130:, and Vicenza invested San Zenone. Completely circled and with no possibility of mounting a defence, Alberico surrendered in the hopes of saving his and his relatives' lives. The hatred his brother had incurred, however, was too great. The following day his sons, some still young children, were chopped to pieces before his eyes while he languished in chains. His female relatives were paraded naked through the streets and then burned alive. Alberico, having been forced to assist in their execution, was then tortured with hot irons, tied to the tail of a horse, and dragged through the streets of Treviso until dead. The chronicler
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named
Beatrice, he had one daughter, Adelaide, who married Rinaldo d'Este in 1235, and five sons: Ezzelino, killed in battle in 1243; Alberico; Romano; Ugolino; and Giovanni. From his second marriage to Margherita he had three daughters: Griselda, Tornalisce, and Amabilia.
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Hec sunt inceptiones cantionum de libro qui fuit domini
Alberici et nomini repertorum earundem cantionem
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in 1227. In 1239 he became detached from the
Ghibelline faction and allied with the Guelph
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excommunicated him and, in 1259, on the death of his brother following the
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by most scholars today. Alberico does have one other work extant, a
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Politically allied with his brother
Ezzelino, Alberico served as
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of poetry. The man he replaced at
Treviso was the Sicilian poet
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Italian condottiero, troubadour, and statesman (1196–1260)
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I Trovatori d'Italia: Biografie, testi, tradizioni, note
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against the emperor. In 1240, as a Guelph, he conquered
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Alberico has been identified as the author of the poem
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Alberico was a friend and patron of troubadours and an
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and
Adelaide Alberti di Mangona. He was a brother of
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247:. Rome: SocietĂ Multigrafica Editrice Somu, 1967 .
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258:PDF of Estense Library's manuscript alfa.r.4.4
293:People excommunicated by the Catholic Church
197:. The rubric identifies the composer as one
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318:People executed by the Republic of Venice
118:On 25 August 1260 the Guelph troops of
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226:Alberico also has a connection to the
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283:People from the Province of Treviso
138:" ("I saw this with my own eyes").
41:statesman. He was also a patron of
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221:Mesier Albric, so.m prega Ardisons
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298:13th-century Italian troubadours
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195:Na Maria, pretç e fina valors
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333:People executed by dragging
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328:Italian literature patrons
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232:Jacopo de Morra di Puglia
178:("Book of Alberic"). The
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53:Alberico was born in the
288:13th-century condottieri
113:Battle of Cassano d'Adda
313:Italian torture victims
308:13th-century executions
303:Executed Italian people
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219:he composed with Uc:
136:Vidi ista oculis meis
63:Ezzelino II da Romano
39:Guelph and Ghibelline
93:Guecellone da Camino
89:Emperor Frederick II
199:nabieiris de roman
168:Biblioteca Estense
43:Occitan literature
20:Alberico da Romano
243:Bertoni, Giulio.
211:Bieiris de Romans
207:N'Albric de Roman
132:Salimbene de Adam
109:Pope Alexander IV
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156:Uc de Saint Circ
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278:1260 deaths
273:1196 births
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24:Alberico II
267:Categories
59:San Zenone
35:troubadour
49:Biography
26:, was an
152:Sordello
97:Milanese
238:Sources
186:reads:
148:Occitan
105:podestĂ
101:Treviso
84:podestĂ
75:Vicenza
71:Cunizza
28:Italian
184:rubric
180:Liber'
172:Modena
142:Poetry
124:Trento
120:Venice
55:castle
216:tenso
128:Padua
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