[609] Pignotti, as cited, iii, 283-84.
[610] Heeren, as cited, pp. 69, 120, etc.
[611] Cp. Trollope, History of Florence, i, 105; Villari, Two First Centuries, pp. 95, 100.
[612] Cp. Sismondi, Short History, pp. 88-90.
[613] Podestà, as we have seen, was an old imperialist title. In Florence it became communal, and in 1200 it was first held by a foreigner, chosen, it would seem, as likely to be more impartial than a native. Cp., however, the comments of Villari, First Two Centuries, p. 157, and Trollope, i, 84, 94; and the mention by Plutarch, De amore prolis, § 1, as to the same development among the Greeks. In the memoirs of Fra Salimbene (1221-90) there is mention that in 1233 the Parmesans "made a friar their podestà, who put an end to all feuds" (trans. by T.K. L. Oliphant, in The Duke and the Scholar, 1875, p. 90). The Florentine institution of the priori delle arti, mentioned below, is traced back as far as 1204 (Cantù, as cited, viii, 465, note). The anziani, during their term of office, slept at the public palace, and could not go out save together.
[614] Thus Dante and Lorenzo de' Medici belonged to the craft of apothecaries.
[615] See Trollope, ii, 179, as to the endless Florentine devices to check special power and to vary the balance of the constitution.
[616] Two years before a feebler attempt had been made to set up a military tool, named Gabrielli.
[617] Machiavelli, Istorie, end of 1. ii and beginning of 1. iii.
[618] According to Giovanni Villani, in the fourteenth century there were schools only for 8,000 children, and only 1,200 were taught arithmetic.