Books on the topic 'Stato napoleonico'

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1

Costanza, D'Elia, ed. Stato e chiesa nel Mezzogiorno napoleonico: Atti del quinto Seminario di studi "Decennio francese (1806-1815)". Napoli: Giannini, 2011.

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2

Vito, Tirelli, ed. Il Principato napoleonico dei Baciocchi (1805-1814): Riforma dello stato e società : atti del convegno internazionale (Lucca 10-12 Maggio 1984). Lucca: Maria Pacini Fazzi Editore, 1986.

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3

La scuola nelle Marche in età napoleonica. Urbino: Quattro venti, 2000.

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4

Archivio di Stato di Milano. Momenti dell'eta napoleonica nelle carte dell'Archivio di Stato di Milano. Milano]: Archivio di Stato di Milano, 1987.

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5

Frate, Paolo Alvazzi del. Le istituzioni giudiziarie degli "Stati romani" nel periodo napoleonico (1808-1814). Roma: Euroma-La Goliardica, 1990.

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6

Science and polity in France: The revolutionary and Napoleonic years. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2004.

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7

Dall'abbecedario alle "scienze sublimi": Scuola e istruzione nel Novarese napoleonico (1800-1814). Macerata: EUM, 2010.

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8

Inside Napoleonic France: State and society in Rouen, 1800-1815. Aldershot, [England]: Ashgate, 2001.

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9

Broers, Michael. Napoleonic imperialism and the Savoyard monarchy, 1773-1821: State building in Piedmont. Lewiston [N.Y.]: Edwin Mellen Press, 1997.

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10

Marina, Caffiero, Granata Veronica, and Tosti Mario, eds. L'impero e l'organizzazione del consenso: La dominazione napoleonica negli Stati romani, 1809-1814. Soveria Mannelli: Rubbettino, 2013.

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11

Agostini, Filiberto. La riforma napoleonica della Chiesa nella repubblica e nel regno d'Italia 1802-1814. Vicenza: Istituto per le ricerche di storia sociale e religiosa, 1990.

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12

Vivoli, Liliana. La popolazione di Imola in età napoleonica: Gli stati d'anime della città nel 1806. Imola (Bologna): La mandragora, 2004.

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13

Trow, M. J. Enemies of the state: The Cato Street conspiracy. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Miliary, 2010.

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14

I depositi di mendicità negli stati romani e la dominazione napoleonica: Lavoro forzato e inclusione sociale. Torino: L'Harmattan Italia, 2018.

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15

1970-, Rowe Michael, ed. Collaboration and resistance in Napoleonic Europe: State formation in an age of upheaval, c. 1800-1815. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.

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16

Convegno, Centro di studi avellaniti. Lo stato della chiesa in epoca napoleonica: Atti del XIX Convegno di studi avellaniti, Fonte Avellana, 24-25-26 agosto 1996. Fonte Avellana: Centro di Studi avellaniti, 1995.

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17

Venice, Italy) Convegno "Un nuovo volto per la Chiesa veneziana La riorganizzazione delle parrocchie in età napoleonica" (2011. Napoleone e la Chiesa: Il caso Venezia : un nuovo volto per la Chiesa veneziana attraverso la riorganizzazione delle parrocchie in età napoleonica. Venezia: Marcianum press, 2013.

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18

Giumanini, Michelangelo L. Beni culturali: Reciproche restituzioni tra Lombardo Veneto e Stato Pontificio (1816-1818). Bologna: CLUEB, 1999.

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19

Convegno, Centro di studi avellaniti. Lo stato della Chiesa in epoca napoleonica: Atti del XIX Convegno del Centro di studi avellaniti, Fonte Avellana, 24-25-26 agosto 1995. [Italy: s.n., 1996.

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20

Ferri, Giovanni. Università napoleoniche negli "Stati romani": Il Rapport di Giovanni Ferri de Saint-Constant sull'istruzione pubblica (1812). Roma: Viella, 1995.

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21

Il mito di Bonaparte in Italia: Atteggiamenti della società milanese e reazioni nello Stato romano. Roma: Carocci, 2005.

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22

Chimarov, S. I︠U︡. Russkai︠a︡ Pravoslavnai︠a︡ T︠S︡erkovʹ v Otechestvennoĭ voĭne 1812 goda. Sankt-Peterburg: Peterburgskiĭ gos. inzhenerno-ėkonomicheskiĭ universitet, 2004.

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23

Russkai︠a︡ Pravoslavnai︠a︡ T︠s︡erkovʹ v Otechestvennoĭ voĭne 1812 goda. Moskva: Izdanie Sretenskogo monastyri︠a︡, 2002.

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24

Michelet, Jules. Il Rinascimento. Edited by Leandro Perini. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-6655-990-0.

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Il Rinascimento dello storico francese Jules Michelet (1798-1874), volume VII della sua Histoire de France au seizième sièc le (1855), è qui tradotto per la prima volta in italiano da Leandro Perini che lo ha anche annotato, a differenza dalle edizioni francesi. La città di Firenze che accolse l’opera appena uscita nel suo Gabinetto Vieusseux, suscitando viva curiosità (come appare dai registri di prestito), accolse più tardi (1870) l’Autore quando, esule dalla Francia napoleonica, si trasferì nell’allora capitale del Regno d’Italia, accolto dagli amici italiani (Amari, Villari, l’editore Le Monnier). Composto in un momento di felicità creativa, Il Rinascimento di Michelet è nato da un’intuizione geniale: il contatto, anzi lo choc, conseguenza dell’invasione francese in Italia a cominciare da Carlo VIII, l’urto di un paese arretrato come la Francia contro la raffinata civiltà dell’Italia. Il Rinascimento, oltre che un capolavoro della storiografia romantica francese, è stato il seme fecondo della sua storiografia contemporanea, da Bloch a Febvre e da Braudel a Le Goff, che si è spesso richiamata all’opera sua. Uno storico insigne, dunque, un capolavoro: quasi un eroico vessillo.
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25

Soldiers of Napoleon's Kingdom of Italy: Army, state, and society, 1800-1815. Boulder, Colo: Westview Press, 1995.

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26

Institut rossiĭskoĭ istorii (Rossiĭskai︠a︡ akademii︠a︡ nauk), ed. Armii︠a︡ i Pravoslavnai︠a︡ T︠S︡erkovʹ Rossiĭskoĭ imperii v ėpokhu napoleonovskikh voĭn. Moskva: Kuchkovo pole, 2007.

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27

Melʹnikova, L. V. Armii͡a i Pravoslavnai͡a T͡Serkovʹ Rossiĭskoĭ imperii v ėpokhu napoleonovskikh voĭn. Moskva: Kuchkovo pole, 2007.

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28

Dominique-Vivant Denon et Benjamin Zix: Acteurs et témoins de l'épopée napoléonienne 1805-1812. Paris, France: L'Harmattan, 2000.

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29

Madeleine, Barbin, ed. Vivant Denon: Homme des Lumières, "ministre des arts" de Napoléon. Paris: Picard, 1993.

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30

Tulard, Jean. Napoléon: Jeudi 12 octobre 1809, le jour où Napoléon faillit être assassiné. [Paris]: J.C. Lattès, 1994.

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31

Tulard, Jean. Napoléon: Le pouvoir, la nation, la légende. Paris: Livre de poche, 1997.

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32

Tulard, Jean. Napoléon: Ou, Le mythe du sauveur. Paris: Fayard, 1993.

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33

Napoléon: Les grands moments d'un destin. [Paris]: Fayard, 2006.

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34

Daly, Gavin. Inside Napoleonic France: State and Society in Rouen, 1800-1815. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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35

Daly, Gavin. Inside Napoleonic France: State and Society in Rouen, 1800-1815. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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36

Daly, Gavin. Inside Napoleonic France: State and Society in Rouen, 1800-1815. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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37

Daly, Gavin. Inside Napoleonic France: State and Society in Rouen, 1800-1815. Taylor & Francis Group, 2017.

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38

Gillispie, Charles Coulston. Science and Polity in France: The Revolutionary and Napoleonic Years. Princeton University Press, 2014.

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39

Trow, M. J. Enemies of the State: The Cato Street Conspiracy. Wharncliffe Books, 2011.

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40

Rowe, M. Collaboration and Resistance in Napoleonic Europe: State Formation in an Age of Upheaval, C. 1800-1815. Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.

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41

Collaboration and Resistance in Napoleonic Europe: State-Formation in an Age of Upheaval, c.1800-1815. Palgrave Macmillan, 2003.

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42

Hien, Josef. Tax Evasion in Italy. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198796817.003.0004.

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The negative perception of Italians of their state has been formed by the deep conflict between Church and state that emerged during the Napoleonic occupation of Italy and reached its peak with Italian unification in the late nineteenth century. To the Vatican, territorial integration of the Italian nation state posed an existential threat, both at the political level (loss of territory) and at the spiritual level (diffusion of liberalism). From unification onwards the Vatican did all it could to harm the legitimacy of the Italian state. This chapter analyzes the Vatican strategy to delegitimize the Italian state and its right to tax. It shows how the willingness of Italians to pay their taxes still suffers today from the Church–state conflict.
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43

Godsey, William D., and Petr Maťa, eds. The Habsburg Monarchy as a Fiscal-Military State. British Academy, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5871/bacad/9780197267349.001.0001.

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This volume offers a fresh interpretative agenda for thinking about the Vienna-based Habsburg Monarchy’s development, coherence, functionality, and domestic legitimacy under the impact of enduring international rivalry and armed conflict across a period spanning nearly two centuries, from the Thirty Years War to the Napoleonic wars. It does so in a wider European comparative perspective and by engaging closely with the concept of the ‘fiscal-military state’, rendering it both greater depth and precision and elaborating heuristic potential. This volume firmly returns the maintenance of a permanent standing army to the centre of the Habsburg government’s concerns between 1648 and 1815. In an exemplary way, it spotlights a broad range of structures, practices, and actors on both the financial and military sides that sustained the Habsburg fiscal-military state over time. These include the General War Commissariat, foreign subsidies and other external support, the provincial Estates and diets, taxation and borrowing, recruitment and the enrolment of officers, supply and provisioning as well as individual noble families, brokers, and contractors. In also applying the idea of ‘composite monarchy’ to the Habsburg polity, the volume additionally calls attention to both symmetries and asymmetries in the processes of state formation that occurred under the impact of fiscal-military exigency. Consolidation was accompanied by the emergence of new forms of particularism.
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44

Planert, Ute. International Conflict, War, and the Making of Modern Germany, 1740–1815. Edited by Helmut Walser Smith. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199237395.013.0005.

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The article traces the making of modern Germany. War made the state, and the state made war: This statement holds true for the state of Germany. Unlike in France and England, political loyalties in Germany oscillated between the Reich, the nation, and individual states, as well as between different confessions. For this reason, problems in the course of state and nation building were more complex than in those European neighbor states where centralized power was established earlier and on a mono-confessional basis. The international rivalry of power played a pivotal role for European developments in the eighteenth century. Several German language territories strove to outgrow the constraints of the Holy Roman Empire, or Old Reich, and gain influence and importance. A detailed description of Napoleonic Rule in Germany, the decline of the same, the reshaping the state and its aftermath concludes this article.
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45

Fitzsimmons, Michael P. The Place of Words. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190644536.001.0001.

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From its initial appearance in 1694 and through successive editions in 1718, 1740, and 1762, the Dictionnaire de l’Académie Française had risen to become the definitive arbiter of the French language. Preparation of the fifth edition was at an advanced state when the French Revolution began in 1789 but it remained unfinished when the National Convention suppressed academies in August 1793. Seeking to codify the language of the Revolution, the Convention commissioned two Parisian publishers to complete the fifth edition, hoping that it would be a vehicle for promoting the ideals of the Revolution in the manner that the earlier editions had for the values of absolute monarchy. When it appeared during the year VI (1798), however, it was completely anachronistic and barely took note of the Revolution except for a brief supplement of “words in use since the Revolution” that comprised only a small fraction of its content. Another Parisian publisher believed its deficiencies offered an opportunity to publish a competing edition, which he did, along with a partner, in 1802. The holders of the rights to the fifth edition took them to court for piracy, initiating protracted legislation in which they ultimately prevailed. Preparation of the sixth edition had been entrusted to the Institut National and the Napoleonic regime was eager to see it completed, but Bonaparte fell before that occurred. The restored Bourbon dynasty was also eager to see the new edition completed but it was overthrown in 1830. The sixth edition appeared only in 1835 and, similar to the fifth edition it supplanted, it glossed over the Revolution—as well as the Napoleonic period—but in a different manner. Although the dictionary included definitions from the revolutionary and Napoleonic era, it frequently elided the period through the phrase “at a certain epoch.”
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46

Buckler, John, Rafe Blaufarb, Bennett D. Hill, Claudia Liebeskind, Clare Haru Crowston, John P. McKay, and Robert G. Moeller. History of Western Society 10e V2 & Sources of Western Society V2 & Napoleonic Foot Soldiers and Civilians & Nazi State and German Society. Bedford/St. Martin's, 2011.

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47

Lovell, Stephen. Russia and the West. Edited by Simon Dixon. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199236701.013.006.

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Concentrating on the political and cultural capital that various elites have extracted from notions of the West, this chapter identifies four phases in the development of the most consistently articulated binary opposition in modern Russian culture: Russia’s entry into the European state system in the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; the era of national awakening from the Napoleonic wars to the 1860s; the era of mass national politics and decolonization from the 1860s to the 1950s; and the era of American hegemony, globalization and European peace from the 1950s onwards which has eventually caused the Russian nation to reinvent itself in a postcommunist guise.
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48

Purvis, Zachary. Education and Its Institutions. Edited by Joel D. S. Rasmussen, Judith Wolfe, and Johannes Zachhuber. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198718406.013.25.

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For theological education, the nineteenth century was one of the most creative and tumultuous periods in the history of Christian thought. Patterns of both deconfessionalization and theological renewal, changes in Church–state relations, the rise of the modern research university in Berlin, and new fields like religious studies all contributed to the displacement of theology as the ‘queen of the sciences’ in the wake of the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, and the Napoleonic era. This chapter examines some of the major developments, including the institutionalization of Protestant theology in the modern research university, key issues confronting Catholic scholarship, and the inception of the seminary in North America. Finally, it discusses the challenges modern academic theology faced in its increasing appeal to the political community of the modern nation-state and the academic community of science, rather than Christianity’s historic creeds, confessions, and traditions of ecclesiastical authority.
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49

Orders in council, or, An examination of the justice, legality, and policy of the new system of commercial regulations: With an appendix of state papers, statutes and authorities. London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees and Orme ... and J. Ridgway ..., 1987.

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50

Ferguson, Gillum. Peace? University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252036743.003.0011.

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This chapter considers a treaty of peace at Ghent, signed on December 24, 1814 by American and British commissioners. Initially, the British had insisted on creation of a permanent and semi-independent Indian buffer state north of the line drawn by the Treaty of Greenville, within which the United States would be forever barred from demanding further cessions of land. The American commissioners absolutely refused to consider such a proposal, and the British, weary of war after twenty years fighting against the power of Napoleonic France, yielded. Instead, they were able to obtain only a face-saving provision, Article IX of the treaty, which guaranteed their Indian allies all the possessions, rights, and privileges they may have enjoyed, or been entitled to, in 1811, provided they ceased hostilities against the United States.
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