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THE HARBOUR OF LEGHORN_LIVORNO,TUSCANY,Italy,Antique Map
THE HARBOUR OF LEGHORN_LIVORNO,TUSCANY,Italy,Antique Map HISTORICAL MAP CHART
Livorno, sometimes in English Leghorn, is a port city on the Tyrrhenian Sea on the western edge of Tuscany, Italy. It is the third-largest port on the western coast of Italy. An important area under the Medici in the Renaissance with many important landmarks from the 16th century, Livorno was enlarged at the end of the 18th century by Leopold II, who also opened the city to foreign merchants. It became a free port under Ferdinand I from 1590, and remained such until 1860, when it became part of the Kingdom of Italy. The earliest mention of Leghorn occurs in a document of 891, relating to the first church here; in 1017 it is called a castle. In the 13th century the Pisans tried to attract a population to the, spot, but it was not till the 14th that Leghorn became a rival of Porto Pisano at the mouth of the Arno, which it was destined ultimately to supplant. It was at Leghorn that Urban V. and Gregory XI. landed on their return from Avignon. When in 1405 the king of France sold Pisa to the Florentines he kept possession of Leghorn; but he afterwards sold it for 26,000 ducats to the Genoese, and from the Genoese the Florentines purchased it in 1425. In 1496 the city showed its devotion to its new masters by a successful defence against Maximilian and his allies, but it was still a small place; in 1551 there were only 749 inhabitants. With the rise of the Medici came a rapid increase of prosperity; Cosmo, Francis and Ferdinand erected fortifications and harbour works, warehouses and churches, with equal liberality, and the last especially gave a stimulus to trade by inviting men of the East and the West, Spanish and Portuguese, Greeks, Germans, Italians, Hebrews, Turks,
1890s Wood Engraving, Antique Map
Approximate Overall Size: 7 X 10 1/2 inches
CONDITION: Book Plate INTEXT MAP - Excellent Condition. Beautiful with excellent detail. There is Text on Front and Back Side.

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