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EN
The very basis of the relationships between Italy and the new born Czechoslovak state was constituted by military and diplomatic activities, leading to formation of military corps as the first manifestation of the state not having yet denomination no its own geographical frontiers. The article proposes to show how the attitude of Italy towards constitution of the independent Czechoslovakia was strictly conditioned by seeing the new state as an ally in the Adriatic problem and by its support of Italyʼs territorial demands on the Dalmatia and Istria coast. We try to point out, relaying on the information and contents of the Italian diplomatic correspondence, how such a support was abandoned as a consequence of Czechoslovak foreign politics choices made in the immediate after World War I period. In this way, we were able to reconstruct in a more detailed way a chapter of the Italian-Czechoslovak relations not fully examined in the contemporary period.
EN
Isabella d’Este (May 17, 1474 in Ferrara, Italy – February 13, 1539 in Mantua, Italy) was an important female protagonist of the Italian Renaissance, often referred as the “Lady of the Renaissance”, “Daughter of Humanism”, “the First World Lady”. This study aims to bring closer the ruler who influenced (especially Italian) history in diplomacy and politics, but was also a major figure in the collection of art and patronage of authors such as Titian, Leonardo da Vinci, Raffaello Sanzio and others. The study reflects the period context and at the same time looks at the importance of the Renaissance female intellectual through the prism of her personal and public correspondence available in the Italian state archives (Mantova, Ferrara, etc.), pointing to the growing importance and interest in digitized authentic materials.
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