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词条 March of Montferrat
释义

  1. See also

  2. Sources

{{More citations needed|date=January 2007}}{{Infobox country
|native_name = Marchesato del Monferrato
|conventional_long_name = Margraviate of Montferrat
|common_name = Montferrat
|life_span = 961–1574
|event_start =
|year_start = 961
|date_start =
|year_end = 1574
|date_end =
|event_end = Raised to
{{Spaces|4}}Duchy of Montferrat
|event1 = End of Aleramici rule
|date_event1 = 1305
|event2 = Inherited by the
{{Spaces|4}}House of Gonzaga
|date_event2 = 1536
|p1 = Piedmont
|image_p1 =
|s1 = Duchy of Montferrat
|flag_s1 = Flag of Montferrat.svg
|image_coat = Argent a chief gules.svg
|symbol_type = Arms of Montferrat (House of Aleramo): Argent a chief gules
|image_flag = Flag of Montferrat.svg
|flag_type = Flag of Montferrat
|image_map = Italy 1494 shepherd detail.jpg
|image_map_caption = The March of Montferrat (blue) in 1494
|capital = Casale Monferrato
{{Coord|45|08|N|08|27|E |type:country_region:IT |display=it}}
(from 1305)
|status = March of the Kingdom of Italy
State of the Holy Roman Empire
|government_type = Monarchy
|common_languages = Italian
|title_leader = Marquess
|leader1 = Aleramo (first)
|year_leader1 = 961–967
|leader2 = William X (last)
|year_leader2 = 1550–1574
|stat_pop1 =
|stat_year1 =
|currency =
|footnotes =
}}

The March (also margraviate or marquisate) of Montferrat was a frontier march of the Kingdom of Italy during the Middle Ages and a state of the Holy Roman Empire. The margraviate was raised to become the Duchy of Montferrat in 1574.

Originally part of the March of Western Liguria (Marca Liguriae Occidentalis) established by King Berengar II about 950, the area of Montferrat was constituted as the marca Aleramica ("Aleramic march") for his son-in-law Aleramo. The earliest secure documentation of Aleramo and his immediate family is derived from the founding charter of the Abbey of Grazzano in 961. occasioned by the recent death of Aleramo's son Gugliemo.

After King Otto I of Germany had invaded Italy in 961 and displaced Berengar II, he began, in a manner much like his predecessors Berengar and Hugh of Arles, to redefine the great fiefs of Italy. He reorganised the northwest into three great marches. Western Liguria he restored to Aleramo, Eastern Liguria or the marca Januensis he gave to Oberto I, and Turin he made a march for Arduin Glaber.

Aleram's descendants were relatively obscure until the time of Marquess Rainier in the early twelfth century. About 1133 Rainier's son Marquess William V married Judith of Babenberg, a half-sister of King Conrad III of Germany, and so greatly increased his family's prestige. He entered into the Italian policies of Conrad and the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos, setting a Ghibelline precedent for his successors, and with his sons became involved in the Crusades.

Marquess Boniface I was the leader of the Fourth Crusade and established the Kingdom of Thessalonica in the Latin Empire of Greece. Reuniting Thessalonica, inherited by Boniface's Greek son Demetrius, with Montferrat became a goal of Boniface's Italian heirs, though nothing ever came of their endeavours.

In the thirteenth century, Montferrat waffled between the Guelph and Ghibelline parties under Boniface II and William VII. They had to wage several long wars against the independence-minded communes of Asti and Alessandria and they became the standard-bearers of a renewed Lombard League forged to fight the spread of Angevin influence into northern Italy. The capital of Montferrat at this time was Chivasso, the centre of the margraves' power.

In 1305, the last Aleramici margrave died and Montferrat was inherited by the Greek imperial Palaiologos dynasty, who held it until 1533, during a period of diminishing territoriality. In that year, Montferrat was seized by the Spanish under Emperor Charles V of Habsburg, who restored it to Federico II, Duke of Mantua from the illustrious House of Gonzaga in 1536. His son Margrave William X was elevated to a Duke of Montferrat in 1574 and the "march" ceased to exist as an entity, though it had already undergone the significant change from a feudal collection of frontier counties to one of the petty states of Renaissance Italy, divided into two separated territories.

See also

  • List of rulers of Montferrat, for a list of margraves and dukes
  • Iudiciaria Torrensis
  • Duchy of Montferrat

Sources

  • {{Cite book|ref=harv|last=Haberstumpf|first=Walter|year=2009|title=Regesti dei Marchesi di Monferrato (secoli IX-XVI)|location=Alessandria|publisher=San Giorgio Editrice|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2cxEAQAAIAAJ}}
  • {{Cite book|ref=harv|last=Ruggiero|first=Michele|year=1979|title=Storia del Piemonte|location=Torino|publisher=Piemonte in Bancarella|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pZgKAQAAIAAJ}}
{{Former monarchies Italian peninsula}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Montferrat, March Of}}

7 : March of Montferrat|Monferrato|1574 disestablishments|Marches of the Holy Roman Empire|Former countries on the Italian Peninsula|States and territories established in the 960s|961 establishments

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