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CORIO

Volume 7 · 240 words · 1842 Edition

Bersandino, an historian, born of an illustrious family at Milan, in the year 1459. He was secretary of state to that duchy; and Ludovico, duke of Sforza, employed him to write the history of Milan. He died in 1519. The best edition of his history is that of Milan, 1503, folio. It is printed in Italian, and is very scarce. He wrote, besides, Vita Caesarum, and Utile Dialogo Amoroso, a poem.

a market-town of Italy, in the province of Turin, of the kingdom of Sardinia. It is divided into five parts, which together number 5200 inhabitants.

COROLANUS, CAIUS MARCIUS, a celebrated Roman captain, who took Coriol, a town of the Volscians, whence he derived his surname. At last, having disgusted the people, he was banished from Rome by the tribune Decius. He went over to the Volscians, and having persuaded them to take arms against the Romans, encamped within four miles of the city. An attempt was now made to negotiate; but he would not listen to proposals of peace, till he was prevailed upon by his mother Veturius, and his wife Volumnia, who overcame his resolution with their tears, and saved Rome, but ruined Coriolanus. He was put to death by the Volscians as a traitor who had caused them to abandon their conquest; upon which the Roman ladies went into mourning, and in the place where his blood had been spilt, a temple was consecrated to female fortune.