
246:13th-century Italian nobility
7:
10:
277:
175:(St. Martin's Press), 193.
33:), was the founder of the
212:Padua in the age of Dante
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103:Cangrande I della Scala
146:Mastino II della Scala
113:, a contender for the
97:, who objected to the
54:ad singularem dominum
21:Giacomo I da Carrara
231:13th-century births
109:was transferred to
62:to contemporaries.
37:dynasty that ruled
111:Frederick the Fair
261:Da Carrara family
208:John Kenneth Hyde
169:John Kenneth Hyde
138:Tomasina Morosini
115:Holy Roman Empire
95:Albertino Mussato
268:
215:
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196:
185:
176:
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130:Pietro Gradenigo
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12:
11:
5:
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241:Lords of Padua
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189:Defensor Pacis
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134:Doge of Venice
9:
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43:lord of Padua
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24:
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236:1324 deaths
142:Due Carrare
79:Ghibellines
225:Categories
91:gubernator
65:Jacopo, a
123:Scrovegni
119:Scaligeri
87:protector
35:Carraresi
25:the Great
23:, called
210:(1966),
171:(1973),
107:signoria
99:signoria
83:defensor
59:signoria
148:in the
121:or the
75:Vicenza
51:commune
47:signore
89:, and
71:Verona
67:Guelph
30:Grande
17:Jacopo
156:Notes
39:Padua
19:or
227::
200:^
180:^
152:.
132:,
125:.
85:,
45:(
27:(
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