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MANTUA (Ital. Mantova)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 608 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MANTUA (Ital. Mantova)  , a fortified city of
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Lombardy, Italy, the capital of the province of Mantua, the see of a bishop, and the centre of a military
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district, 25 M . S.S.W. of Verona and too m . E.S.E. of Milan by
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rail . Pop . (1906), 31,783 . It is situated 88 ft. above the level of the Adriatic on an almost insular site in the midst of the swampy lagoons of the Mincio . As the belt of marshy ground along the south side can be laid under
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water at pleasure, the site of the city proper, exclusive of the considerable suburbs of Borgo di Fortezza to the north and Borgo di
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San Giorgio to the east, may still be said to consist, as it formerly did more distinctly, of two islands separated by a narrow channel and
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united by a number of bridges . On the west side lies Lago Superiore, on the east side Lago Inferiore —the boundary between the two being marked by the Argine del Mulino, a long mole stretching northward from the north-west angle of the city to the citadel . On the highest ground in the city rises the
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cathedral, the interior of which was built after his
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death according to the plans of Giulio Romano; it has double aisles, a
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fine fretted ceiling, a dome-covered transept, a
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bad .
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baroque
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facade, and a large unfinished Romanesque tower . .Much more important architecturally is the church of St Andrea, built towards the close of the 15th century, after plans by Leon Battista Alberti,and consisting of a single, barrel-vaulted
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nave 350 ft. long by 62 ft. wide . It has a noble facade with a deeply recessed portico, and a brick campanile of 1414 ... The interior, is decorated with 18th-century frescoes, to which period the dome also belongs .

Mantegna is buried in one of the side chapels, S . Sebastiano is another
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work of Alberti's . The old ducal palace—one of the largest buildings of its kind in
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Europe was begun in 1302 for Guido Bonaccolsi, and probably completed in 1328 for Ludovico Gonzaga; but many of the
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accessory apartments are of much later date, and the
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internal decorations are for the most
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part the work of Giulio Romano and his pupils . There are also 'some fine rooms of the early loth century . ' Close by are the Piazza dell' Erbe, and the Piazza Sordello,. with
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Gothic palaces . The Castello di
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Corte here, the old castle of the Gonzagas (1395-1+406), erected by Bartolino da
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Novara, the architect of, the castle of
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Ferrara, now contains the archives, and has some fine frescoes by Mantegna with scenes from the
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life of Ludovico Gonzaga . Outside of the city, to the south of Porta Pusterla, stands the Palazzo del Te, Giulio's architectural masterpiece, erected' for Frederick Gonzaga in 1523—I535; Of the numerous fresco-covered chambers which it contains,• perhaps the most celebrated is the Sala dei Giganti, where, by a combination of
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mechanical with
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artistic devices, the rout of the Titans still contending with artillery of uptorn rocks against the pursuit and thunderbolts of Jove appears to rush downwards ' on the spectator . The architecture of Giulio's own house in the
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town is also good . Mantua has an academy of arts and sciences (Accademia Vergiliana), occupying a fine
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building erected by Piermarini, a public library founded in 1780 by Maria Theresa, a museum of antiquities dating from 1779, many of which have been brought from
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Sabbioneta, a small residence town of the Gonzagas in the
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late 16th century, a mineralogical museum, a good botanical garden, and an
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observatory . There are ironworks, tanneries, breweries, oil-mills and
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flour-mills in the town, which also has printing, furriery,
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doll-making and playing-card
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industries . As a fortress Mantua was long one of the most formidable in Europe, a force of
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thirty to
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forty thousand men finding accommodation within its walls; but it had two serious defects—the marshy
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climate told heavily on the
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health of the garrison, and effective sorties were almost impossible . It lies on the main
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line of railway between Verona and Modena; and is also connected by rail with Cremona and with Monselice, on the line from Padua to Bologna, and by steam
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tramway with Brescia and other places .

S . Maria delle Grazie,

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standing some 5 M. outside the town, was consecrated in 1399 as an act of thanksgiving for the cessation of the plague, and has a curious collection of ex veto pictures (
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wax figures), and also the tombs of the Gonzaga
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family . Mantua had still a strong
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Etruscan element in its population during the
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Roman period . It became a Roman municipium, with the rest of Gallia Transpadana; but Martial calls it little Mantua, and had it not been for Virgil's
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interest in his native place, and in the expulsion of a number of the Mantuans (and among them the poet himself) from their lands in favour of Octavian's soldiers, we should probably have heard almost nothing of its existence . In 568 the Lombards found Mantua a walled town of some strength; recovered from their grasp in .590 by the exarch of Ravenna, it was again captured by Agilulf in 6ox . The 9th century was the period of episcopal supremacy, and in `the 11th the city formed part of the vast possessions of
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Bonifacio,
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marquis of
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Canossa . From him it passed to Geoffrey, duke of
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Lorraine, and afterwards to the countess Matilda, whose support of the pope led to the
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con-quest of Mantua by the emperor Henry IV. in 1090 . Reduced to obedience by Matilda in 1113, the city obtained its liberty on her death, and instituted a communal government of its own, salvo imperiali justitia . It afterwards joined the Lombard
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League; and the unsuccessful attack made by Frederick II. in 1236 brought it a confirmation of its privileges . But after a period of internal discord Ludovico Gonzaga attained to power (1328), and was recognized as, imperial vicar (1329); and from that time till the death of Ferdinando
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Carbo in 17o8 the Gonzagas were masters of Mantua, (see GONZAGA) . Under Gian Francesco IL, the first marquis, Ludovico
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IIL, Gian Francesco III . (whose wife was Isabella d'Este); and Federico II., the first duke of Mantua, the city rose rapidly into importance as a seat of industry and culture .

It was stormed and sacked by the Austrians in 1630, and never quite recovered . Claimed in 1708 as a

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fief of the
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empire by Joseph L, it was governed for the greater part of the century by the Austrians . In
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June 1796 it was besieged by
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Napoleon; but in spite of terrific bombardments it held out till
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February 1797 . 'A three days'
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bombardment in 1799 again placed Mantua in the hands of the Austrians; and, though restored to the French by the peace of
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Luneville (18o1), it became
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Austrian onde more from 1814 till 1866 . Between 1849 and 1859, when the whole of Lombardy except Mantua was, by the peace of Villafranca,' ceded to Italy, the city was the scene of violent
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political persecution . See Gaet . Susani, Nuovo prospetto delle ¢iitture, di'Mantbtia (Mantua, 183o); Carlo d'Arco, Delle arti e degli arlefieidi Mantova (Mantua, 1857) ; and Storia di Mantova (Mantua, 1874) . MA'IU (
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Sanskrit, " man "), in
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Hindu
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mythology, the first man, ancestor of the
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world . In the Satapatha-
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Brahmana he is represented as a
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holy man, the chief figure in a flood-myth . Warned by a fish of the impending disaster he, built a
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ship, and when the waters rose was dragged by the fish, which he harnessed to his craft, beyond the
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northern mountains . When the deluge ceased, a daughter was miraculously born to him and this pair became the ancestors of the human
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race .. In the later scriptures the fish is declared an incarnation of Brahma .

See SANSKRIT LITERATURE;

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INDIAN LAW (Hindu) .

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