EpiMedDat
The Open Data Collection for Historical Epidemics and Medieval Diseases

1363-00-00-Montecalvoli

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Revision as of 14:15, 19 December 2025 by EpiMedDat-Bot (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Disease |Date start=1363 |Date end= |Place=Florence |Disease=Plague |Keyword=Army; Epidemics; Mortality; Siege |Reference=Matteo Villani 1995, Vol. 2, pp. 661-662 |Reference translation=Translation by ChatGPT-3.5; Translation by DeepL; |Summary=The siege of Montecalvoli was lifted because the plague struck badly the army and the captain was ill as well. |Text=Come morì messer Piero da Farnese <br />Essendo entrata la furia della pistilenza dell'anguin...")
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Date startStart date of the disease. 1363 +
Date endEnd date of the disease. +
SeasonSeason (spring, summer, fall or winter)
Date otherOther mentioned dates.
PlacePlace(s), city or location of the disease. Florence
RegionHistorical region(s)
CountryCurrent country
RiverMentioned river(s)
Natural eventMentioned natural event(s)
PersonMentioned persons(s)
GroupGroup(s) of people mentioned
VictimIndication of victims +
AnimalMentioned animal(s)
DiseaseMentioned disease(s) Plague
Epidemic waveAssociated epidemic wave
Social responseSocial response that happened in reaction to the disease
LanguageLanguage of the original text Italian
KeywordFurther keyword(s) Army, Epidemics, Mortality, Siege
last edited 19. 12. 2025 by EpiMedDat-Bot.

The siege of Montecalvoli was lifted because the plague struck badly the army and the captain was ill as well.

Text originalOriginal text

Come morì messer Piero da Farnese
Essendo entrata la furia della pistilenza dell'anguinaia ne l'oste de'Fiorentini, molti n'uccise, molti ne 'ndebolì, molti ne 'nvilì. Il perché essendo levato l'assedio da Montecalvoli, per comandamento de' signori di Firenze, il capitano era in Castello Fiorentino, e quivi lo prese il male dell'anguinaia a dì XVIIII di giugno, e il detto dì n'andò a Sa Miniato del Tedesco, e quivi in su la mezza notte passò di questa vita, e il corpo suo inn-una cassa alle spese del Comune fu recato in Firenze, e posato a Verzaia, aspettando Ranuccio (p. 662) suo fratello per cui era mandato; poi a dì XXV del mese il corpo suo fu recato in Firenze alle spese del Comune con amirabile pompa d'asequio, le quali furono di questa maniera… [...]

Text translationEnglish translation of the text

How Messer Piero da Farnese Died

When the fury of the plague struck the Florentine army, it killed many, weakened many, and demoralized many. After the siege of Montecalvoli was lifted on the orders of the lords of Florence, the captain was in Castello Fiorentino, where he was struck by the disease known as "Anguinaia" (plague boils) on June 19th. On that same day, he went to San Miniato al Tedesco, where he passed away around midnight. His body was placed in a coffin at the expense of the Commune and taken to Florence, where it was laid in Verzaia while waiting for his brother Ranuccio, who had been summoned. Then, on the 25th of the month, his body was brought to Florence at the expense of the Commune with remarkable pomp and ceremony, which proceeded in this manner… [...]

References

  1. ^ Matteo Villani 1995 
  2. ^ Translation by ChatGPT-3.5; Translation by DeepL; 

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