2 - The justice of exile
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 July 2009
Summary
However they came to be there, many of those who found themselves in exile would have been the subject of a formal sentence. This might have been handed down before the exile left, and be the reason for his leaving. It might have been passed on someone who had already departed. Those driven out at the point of the sword by factional rivals could be sentenced later. Even those who had gone into voluntary exile to avoid trouble could be subject to penalties if they did not return when invited, or ordered, to do so. How these sentences were handed down – who decided on them, who issued them (not necessarily the same people), what justifications were adduced – bring out interesting aspects of notions of the state, and of political legitimacy in Renaissance Italy. What reason could a victorious political faction give for the expulsion of their rivals? What procedures could they adopt to give legal validation to political proscription? How far could a faction equate their interests with those of the state? The responses of the exiles to their predicament can be equally illuminating. Would they regard the sentences against them as lawful, would they regard them as justified? Did they consider that they had been exiled by the government, or by their enemies? Did they accept that their exile came within the rules of the political game? What did they consider to be a legitimate reponse?
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- The Politics of Exile in Renaissance Italy , pp. 55 - 86Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000