Spazio urbano, spazio militare : la duplice dimensione di Orbetello e dei Presìdi di Toscana in età moderna
P. 55-71
The Presìdi of Tuscany were created in 1557 by order of Spain, at the end of the Italian Wars. For centuries, this territory has been one of the most important example of the logistic and military strategy of the Spanish imperial system in the Italian peninsula and in the Western Mediterranean Sea. The author briefly reviews the reasons and the ideas behind the creation of the Presìdi and explores their juridical and administrative nature: the universally known State of the Presidi, in fact, has never had the characteristics of a State. It has rather been a group of autonomous urban spaces, of communities held by medieval statutes and united by the Spanish imperial will. A place, or rather a group of places, in which urban and military dimensions have lived side by side, interweaving and sometimes colliding with each other throughout the centuries.
In this particular mixture, Orbetello, the largest town of the Presidi, has taken on an important role, becoming with time and habits a sort of a defacto capital in a nonState. It became a reference point both for Spanish (1557-1707), Austrian (1707-1734) and Neapolitan (1734-1801) authorities and for the communities themselves. Within Orbetello and the Presidi of Tuscany, urban and military spaces have represented two sides of the same coin, intersecting each other in a delicate balance with variable geometries that, however, has always found its peculiar stability. [Publisher's text]
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Informazioni
Codice DOI: 10.3280/SU2021-170003
ISSN: 1972-5523
PAROLE CHIAVE
- Spagna, Mediterraneo, Presìdi, Orbetello, Spazio urbano, Spazio militare
- Spain, Mediterranean Sea, Presìdi, Orbetello, Urban Space, Military Space