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Forlė


 

Forlė, {{coor dm|44|13|N|12|02|E|}}, is a comune and city in Emilia-Romagna, Italy, the seat of the province of Forlė. Its 110,209 inhabitants are Forlivesi, because in Antiquity it was called Forum Livii.

History

The surroundings of Forlė have been inhabited since the Paleolithic: a site, Ca' Belvedere of Monte Poggiolo, has revealed thousands of chipped flints in strata dated 800,000 years before present, which indicates a flint-knapping industry producing sharp-edged tools in a pre-Acheulean phase of the Paleolithic http://web.unife.it/progetti/notes/epoggiol.htm.

Related Topics:
Forlė - Paleolithic - Monte Poggiolo - Acheulean

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About the city of Forlė, the legend would make its founder (188 BC) the consul Marcus Livius Salinator, who confronted Hasdrubal and vanquished him at the banks of the Metaurus River (207 BCE). The old city was destroyed in 88 BC during the civil wars of Marius and Sulla and rebuilt by the praetor Livius Clodius afterwards. After the collapse of the West, the city formed part of the realms of Odoacer and the Ostrogoth kingdom before becoming an outlier of the Byzantine power of the Exarchate of Ravenna

Related Topics:
Forlė - 188 BC - Marcus Livius Salinator - Hasdrubal - Metaurus River - 207 BCE - 88 BC - Marius - Sulla - Livius Clodius - Odoacer - Ostrogoth - Exarchate of Ravenna

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In the time of the Lombards, the city was contested and was repeatedly retaken by Lombard forces, in 665, 728, 742 until its final incorporation with the Papal States in 757, part of the Donation of Pepin.

Related Topics:
Lombards - Donation of Pepin

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By the 9th century, but perhaps a century earlier, the city had wrested control from its bishops and was established as one of the independent Italian city-states, the communes that signalled the first revival of urban Italian life. Because Forlė became a republic for the first time in the 889.

Related Topics:
Communes - Forlė - 889

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In the medieval struggles between Guelphs and Ghibellines, Forlí remained with the Ghibelline factions, partly as a means of preserving its independence, rather than out of loyalty to the temporal power of the papacy. In the centuries, popes many times tried to resume the control of Forlė, sometimes by violence sometimes by allurements.

Related Topics:
Guelphs and Ghibellines - Forlė

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More local competition was involved in loyalties: in 1241, during Frederick II's struggles with Pope Gregory IX the people of Forlė offered their loyal support to Frederick II during the capture of the rival city, Faenza, and, as a sign of gratitude, they were granted an augmentation of the communal coat-of-arms with the Hohenstaufen eagle, together with other privileges. With the collapse of Hohenstaufen power in 1257, Guido da Montefeltro the staunchest imperial lieutenant, was forced to take refuge in Forlė, the only remaining stronghold, in Italy, of the Ghibelline political power. He accepted the position of capitano del popolo until the city was forced to accede to papal power and Guido to take his leave. The commune soon submitted to a local condottiere rather than accept a representative of direct papal control, and Simone Mestaguerra had himself proclaimed Lord of Forlė. He did not succeed in leaving the new signory peacefully to an heir, however, and Forlė passed to Maghinardo Pagano, than to Uguccione della Faggiuola (1297), and to others, until in 1302 the Ordelaffi came into power. Local factions with papal support ousted the family several times, in 1327–29 and again in 1359–1375, and at other turns of events the bishops were expelled by the Ordelaffi: Fra Bartolomeo da Sanzetto (1351), was expelled by Francesco degli Ordelaffi and Bishop Giovanni Capparelli (1427), banished by Antonio degli Ordelaffi. Bishop Luigi Pirano (1437) took an active part in the Council of Ferrara.

Related Topics:
1241 - Frederick II - Pope Gregory IX - Forlė - Faenza - Hohenstaufen - Guido da Montefeltro - Italy - Condottiere - Simone Mestaguerra - Maghinardo Pagano - Uguccione della Faggiuola - Ordelaffi - Bartolomeo da Sanzetto - Giovanni Capparelli - Luigi Pirano - Council of Ferrara

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The most renowned of the Ordelaffi was Pino III, who held the Signiory of Forlė from 1466 to 1480. When he died just 40 years old, perhaps by poison, the situation of Forlė was weakened as contingents of Ordelaffi fought one another, until Pope Sixtus IV claimed the signory for his nephew Gerolamo Riario. Riario was married to Caterina Sforza the indomitable Lady of Forlė, whose name is associated with the city's last independent history. Forlė was seized in 1488 by Visconti and in 1499 by Cesare Borgia, after whose death it was more directly subject to the pope than it had ever been before.

Related Topics:
Pope Sixtus IV - Caterina Sforza - Visconti - Cesare Borgia

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The diocese of Forlė was established early, for its bishop, venerated as Saint Mercurialis attended the Council of Rimini in 359; later legend moved him back into the Apostolic age.

Related Topics:
Saint Mercurialis - Council of Rimini

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In Melozzo da Forli the commune produced its single famous painter, who worked in Rome during the brief years of the High Renaissance.

Related Topics:
Melozzo da Forli - High Renaissance

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