Cola di Rienzi

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Cola di Rienzi

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Cola di Rienzi , 1313?-1354, Roman popular leader. In 1343 on a mission to Pope Clement VI at Avignon, he won the papal confidence. While there he befriended Petrarch. Returning to Rome as papal votary, he won great popular support and received (May, 1347) wide dictatorial powers, which he claimed to hold under the pope's sovereignty. He crushed the barons and began great reforms in an effort to rouse an Italian national conscience. Calling himself tribune of the sacred Roman republic, he sought to rally the support of the other Italian cities and dreamed of a popular Italian empire with Rome as the capital. The pope, aroused by his policies, incited the barons against him. Renzi was defeated (Dec., 1347) and fled. At Prague in 1350 he disclosed to Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV his conviction that they shared a call to regenerate the Roman Catholic Church and the world. Charles, however, responded by jailing him and in 1352 sent him to Avignon to face the Inquisition. The new pope, Innocent VI, subsequently absolved and freed Rienzi and sent him with Cardinal Albornoz to Italy. The cardinal made him senator, and Rienzi entered Rome in triumph, but his violent and arbitrary rule soon resulted in a popular uprising and in his murder. In modern times Rienzi has been idealized as a forerunner of Italian nationalism.

Bibliography: See study by V. Fleischer (1948, repr. 1970).

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Rienzo, Cola di

A Dictionary of World History | 2000 | © A Dictionary of World History 2000, originally published by Oxford University Press 2000. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Rienzo, Cola di (1313–54) Italian popular leader. As spokesman for the Roman populace he attempted to lead a revolution in 1347. Taking the title of tribune, he sought fiscal, political, and judicial reform. Rejected by the papacy and the powerful Orsini and Colonna lords, he was deposed in November 1347 and excommunicated. In 1350 he gained the support of the new pope, Innocent VI, who encouraged him to restore papal authority in Rome. He returned there in triumph in 1354 only to be killed by the mob. He was remembered in the 19th century as a symbol of Italian unity.

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Cola di Rienzi proclaims himself 'tribune' of Rome.(Freeze Frame: May 20th, 1347)
Magazine article from: History Today; 5/1/1997; 700+ words ; ...medieval and Renaissance Italy. The rise and fall of Cola di Rienzi (christened Nicolas di Lorenzo by his parents but brought up at Anagni...Capitol, acted as a catalyst for the aspirations of Rienzi, whose friend and supporter Petrarch became...
Cola di Rienzo murdered: October 8th, 1354.(Months Past)
Magazine article from: History Today; 10/1/2004; ; 700+ words ; ...TRIBUNE of the Roman Republic, Cola di Rienzo (or Rienzi) was so massively fat that when...a bull from Avignon denouncing Cola as a pagan, a heretic and a criminal...him under guard to Pope Clement. Cola was kept in prison in Avignon...
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Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of History; 3/22/2006; ; 700+ words ; ...fatefully attended a performance of Wagner's 1837 opera Rienzi, and took inspiration for his own "Thousand Year Reich" from the tragic Cola di Rienzi, the medieval Italian populist, who attempted to reestablish...
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Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly; 6/22/1996; ; 700+ words ; ...with a cultural time-lag. Jiri Kraus shows that humanist rhetoric reached Bohemia via the visits of Petrarch and Cola di Rienzi in the late fourteenth, and of Eneo Silvio Piccolomini in the fifteenth century. Earlier still, at the end of the...
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Magazine article from: History Today; 7/1/1997; 700+ words ; ...with him rapidly and uncannily echoing the irrational behaviour of his populist Roman predecessor 300 years before, Cola di Rienzi (whose rise and fall was chronicled in May's `Freeze Frame'). After escaping from house arrest on July 16th...
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Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 9/10/1989; 312 words ; ...music rarely heard in Italy. He completed a string quartet in 1864 and a piano quintet and the orchestral overture "Cola di Rienzi" in 1866. His most celebrated piano pieces include the Intermezzo, Opus 16, the Pieces Lyriques, and the Melodies...
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