Abstract

This article analyzes how the Venetian and the Friulian historians from the mid-XIX century to the mid-XX century considered the domination of the Republic of Venice on the Friuli in the early modern period. The different historiographical positions have intertwined with issues such as the Italian character of the Friulian territory, irredentism and the Adriatic ambitions of post-First World War Italy. Only from the 1920s onwards, with the works of Pier Silverio Leicht, and then Pio Paschini and Roberto Cessi, there is a renewal of historiography.

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