This book describes the role and organization of the land forces of a
renaissance state over a long period. It thus provides a model against
which the military development of other countries can be measured in
terms of the composition, control and cost of armies. Above all, it
redresses the imbalance whereby only the naval forces of Venice have
been studied seriously. It is thus an essential contribution to an
understanding of the extension and maintenance of an empire by land and
sea, and of the strength in troops and fortifications that preserved
Venice as the one truly independent state in sixteenth-century Italy. It
also adds significantly to an understanding of the relationship between
Venice and the republic's subject territories.