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・ Chinese Canadian
・ Chinese Canadian Military Museum Society
・ Chinese Canadian National Council
・ Chinese Canadians in British Columbia
・ Chinese Canadians in Greater Vancouver
・ Chinese Canadians in the Greater Toronto Area
・ Chinese candy box
・ Chinese cardboard bun hoax
・ Chinese Caribbean
・ Chine
・ Chine (aeronautics)
・ Chine (boating)
・ Chine (disambiguation)
・ Chine-collé
・ Chine-USA, la guerre programmée
Chinea
・ Chineasy
・ Chinedu Achebe
・ Chinedu Ede
・ Chinedu Ezimora
・ Chinedu Ikedieze
・ Chinedu Obasi
・ Chinedu Odozor-Onikeku
・ Chinedu Oriala
・ Chinedum Ndukwe
・ Chinedum Osuji
・ Chineh Hukerd
・ Chineham
・ Chineja River
・ Chineke


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Chinea : ウィキペディア英語版
Chinea
The Chinèa was the name attached to a tribute paid by the Kings of Naples as vassals to the Popes. The tribute was apparently first recognized by the Norman King of Naples in 1059. The Chinea reached its greatest magnitude from about 1550 to 1776, with grand temporary structures being erected during the celebration all over Rome in honor of the Pope. The Chinea ceremony itself was instituted under Charles I of Naples and Pope Clement IV, and lasted in ceremonial form till 1776, and as a monetary obligation until 1855.
The ceremony included the gift of a white horse, elegantly attired and carrying by the late 1700s the equivalent of 7,000 ducats in silver. The presentation took place annually on June 29, the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, and was followed by elaborate festivities in Rome. The horse itself was paraded in Saint Peter's Basilica.〔(Rome, Its Princes, Priests and People ) Volume 1, Chapter XV, page 184-197 by David Silvagni (translated by Fanny McLaughlin) London, 1985.〕 The presentation was always made by a Neapolitan nobleman, including over the years, members of the Colonna, Sanseverino, or Carafa families. The term ''chinea'' is thought to derive from the French word for a Hackney horse: (''haquennée'').
In 1776, on the pretext of mob rowdiness during the ceremony, King Ferdinand IV of Naples and his foreign minister, Bernardo Tanucci, as well as the philosopher Domenico Caracciolo,〔(History of Naples. ), by Pietro Colleta, 1860, page 122.〕 attempted to eliminate the tribute, but in the end while the ceremony and accompanying sanction of royal rule were eliminated, a simple monetary tribute continued. In 1855, during the papacy of Pius IX, in the hope of abolishing the tradition altogether, Ferdinand VII of Naples paid 10,000 scudi for the Column of the Immaculate Conception in Piazza di Spagna, Rome.〔(Il Portale del Sud website ), entry on Chinea.〕〔(Encyclopedia Treccani ), entry on Chinea.〕
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Chinea」の詳細全文を読む



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